Local shares rose further Friday as investors welcomed the 25-basis-point rate cut by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas and expectations of another reduction in the second half of the year.
The benchmark Philippine Stock Exchange index ended the week at 6,465.12, up 57.97 points, or 0.90 percent. The broader all shares index closed at 3,570.68, up 23.36 points, or 0.66 percent.
“The PSEi advanced 0.9 percent for a third straight trading session, bucking regional softness as foreigners reversed early selling and turned strong net buyers into the close,” AB Capital Securities said.
Philstocks Financial Inc. research head Japhet Tantiangco said the market’s jump was driven by the BSP’s latest policy rate cut.
All sectors rose, led by financials, which advanced 1.68 percent, and mining and oil, which went up 1.1 percent. Value turnover was tepid at P5.37 billion. Advancers edged out decliners, 107 to 93.
Foreign buying amounted to P351.89 million.
Puregold Price Club Inc. was the day’s top index gainer, climbing 3.85 percent to P40.50, while ACEN Corp. was at the bottom, declining 3.23 percent to P2.70.
The peso depreciated to 58.15 against the U.S. dollar Friday from 57.996 on Thursday.
Meanwhile, Asian equities were mixed and oil prices rose on Friday after Donald Trump ratcheted up Middle East tensions by hinting at possible military strikes on Iran if it did not make a “meaningful deal” in nuclear talks.
The remarks fanned geopolitical concerns and cast a pall over a tentative rebound in markets following an AI-fueled sell-off this month.
Traders are also looking ahead to the release of US data later in the day that will provide a fresh snapshot of the world’s top economy.
A slew of forecast-beating figures over the past few days has lifted optimism about the outlook but tempered expectations for more interest rate cuts.
The US president told the inaugural meeting of the “Board of Peace”, his initiative to stabilize Gaza, that Tehran should make a deal.
“It’s proven to be over the years not easy to make a meaningful deal with Iran. We have to make a meaningful deal otherwise bad things happen,” he said, as he deployed warships, fighter jets and other military hardware to the region.
He warned that Washington “may have to take it a step further” without any agreement. “You’re going to be finding out over the next probably 10 days.”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned earlier: “If the ayatollahs make a mistake and attack us, they will receive a response they cannot even imagine.”
The threats come days after the United States and Iran held a second round of Omani-mediated talks in Geneva as Washington looks to prevent the country from getting a nuclear bomb, which Tehran says it is not pursuing.
The prospect of a conflict in the crude-rich Middle East has sent oil prices surging this week, and they extended the gains Friday to sit at their highest levels since June.
On stock markets, Hong Kong fell as it reopened from a three-day break, while Tokyo, Sydney, Wellington and Bangkok were also down. However, Seoul continued to rally to a fresh record thanks to more tech buying, with Singapore, Manila and Mumbai also up.
London, Paris and Frankfurt opened higher.
City Index market analyst Matt Simpson said a strike was not certain.
“At its core, this looks like pressure and leverage rather than a prelude to invasion,” he wrote.
“The US is pairing military readiness with stalled nuclear negotiations, signaling it has credible strike options if talks fail. That doesn’t automatically translate into boots on the ground or a regime-change campaign.
“While military assets dominate headlines, diplomacy is still in motion. The fact talks are continuing at all suggests both sides are still probing for a diplomatic off-ramp before tensions harden further.”
Shares in Jakarta slipped even after Trump and Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto reached a trade deal after months of wrangling.
The accord sets a 19 percent tariff on Indonesian goods entering the United States. The Southeast Asian country had been threatened with a potential 32 percent levy before the pact.
Jakarta also agreed to $33 billion in purchases of US energy commodities, agricultural products and aviation-related goods, including Boeing aircraft. With AFP







