Wednesday, May 20, 2026
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PSEi hits highest level since January 2024

The Philippine stock market continued to rally Wednesday, closing above the 6,600 level for its highest finish since January 2024 amid an improving global and domestic economic outlook.

The benchmark Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) surged 71.89 points, or 1.1 percent, to close at 6,619.87. The broader all-shares index added 25.91 points, or 0.72 percent, to end at 3,640.38.

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The peso also strengthened, closing Wednesday at 57.51 to the U.S. dollar, up from 57.755 on Tuesday.

Analysts noted that risk appetite shifted after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that President Donald Trump’s reciprocal tariffs were unconstitutional. Investors also shrugged off geopolitical tensions.

“The local stock market rallied further as investors continue to anticipate Q4/FY 2025 corporate results with optimism,” said Japhet Tantiangco, research head at Philstocks Financial Inc. “Investors were also relieved as the U.S. implemented a global tariff at 10 percent, lower than President Donald Trump’s prior announcement of 15 percent.”

Tantiangco added that investors cheered the continued improvement of the peso.

Sectors closed mixed, with services leading the gains at 4.25 percent. The property sector continued to decline, however, falling 0.64 percent.

Trading was robust as value turnover reached P8.53 billion on strong foreign participation. Foreigners were net buyers, with net inflows totaling P1.85 billion.

Semirara Mining and Power Corp. was the day’s top index gainer, jumping 6.12 percent to P28.20 as company officers bought back shares following a recent steep decline. JG Summit Holdings Inc. was the worst performer, declining 2.57 percent to P30.30.

Stock markets in Seoul and Tokyo surged to record highs as tech firms led an Asia-wide rally Wednesday following a rebound in their counterparts on Wall Street.

Investors built on a broadly healthy week in the region as they piled onto the artificial intelligence bandwagon amid a shift from New York, where there is growing concern about elevated valuations as well as US political and economic uncertainty.

They were also keeping an eye on President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address, which comes after his tariff policy was dealt a body blow by the Supreme Court on Friday and as he considers strikes on Iran. With AFP

Wall Street’s tech titans including Magnificent Seven stalwarts have struggled in 2026 to match the past two years’ eye-watering performance, with questions being asked about the vast sums they have invested in AI and when they will see returns.

Fresh worries about the recent release of tools that could hammer software firms have compounded the problems.

The latest blow came from a report Sunday by Citrini Research that used possible scenarios set in the future showing parts of the global economy that could be at risk from new tools, such as credit card and food delivery firms.

But a presentation by AI company Anthropic emphazising the compatibility of its technology with existing programs tempered some fears, analysts said.

An announcement that Facebook parent Meta had reached an agreement to buy millions of chips from processor-maker AMD also lifted optimism.

Focus is now on the release of earnings from chip behemoth Nvidia later in the day, with analysts saying they could have an outsized impact on markets.

But Matt Weller at City Index warned: “Put simply, ‘meeting’ earnings expectations is unlikely to be enough to drive the stock higher, especially if conservative guidance reinforces some traders’ fears that demand for AI (capital expenditure) may be downshifting.”

A rally on all three main bourses on Wall Street provided a healthy lead for Asia, which has also enjoyed a lift from the Supreme Court’s tariff announcement.

Seoul’s Kospi topped 6,000 points for the first time, led once again by chip titans Samsung and SK hynix. The index has surged more than 40 percent this year, having rallied 76 percent in 2025.

Tokyo piled on more than one percent to also hit a new peak, with tech firms Advantest and Tokyo Electron among the best performers.

Taipei’s two percent gains were supported by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company.

Hong Kong, Shanghai, Sydney, Mumbai and Bangkok were also higher, though Singapore, Wellington and Jakarta slipped.

London, Paris and Frankfurt were also in the red.

The yen was steady against the dollar after sinking Tuesday on media reports that Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi last week told Bank of Japan boss Kazuo Ueda of her concern about hiking interest rates further.

The Mainichi newspaper said she had taken a “tougher stance” than in their November meeting.

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