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Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Stocks drop; SM Prime, Consunji issues decline

Share prices sank Thursday along with the rest of Asia on fears over rising inflation and pressure on central banks to tighten monetary policy.

The Philippine Stock Exchange Index slumped 72.42 points, or 1 percent, to 7,157.73 on a value turnover of P7.2 billion. Losers beat gainers, 121 to 85, with 41 issues unchanged.

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SM Prime Holdings Inc. of the Sy Group fell 3.7 percent to P33.70, while conglomerate Ayala Corp. of the Ayala Group dropped 3.3 percent to P850.

Semirara Mining and Power Corp. of the Consunji Group, the biggest coal miner, declined 7.1 percent to P26.05, while parent DMCI Holdings Inc. decreased 6.1 percent to P8.22.

The rest of Asian markets fell as  investors contemplate the end of the cheap-cash era, while spiking COVID-19 infections act as a reminder that the pandemic is far from over.

Ongoing worries about China’s vast property sector and the future of giant developer Evergrande were also in view ahead of a payment deadline, while uncertainty over Joe Biden’s social spending plan was also keeping a lid on sentiment.

However, a string of healthy corporate earnings reports has provided a crucial boost to trading floors, helping push markets to multi-year or record highs this week, while Apple and Amazon are due to report later in the day.

Initial optimism that the global economic recovery would bound well into next year has petered out in recent months as dealers assess the impact of soaring inflation, with prices rising at rates not seen for decades in some countries owing to supply chain snarls and rocketing demand.

That has led several central banks to lift interest rates sooner than they had hoped or withdraw their easy-money policies to prevent inflation from running out of control.

The Bank of Canada on Wednesday said it would end its vast bond-buying program, and flagged an interest rate hike earlier in 2022 than previously envisaged, while Brazil also raised rates.

The moves come after finance chiefs in South Korea and New Zealand raised borrowing costs, and as the Bank of England and Reserve Bank of Australia prepare for lift-off.

Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve is expected to start tapering its vast bond-buying program by the end of the year and hike rates in the middle of 2022.

It is hoped the European Central Bank’s policy meeting later in the day will provide clarity on its own plans, though expectations are for it to stand pat, while the Bank of Japan held its own easing policy in place Thursday.

After a broadly negative lead from Wall Street, Asia also dropped, with Hong Kong, Shanghai, Tokyo, Seoul, Sydney, Singapore, Wellington, Mumbai, Taipei and Jakarta all selling off.

In Washington, Biden was battling with Democratic leaders to resolve disputes over their giant social spending plan, though some lawmakers warned a deal did not appear to be imminent.

While House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the spending plan was “closer to passing,” a key centrist senator later dismissed as a non-starter a new tax on billionaires to help pay for the $1.5 trillion-$2 trillion package.

Oil prices briefly fell more than two percent to extend Wednesday’s sharp drops following data showing a big gain in US inventories of crude and petrol. The figures eased concerns about a supply crunch and surging demand. With AFP

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