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Thursday, September 26, 2024

PSEi falls below 6,400 on lingering high rate concerns

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The country’s main composite index plunged deeper Thursday, falling below the support level of 6,400, on continued concerns about lingering high interest rates.

The Philippine Stock Exchange index shed 39.66 points, or 0.62 percent, to close at 6,371.75, while the broader all-shares index dropped 26.17 points, or 0.76 percent, to end at 3,425.57.

“The current environment is becoming a concern, a far departure from the optimism we saw at the start of the year,” veteran stockbroker Jonathan Ravelas said.

“Not only yields are rising again in the US but they are moving higher in other parts of the world. That is not good news for any stock market,” he said.

US stocks also tumbled as higher Treasury yields fueled pessimism.

Regina Capital Development Corp. head of sales Luis Limlingan said while the odds for US Federal Reserve to raise rates are currently low, it is not completely off the table.

Value turnover remained moderate at P5.06 billion.

Among the sectoral indices, only the holding firms ended in green, rising by 0.38 percent.

Property declined by 1.49 percent followed by industrial and services, which dropped by 1.27 percent and 1.14 percent, respectively.

Asian markets fell Thursday, with traders tracking losses on Wall Street fueled by concerns over rising Treasury yields and fading hopes for US interest rate cuts.

Jenniffer B. Austria with AFP

The losses in equities extended a more than week-long sell-off that came on the back of forecast-beating data and warnings from Federal Reserve officials that they were in no rush to lower borrowing costs.

A second straight day of weak demand in a Treasuries auction forced yields — a proxy for interest rates — to extend a recent advance.

That put upward pressure on the dollar, though it retreated against the yen as speculation swirled that the Bank of Japan would hike interest rates again, having done so in March for the first time in 17 years.

Traders are now focusing on the release Friday of the crucial personal consumption expenditures (PCE) index, the Fed’s preferred gauge of inflation, hoping for signs that prices are being brought under control enough to allow officials to ease monetary policy.

The central bank’s “Beige Book” survey of the world’s top economy suggested the outlook had become gloomier, with discretionary spending cooling and consumers more sensitive to costs in recent weeks.

It also said job gains were largely modest to negligible.

The report provided a little hope that the Fed’s tight policy stance was having some effect, though with inflation still stubbornly well above its two percent target, rate-cut hopes remain dimmed.

Still, Cantor Fitzgerald’s Eric Johnston said the latest spike in Treasury yields might not be entirely down to sticky prices.

“Bond yields may be moving higher mainly due to supply of bonds and the continued massive deficit — and not because of a concern around inflation or strong economy,” he said.

All three main indexes retreated in New York, with the Dow off more than one percent.

Asia followed the US lead.

Tokyo, Hong Kong, Seoul, Wellington and Taipei all gave up more than one percent, while there were also losses in Shanghai, Singapore, Manila, Mumbai, Bangkok and Jakarta.

Sydney joined them, with mining giant BHP shedding around 1.7 percent after giving up on its proposed $49-billion takeover of British rival Anglo American, which would have been one of the biggest in the industry and created a copper titan.

London was flat, Paris rose, and Frankfurt fell.

Hopes for a softening of the Fed’s monetary policy have been weighed by comments from a succession of decision-makers saying they wanted to see more data convincing them that inflation was on its way back to two percent.

The latest was Atlanta Fed chief Raphael Bostic, who saw a cut potentially coming at the end of the year, though many of the indicators he closely watched were moving in the right direction.

“My outlook is that if things go according to what I expect — inflation goes slowly, the labor market slowly and orderly moves back into a sort of a weaker stance, but a stable-growth stance,” he told a conference.

“I’m looking at the end of the year, the fourth quarter, as the time where we might actually think about and be prepared to reduce rates.”

On currency markets the yen strengthened to less than 157 per dollar, having sunk Wednesday on the fading US rate hopes.

