Wednesday, May 13, 2026
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PSEi slips on profit taking after gains; Peso rebounds

Local stocks declined Friday, reflecting profit taking after gains during the previous session.

The benchmark Philippine Stock Exchange index declined by 22.86 points, or 0.35 percent, to close at 6,464.67, while the broader all shares index slipped 8.37 points, or 0.23 percent, to 3,652.33.

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Luis Limlingan, head of sales at Regina Capital Development Corp., said market sentiment was weighed down by the peso’s continued depreciation against the dollar. The peso closed at 59.35 to the U.S. dollar on Friday, compared with 59.46 on Thursday.

“This was further pressured by remittances falling to their lowest level in six months,” Limlingan added.

Sectors were mixed, with banks leading the gainers, up 0.52 percent, while holding firms increased by 0.07 percent. On the other hand, services declined by 1.74 percent, while mining and oil dropped 1.69 percent.Trading remained strong with net value turnover at P6.81 billion, higher than the year-to-date average of P6.21 billion. Foreign investors were net buyers with inflows of P337.05 million.

Semirara Mining and Power Corp. was the day’s top index gainer, rising 2.18 percent to P30.50. DigiPlus Interactive Corp. was the main index laggard, falling 3.66 percent to P15.80.

Asian markets were mixed Friday after Taiwanese chipmaking titan TSMC posted a big profit jump, bolstering confidence in the artificial intelligence sector as the United States struck a trade deal with the self-ruled island.

It came after Wall Street rebounded following two down days, while oil steadied as President Donald Trump stepped back from military action in Iran.

Taipei stocks surged two percent after the government agreed with Washington to boost Taiwanese chipmaking investments in the United States, which will cut tariffs.

Taiwan will remain the world’s “most important” producer of the advanced chips that power AI tools, the island’s Economic Affairs Minister Kung Ming-hsin said. AFP

Some market-watchers fear the bubble of excitement around AI, which has pushed global markets to record highs, could burst and cause a stock rout.But TSMC, the world’s biggest contract maker of chips, announced Thursday a forecast-busting net profit for the fourth quarter — seen as a sign of sustained global demand for AI technology.

The company’s shares jumped 4.4 percent on Wall Street, and rose three percent Friday in Taipei.

Analyst Gavin Friend said TSMC’s strong annual capital expenditure forecast in particular would reassure those concerned over how long the AI boom can last.

“Increasingly, investors have been questioning the extent of the capex drive into data centers,” he told the National Australia Bank’s Morning Call podcast.

“I think the most important thing — and they (TSMC) pretty much exceeded on everything — was the upbeat outlook on things like capex, expected to be significantly higher over the next three years,” he said.”That’s given AI and tech stocks a much-needed shot in the arm.”- Oil steady –

The news spurred US markets, with the tech-rich Nasdaq piling on more than one percent early in the session behind large gains among leading chip firms.

But later in the day there was “kind of a roll-back in the megacap stock and semiconductors”, said Briefing.com analyst Patrick O’Hare.

This weakening came after US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick indicated that semiconductor companies that do not build in the United States could face 100 percent tariffs.

In Asia, traders were watching Tokyo ahead of a week that brings a Bank of Japan policy decision and Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s expected snap election announcement.

The yen has softened against the dollar on reports that the Bank of Japan will keep its monetary policy unchanged, said Kyle Rodda, senior market analyst at Capital.com.

That “adds to downside pressures on the currency, with a looming election, called to gain a mandate for very expansionary fiscal policy, also a critical headwind”, Rodda said.

Traders are alert to the possibility of a government intervention to prop up the yen’s value, Rodda added.

Tokyo, Shanghai and Hong Kong all closed 0.3 percent down.

Sydney, Wellington, Mumbai, Jakarta, Bangkok and Singapore were all up, and tech highflier Seoul gained 0.9 percent. Manila and Kuala Lumpur posted losses.

London, Paris and Frankfurt opened in the red.

Oil prices continued to steady as Washington distanced itself from military intervention in Iran.

The United States on Thursday said Iran halted 800 executions of protesters under pressure from Trump, after Gulf allies appeared to pull him back from military action over Tehran’s deadly crackdown on demonstrations. With AFP

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