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Philippines
Thursday, March 28, 2024

Market declines; Jollibee tumbles

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The stock market declined Wednesday, weighed down by fears of a trade war between the world’s top two economies despite a recovery on Wall Street.

The Philippine Stock Exchange Index fell 51.05 points,or 0.6 percent, to 7,997.67 on a value turnover of nearly P7 billion. Losers edged gainers, 107 to 103, with 46 issues unchanged.

Jollibee Foods Corp., the biggest fastfood chain, slumped 3.8 percent to P285, while SM Investments Corp. of retail tycoon Henry Sy Sr. slipped 1.5 percent to P960.

Casino operator Bloomberry Resorts Corp. tumbled 4.2 percent to P13.70, while JG Summit Holdings Inc. of industrialist John Gokongwei lost 2.6 percent to P63.

Several major markets in Asia, meanwhile, closed in the red.

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Markets in Japan and Australia clung on to marginal gains but China, Hong Kong and South Korea dipped into the red, delivering a mixed picture across the region.

Tokyo opened strongly but stocks sank throughout the trading day, finishing only 0.13 percent up at 21,319.55. The broader Topix index closed with similar gains.

The Japanese market was helped by an earlier bounce in US stocks and a weaker yen which helps exporters, said Hikaru Sato, senior technical analyst at Daiwa Securities.

The dollar was trading at 106.56 yen against 106.60 yen in New York on Tuesday, rising from levels below 106 seen a day earlier.

“But buying remained limited as investors are still concerned about several uncertain elements, including a US-led trade war,” Sato told AFP.

The United States has published a list of Chinese imports worth around $50 billion that could be targeted by tariffs—a significant escalation in the confrontation with Beijing.

China responded sharply, saying it was ready to retaliate against what it described as a “unilateralistic and protectionist” move that serves neither country’s interests.

The prospect of a trade war between the US and China “continues to cast a dark shadow over global capital markets,” warned Stephen Innes, an analyst at OANDA.

China’s main market, the Shanghai Composite Index, closed down 0.15 percent to end the day at 3,131.84 points, erasing some healthy gains earlier in the session.

Leading the decliners in Asia was the Hang Seng index in Hong Kong, which was off 1.48 percent at 29,732.67 points in the afternoon.

The Asia trading day followed a volatile session on Wall Street, where US stocks finished Tuesday with a strong rally.

The Dow Jones Index closed up 1.7 percent and the broad-based S&P 500 was up 1.3 percent.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq also finished in the black, up 1.0 percent, mainly on bargain-hunting after suffering a pummelling in recent days.

Large technology companies that have been slumping all enjoyed gains, including Facebook, Google parent Alphabet and Intel.

Amazon also pushed 1.5 percent higher as investors welcomed headlines which suggested President Donald Trump did not plan to follow up a series of irate tweets with concrete action against the company. With AFP

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