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PSEi gains for 2nd day as peso strengthens to 58.74

The Philippine Stock Exchange index, or PSEi, the local stock barometer, closed higher for a second straight trading day Wednesday following the recent appreciation of the peso against the dollar.

The PSEi advanced 48.88 points, or 0.77 percent, to close at 6,355.78, while the wider all-shares index jumped 15.96 points, or 0.45 percent, to 3,597.04.

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Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. chief economist Michael Ricafort said the index ended higher after the peso closed at 58.74 against the U.S. dollar, its strongest level in more than a month. Earlier this month, the peso hit an intraday low of 59.50.

Analysts said buying pressure increased ahead of the release of gross domestic product data. Investors also cheered low trade deficit data, which enhanced the overall macroeconomic outlook.

Among sectors, services advanced the most, up 2.55 percent, while mining and oil rose 2.33 percent. Financials and industrials also added 0.38 percent and 0.23 percent, respectively. Conversely, property dropped 0.22 percent, while holding firms slipped 0.15 percent.

Value turnover stood at P6.55 billion. Market breadth was negative as decliners outnumbered gainers 106 to 102, while 54 stocks ended unchanged.

International Container Terminal Services Inc. led index gainers, increasing 4.12 percent to P645, while Acen Corp. was the main index laggard, falling 5.10 percent to P2.79.Meanwhile, the U.S. dollar struggled to bounce back Wednesday following another selloff fueled by Donald Trump’s suggestion he was happy with the currency’s recent decline, while tech firms helped most Asian equity markets extend their rally.

Traders are also keeping an eye on the Federal Reserve’s latest meeting, hoping for some guidance on its plans for interest rates amid uncertainty over the US president’s policies following his latest tariff threats.

The greenback has retreated across the board this week following reports that the New York Fed had checked in with traders about the yen’s exchange rate, which fueled talk that US and Japanese officials were prepared to stage a joint intervention. With AFP

That led to speculation the White House was prepared to let the dollar weaken, and Trump did little to dismiss that when asked Tuesday if he was worried about the decline.

“No, I think it’s great,” he told reporters in Iowa as the unit hit its weakest level against the euro in four-and-a-half years and a two-and-half-month low against the yen. “Look at the business we’re doing. The dollar’s doing great.”

He added: “I want it to be — just seek its own level, which is the fair thing to do.”

The dollar also sank against the pound, South Korean won and Chinese yuan, with a slight bump Wednesday doing little to recover its latest losses.

Observers said unease about Trump’s latest tariff outbursts, including threats against European nations over their opposition to his Greenland grab and a warning to Canada over its trade talks with China, have also dented faith in US assets and weighed on the unit.

Meanwhile, US consumer confidence plunged to its lowest level since 2014, a survey showed, as households fret about inflation and the elevated cost of living.

Win Thin, at Bank of Nassau 1982 Ltd, said: “Foreign exchange typically is the leader in terms of showing market discomfort with a country’s policies and economic outlook, so this dollar weakness bears watching.”

Still, equity markets performed well in Asia after the S&P 500 clocked another record high in New York thanks to a surge in tech titans including Apple, Microsoft and Amazon.

That helped Seoul to be among the best performers again — hitting another all-time peak — as chipmakers Samsung and SK hynix rallied.

There were also big gains in Tokyo, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Taipei, Manila, Mumbai and Bangkok.

London and Frankfurt were flat at the open, while Paris fell.

Jakarta plunged more than eight percent — its heftiest fall in more than nine months — after index compiler MSCI called on regulators to look into ownership concerns and said it would hold off adding Indonesian stocks to its indexes or increasing their weighting.

The plunge saw market heavyweights including PT Bumi Resources and PT Petrosea lose around 15 percent.

MSCI said “investors highlighted that fundamental investability issues persist due to ongoing opacity in shareholding structures and concerns about possible coordinated trading behavior that undermines proper price formation”.

Sydney, Singapore and Wellington dipped.

Traders are keeping a close watch on earnings this week from some of Wall Street’s Magnificent Seven, with Microsoft, Meta, Tesla and Apple all reporting.

“These results will provide critical insights into the trajectory of the artificial intelligence trade,” wrote Tony Sycamore, market analyst at IG.

“After losing momentum in the final months of 2025 due to growing scrutiny over return on investment, capital expenditure and real-world constraints, the market is eager to see if the AI narrative can regain traction in 2026.

“Forward guidance will be key, alongside scrutiny of margins and capex projections.”

In company news, tech investment titan SoftBank jumped almost six percent after the Wall Street Journal reported it was in talks to pump an additional $30 billion into ChatGPT developer OpenAI.

That comes after it invested $22.5 billion last month for an 11 percent stake. With AFP

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