spot_img
28.8 C
Philippines
Friday, October 4, 2024

Stock market dips; DMCI, GT Capital lead decliners

Stocks retreated for a second day Wednesday along with the rest of Asia,  tracking the end of a record streak on Wall Street as concerns lingered over the economic recovery and China’s widening crackdown on tech firms.

The Philippine Stock Exchange Index slipped 49.43 points, or 0.7 percent, to 6,943 on a value turnover of P4.5 billion. Losers overwhelmed gainers, 127 to 59, with 57 issues unchanged.

- Advertisement -

DMCI Holdings Inc. of the Consunji Group dropped 4 percent to P6.42, while GT Capital Holdings Inc of the Ty Group fell 2.4 percent to P607.

Security Bank Corp., the eighth biggest lender in terms of assets, declined 2.2 percent to P119.20, while conglomerate Ayala Corp. of the Ayala Group decreased 1.7 percent to P798.

The rest of Asian markets were broadly down on Wednesday as oil prices briefly spiked Tuesday before falling after the latest talks by OPEC+ crude producers fell apart, ending negotiations on a proposal to boost crude supply.

US oil futures approached a seven-year peak after the talks were called off but investors quickly shifted course, selling both Brent and West Texas Intermediate futures contracts over concerns about the possible disintegration of efforts to rein in supply.

The trend in oil prices has also fanned fears about inflation, with investors worried that an overheating economy may force central banks such as the US Federal Reserve to hike interest rates earlier than thought.

“There are still concerns about what happens with the Fed tapering and there’s lack of traction on the fiscal stimulus side,” Keith Lerner, chief market strategist at Truist Advisory Services, told Bloomberg News.

“Those uncertainties are just injecting some volatility and then you throw in concerns about peak economic growth. That just feeds into the concerns about—is the best growth behind us?”

Wall Street was down Tuesday, with the Dow and the S&P 500 retreating from records and Treasury yields dropping following the release of a worse-than-expected economic indicator for the US services sector in June.

Those losses carried over to Tokyo on Wednesday, while Seoul was also down.

Sydney, however, rose despite concerns over coronavirus outbreaks fueled by the Delta variant and an extended lockdown in Australia’s biggest city.

Shanghai closed higher but Hong Kong fell, with concerns looming about China’s crackdown on tech giants following the removal of the ride-hailing firm Didi Chuxing from app stores.

Didi shares plunged nearly 20 percent on Wall Street Tuesday after Chinese authorities raised national security concerns over the popular app, hinting at an expansion of oversight over tech firms after years of light-touch regulation.  

“You could say that the last decade has been regulatory-free for the Chinese companies,” said Winston Ma, an adjunct professor at New York University. “Now they are entering into a new era.”

Shares in Chinese electric car maker Xpeng—already listed on the Nasdaq—debuted in Hong Kong Wednesday under the cloud of that crackdown, following a $1.8 billion IPO. With AFP

LATEST NEWS

Popular Articles