The Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) eked out a modest gain Monday as investors treaded carefully following the Holy Week break and ahead of key economic data from the United States.
The 30-company index inched up by 3.38 points, or 0.05 percent, to close at 6,138.00, while the broader all-shares index declined 11.68 points, or 0.32 percent, to end at 3,645.31, as selling pressure persisted in most sectors.
“Philippine shares started off tepidly as investors remain on the sidelines after the Holy Week break to gauge the price action movement of the market at the beginning of the week,” Regina Capital Development Corp. head of sales Luis Limlingan said.
The peso also climbed to 56.61 against the US dollar Monday from 56.80 on April 16.
Investors are awaiting the release of key US economic data including the S&P Global Flash PMIs, new home sales and durable goods orders.
“These indicators will provide fresh insights into economic momentum, manufacturing activity, housing demand, and consumer confidence,” said Limlingan.
Sectoral performance was mixed, with mining and oil jumping 3.16 percent and financials gaining 1.45 percent.
The rest of the indices ended in the red, with property down 0.91 percent, services lower by 0.58 percent, industrials dropping 0.60 percent and holding firms inching lower by 0.08 percent.
Total value turnover stood at P3.814 billion. Market breadth was negative with 93 advancers, 109 decliners and 51 unchanged issued.
Jenniffer B. Austria
Bank of the Philippine Islands rose 2.35 percent to P135.10 after the company reported 9-percent net income growth in the first quarter of 2025.
Meanwhile, gold prices hit a fresh record on Monday while the dollar weakened further and stocks were mixed amid worries about Donald Trump’s tariff blitz and his bubbling row with the Federal Reserve.
With several markets still closed for the Easter holiday, business was limited ahead of a week that will see the release of key data that should give an insight into the impact of the US president’s trade war.
Several nations have moved to cut a deal with Washington to stem the worst of the White House’s levies, with Japan the highest-profile economy, while US Vice President JD Vance arrived in India on Monday for talks.
South Korea’s finance and trade ministers will hold high-level trade talks in Washington this week, Seoul said.
However, China warned governments on Monday not to seek an agreement that compromised Beijing’s interests.
While the rest of the world has been slapped with a blanket 10 percent tariff, China faces levies of up to 145 percent on many products. Beijing has responded with duties of 125 percent on US goods.
“Appeasement will not bring peace, and compromise will not be respected,” a commerce ministry spokesperson said in a statement.
“To seek one’s own temporary selfish interests at the expense of others’ interests is to seek the skin of a tiger,” Beijing said.
That approach, it warned, “will ultimately fail on both ends and harm others”.
Top Chinese diplomat Wang Yi also called on Monday for “openness, inclusiveness, mutual benefit and win-win” and condemned “any form of unilateralism and trade protectionism”.
The remarks come after Trump said on Thursday the United States was in talks with China on tariffs, adding that he was confident the world’s largest economies could make a deal to end the bitter trade war.
“Yeah, we’re talking to China,” he said. “I would say they have reached out a number of times.”
“I think we’re going to make a very good deal with China.”
Still, Washington this month closed a duty-free exemption for small parcels from China, a move that appeared to be designed to target low-cost online retailers such as Temu and Shein.
Global shipping giant DHL said it will “temporarily” suspend from Monday the delivery of parcels worth more than $800 from businesses to individuals in the United States.
Concerns about the global economic outlook pushed safe haven assets higher, with gold hitting a record high above $3,393.
The precious metal was also helped by a weaker dollar, which has also been hit by worries about Trump’s standoff with Fed boss Jerome Powell.
The president raised worries about the bank’s independence when he lashed Powell last week for warning that the tariffs were “highly likely to generate at least a temporary rise in inflation” and suggested interest rate cuts were unlikely.
Trump later called on him to slash borrowing costs and added: “If I want him out, he’ll be out of there real fast, believe me.”
Powell has said he had no plans to step down early, adding that he considered the bank’s independence over monetary policy to be a “matter of law”.
The dollar fell against its main peers, with the yen and euro among the best performers.
French Finance Minister Eric Lombard said: “Donald Trump has hurt the credibility of the dollar with his aggressive moves on tariffs — for a long time.”
If Powell is pushed out “this credibility will be harmed even more, with developments in the bond market”, he told La Tribune Dimanche newspaper.
Chicago Fed boss Austan Goolsbee told CBS’s Face The Nation on Sunday: “There’s virtual unanimity among economists that monetary independence from political interference — that the Fed or any central bank be able to do the job that it needs to do — is really important.”
Stocks had a mixed start to the week, with Tokyo weighed by the stronger yen while Taipei, Jakarta and Bangkok were also in negative territory. Shanghai, Seoul, Singapore, Mumbai and Manila rose.
Oil prices dropped on demand fears as worries about the global economy swirl.
Traders are keeping tabs on the release of key April manufacturing data around the world this week, hoping for an idea about the early impact of Trump’s tariffs.
“One thing that’s absolutely clear — and no longer debatable — is that the reputational hit to the US brand is real, and it’s not fading quietly into the next news cycle,” said Stephen Innes at SPI Asset Management.
“It’s sticking. Investors, allies, and even central banks are starting to bake in the idea that American policymaking, both fiscal and monetary, is now a geopolitical variable — not a given,” he added. With AFP