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Saturday, June 29, 2024

Stocks rebound, peso declines to 58.78 a dollar on faster inflation

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Philippine stocks rebounded, while the peso fell as inflation rate quickened to 3.9 percent in May from 3.8 percent in April.

The bellwether Philippine Stock Exchange index closed at 6,441.32, up 54.90 points, or 0.86 percent, from the previous trading day, while the broader all-shares index went up by 14.65 points, or 0.43 percent, to reach 3,453.69.

The peso dropped to 58.78 against the US dollar Wednesday from 58.71 Tuesday.

Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. chief economist Michael Ricafort said while inflation rate reached 3.9 percent in May, the figure was slightly better than market estimates. This was also slower than 6.1 percent recorded in May last year.

Ricafort said the figure was also within the government’s full-year inflation rate target of 2 percent to 4 percent, which could support expectations of possible local policy rate cut in the second half of the year.

Regina Capital Development Corp. head of sales Luis Limlingan said investors ignored the uptick in headline inflation rate after the US markets ended up higher in its last trading session.

Sectoral indices ended mixed. Holding firms rose 1.78 percent, while property and services went up by 0.92 percent and 0.41 percent, respectively.

Mining and oil declined by 0.57 percent, while industrial slipped by 0.05 percent.

Meanwhile, Asian equities were mixed Wednesday as building optimism that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates before the end of the year was offset by renewed worries about the US economy.

A below-forecast read on job openings Tuesday indicated the resilient labor market was showing signs of softening a day after a big downside miss on factory activity — suggesting a long-running period of high inflation and borrowing costs was taking its toll.

Job vacancies fell far more than expected in April, to below 8.1 million, which Briefing.com said was the lowest level since 2021.

The figures come ahead of closely watched non-farm payrolls figures due Friday, which will provide a much clearer snapshot for the US central bank ahead of its policy decision next week.

Readings below forecasts have for some time been taken as a positive, because they were seen as pointing to an economy still in rude health but slowing enough to give the Fed room to start cutting rates — known as a “Goldilocks” situation.

However, some investors are getting uncomfortable.

“Recent economic reports have reinforced the notion that investors are increasingly looking beyond the ‘Goldilocks’ narrative toward something a bit more consistent with the flagging trajectory of consumption,” warned Ian Lyngen and Vail Hartman, of BMO Capital Markets.

“There is nothing to imply that the real economy is on the precipice of a recession… rather that a no-landing for the labor market appears less likely than it did during the first quarter.

“Goldilocks is edging toward the door, but has yet to leave the building.”

Still, bets on a Fed rate cut before the end of the year picked up, with some eyeing September as the lift-off point.

“The evidence is accumulating that the Fed should begin easing,” said Lazard strategist Ronald Temple.

All three main indexes on Wall Street pushed higher, and Asia largely tracked those gains in the morning but struggled in the afternoon.

Sydney, Seoul, Taipei, Manila and Wellington all enjoyed buying interest, though Hong Kong, Tokyo, Singapore, Shanghai, Bangkok and Jakarta were in the red.

Mumbai rose more than two percent after tanking Tuesday when it appeared that India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi would not win as big an election victory as expected.

Exit polls had suggested Monday he was on course for a landslide, but as votes were counted it emerged that he had lost his majority and would have to rule with a coalition.

London, Paris and Frankfurt also advanced as traders in the eurozone geared up for an expected rate cut by the European Central Bank later in the week.

Crude prices edged up after recent hefty losses as investors digest the OPEC+ alliance of major crude producers’ decision to begin winding back output cuts from October and through next year.

The decision comes as observers fret over demand for the commodity as data suggests US stockpiles are rising, while China’s economy is still struggling to get back on track owing to soft consumer activity and a battered property industry. With AFP

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