Saturday, December 13, 2025
Today's Print

Local shares trade sideways as investors await catalysts

Local shares continued to trade sideways Friday as investors awaited more catalysts that could push the market upward.

At the end of the trading week, the 30-company Philippine Stock Exchange index closed at 6,089.53, up by 4.14 points, or 0.07 percent.

- Advertisement -

The broader all shares index ended at 3,665.08, lower by 7.12 points, or 0.19 percent.

Meanwhile, the peso declined slightly to 58.16 to the U.S. dollar Friday from 58.125 Thursday.

While the market has been trading in a narrow band, the PSEi still managed to close above the 6,000 level, indicating resilience.

However, sideways trading suggests investor cautiousness amid uncertainties in the economy.

Regina Capital Development Corp. head of sales Luis Limlingan said mixed sentiment over the second-quarter earnings results also kept the index moving sideways.

Wall Street, on the other hand, ended lower overnight due to renewed concerns over the health of regional banks. Investors also stayed cautious due to U.S.-China trade tensions.

Sectors ended mostly in negative territory, led by property, which declined by 1.09 percent.

Services and financials, on the other hand, rose 0.37 percent and 0.10 percent, respectively.

Value turnover was tepid at P4.01 billion.

The index closed with 109 decliners versus 83 gainers while 56 stocks remained unchanged.

Asian and European stocks tracked losses on Wall Street on Friday amid fresh credit market fears that compounded worries about trade tensions, a possible tech bubble and the US government shutdown.

After a months-long run-up that has seen some indexes hit multiple records, investors have been sent reeling this week since US President Donald Trump stoked his tariff standoff with China on Friday, sparking tit-for-tat salvos that have broken the calm.

Investors have been nervously watching the US banking sector since parts company First Brands and subprime lender Tricolor filed for bankruptcy in September, with the former owing billions to lenders.

The announcement was followed this week by news that Zions Bancorp had a $50 million charge-off tied to commercial loans from its California arm, while Western Alliance said a borrower failed to deliver the promised collateral.

The news sent mid-sized banking shares tumbling and fanned out to the rest of Wall Street, with the all three main indexes down.

The VIX Volatility index — a closely watched benchmark of investor anxiety — hit its highest level since May, while safe-haven gold set another record of $4,379.93. Silver also hit a new peak.

Thursday’s developments dealt another blow to the optimism that had pushed markets higher this year, with investors already fretting that valuations — particularly among tech firms — are overdone and possibly in an AI-fueled bubble that could soon pop.

“The volatility in regional banks, combined with the recent collapse of subprime lender Tricolor Holdings, has investors questioning the broader health of US credit markets,” said National Australia Bank’s Rodrigo Catril.

The losses in New York were matched in Asia, where Hong Kong tanked 2.5 percent and Shanghai two percent. Tokyo and Taipei each lost more than one percent while Singapore, Sydney, Wellington, Bangkok and Manila were also in the red.

London, Paris and Frankfurt fell between one and 2.3 percent.

Investors were also still on tenterhooks as Washington and Beijing exchanged salvos this week on trade and shipping after Trump’s warning Friday that he would hit China with 100 percent tariffs over its rare earth export controls.

However, Pepperstone’s Michael Brown was upbeat about the outlook on that front.

“Conviction remains lacking, as the latest round of Trump tariff threats continues to hang over markets like the ‘Sword of Damocles’,” he wrote in a commentary.

“It must be said that there’s not been much by way of new info on that front, though my working assumption remains that the latest round of tariff threats are a negotiating gambit, and that tensions will indeed de-escalate in relatively short order.”

Lawmakers in Washington are still no closer to ending a shutdown that has caused the closure of government departments and delayed the release of key data used by the Federal Reserve to decide on policy.

Still, traders have been given some support by expectations the central bank will cut interest rates at least once more this year, though even that was based on a string of reports showing the US jobs market deteriorating.

Crude prices extended losses on worries about China-US tensions, with selling also coming from news that Trump will meet Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin to discuss ending the conflict in Ukraine. — With AFP

- Advertisement -

Leave a review

RECENT STORIES

spot_imgspot_imgspot_imgspot_img
spot_img
spot_imgspot_imgspot_img
Popular Categories
- Advertisement -spot_img