Tuesday, May 19, 2026
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PH stocks fall below 6,400, peso slips on slim growth

Philippine stocks fell below the 6,400 level on Friday due to modest growth in second quarter gross domestic product (GDP).

The benchmark Philippine Stock Exchange index fell 25.31 points or 0.40 percent to close at 6,339.38 while the broader all shares index slipped by 8.65 points or 0.23 percent to 3,767.41.

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The peso also depreciated against the US dollar to 57.11 on Friday from 56.97 on Thursday.

Unicapital Inc. research head Wendy Esctacio-Cruz said investors locked in gains amid weak sentiment from the disappointing second quarter GDP and lingering geopolitical and trade concerns.

Analysts said investors are also reassigning impact of the US tariffs on the global economy.

Property led sectors, rising by 1.64 percent on prospectus of possible rate cut from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas. Mining and oil sector also went up by 0.79 percent

On the other hand, financials declined by 0.96 percent followed by holding firms which dropped by 0.63 percent.

Value turnover stood at P6.36 billion as foreign buying picked up with inflows at P37.65 million.

Ayala Land Inc. was the top index gainer, advancing by 2.82 percent to P27.35 while Alliance Global Group Inc. was at the bottom, declining by 2.83 percent to P7.20.

Japanese stocks rallied Friday on a broadly negative day for Asian markets, fueled by relief that Tokyo and Washington had settled a tariff issue that raised concerns about their trade deal.

The news compounded optimism sparked by strong earnings from market heavyweights Sony and Softbank that fanned a rally in the tech sector.

Meanwhile, expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates were boosted by Donald Trump’s nomination of a key economic adviser to the central bank’s policy committee, adding to downward pressure on the dollar.

The Nikkei 225 jumped nearly two percent after Japan’s tariffs envoy Ryosei Akazawa told reporters that Washington is expected to revise an executive order that stacked tariffs on top of each other.

It also lowered vehicle tariffs on Japanese autos, a crucial driver of the world’s number-four economy.

Car titan Toyota jumped more than three percent and Nissan 2.8 percent.

Tech investment giant SoftBank rocketed more than 10 percent to a record after posting a quarterly profit thanks to its booming Vision Fund.

And Sony piled on more than three percent — extending Thursday’s 4.1 percent gain — after it hiked its annual profit forecasts owing to its gaming business.

While Taipei and Jakarta also rose, the rest of Asia retreated, with Hong Kong, Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Singapore, Mumbai, Bangkok, Wellington and Manila all down.

London and Paris edged up, but Frankfurt dipped.

Gold futures soared after the Financial Times reported that Washington would put tariffs on one-kilo bars, the most traded type of bullion on Comex — the world’s biggest futures market.

The price of the December contract, the most active, hit a peak of $3,534.10 an ounce before easing, according to Bloomberg data.

It also makes up the largest part of Switzerland’s gold shipments to the United States. The FT also said 100-ounce bars would face tolls.

Spot prices sat around $3,400.

Investors are now keeping tabs on talks between Washington and several other trading partners following the imposition Thursday of Trump’s tariffs, with India and Switzerland scrabbling for a deal.

Also in view are China-US talks to extend a 90-day truce in their stand-off, with their current agreement ending on August 12 and dealers looking on cautiously.

“We think  uncertainties  in US-China trade relations remain high, and any perception of one side failing to fully uphold its promise  could trigger a renewed escalation  in tensions,” economists at Bank of America said.

“Moreover,  as is the case  with India, China could face potential penalties from crude oil imports from Russia,” they added.

The dollar held most of its recent losses against its peers on Fed rate cut bets after Trump said he had tipped Stephen Miran, the chair of his Council of Economic Advisers to a governor role recently made vacant.

“He has been with me from the beginning of my Second Term, and his expertise in the World of Economics is unparalleled — He will do an outstanding job,” the president wrote on his Truth Social platform.

Miran shares Trump’s calls for interest rate cuts and has been a critic of the central bank in the past.

“Miran has been very critical of US Fed policy and would likely advocate for cuts. This makes at least two rate cuts by the end of the year much more probable,” said National Australia Bank’s Tapas Strickland.

The greenback had already been under pressure this week following the release of data last Friday showing US job creation cratered in May, June and July. With AFP

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