The Japanese unit’s ascent came as analysts debated the possibility the country’s central bank will lift borrowing costs again as inflation remains elevated. With AFP

The country’s main composite index plunged deeper Thursday, falling below the support level of 6,400, on continued concerns about lingering high interest rates.

The Philippine Stock Exchange index shed 39.66 points, or 0.62 percent, to close at 6,371.75, while the broader all-shares index dropped 26.17 points, or 0.76 percent, to end at 3,425.57.

“The current environment is becoming a concern, a far departure from the optimism we saw at the start of the year,” veteran stockbroker Jonathan Ravelas said.

“Not only yields are rising again in the US but they are moving higher in other parts of the world. That is not good news for any stock market,” he said.

US stocks also tumbled as higher Treasury yields fueled pessimism.

Regina Capital Development Corp. head of sales Luis Limlingan said while the odds for US Federal Reserve to raise rates are currently low, it is not completely off the table.

Value turnover remained moderate at P5.06 billion.

Among the sectoral indices, only the holding firms ended in green, rising by 0.38 percent.

Property declined by 1.49 percent followed by industrial and services, which dropped by 1.27 percent and 1.14 percent, respectively.

Asian markets fell Thursday, with traders tracking losses on Wall Street fueled by concerns over rising Treasury yields and fading hopes for US interest rate cuts.

The losses in equities extended a more than week-long sell-off that came on the back of forecast-beating data and warnings from Federal Reserve officials that they were in no rush to lower borrowing costs.

A second straight day of weak demand in a Treasuries auction forced yields — a proxy for interest rates — to extend a recent advance.

That put upward pressure on the dollar, though it retreated against the yen as speculation swirled that the Bank of Japan would hike interest rates again, having done so in March for the first time in 17 years.

Traders are now focusing on the release Friday of the crucial personal consumption expenditures (PCE) index, the Fed’s preferred gauge of inflation, hoping for signs that prices are being brought under control enough to allow officials to ease monetary policy.

The central bank’s “Beige Book” survey of the world’s top economy suggested the outlook had become gloomier, with discretionary spending cooling and consumers more sensitive to costs in recent weeks.

It also said job gains were largely modest to negligible.

The report provided a little hope that the Fed’s tight policy stance was having some effect, though with inflation still stubbornly well above its two percent target, rate-cut hopes remain dimmed.

Still, Cantor Fitzgerald’s Eric Johnston said the latest spike in Treasury yields might not be entirely down to sticky prices.

“Bond yields may be moving higher mainly due to supply of bonds and the continued massive deficit — and not because of a concern around inflation or strong economy,” he said.

All three main indexes retreated in New York, with the Dow off more than one percent.

Asia followed the US lead.

Tokyo, Hong Kong, Seoul, Wellington and Taipei all gave up more than one percent, while there were also losses in Shanghai, Singapore, Manila, Mumbai, Bangkok and Jakarta.

Sydney joined them, with mining giant BHP shedding around 1.7 percent after giving up on its proposed $49-billion takeover of British rival Anglo American, which would have been one of the biggest in the industry and created a copper titan.

London was flat, Paris rose, and Frankfurt fell.

Hopes for a softening of the Fed’s monetary policy have been weighed by comments from a succession of decision-makers saying they wanted to see more data convincing them that inflation was on its way back to two percent.

The latest was Atlanta Fed chief Raphael Bostic, who saw a cut potentially coming at the end of the year, though many of the indicators he closely watched were moving in the right direction.

“My outlook is that if things go according to what I expect — inflation goes slowly, the labor market slowly and orderly moves back into a sort of a weaker stance, but a stable-growth stance,” he told a conference.

“I’m looking at the end of the year, the fourth quarter, as the time where we might actually think about and be prepared to reduce rates.”

On currency markets the yen strengthened to less than 157 per dollar, having sunk Wednesday on the fading US rate hopes.

The Japanese unit’s ascent came as analysts debated the possibility the country’s central bank will lift borrowing costs again as inflation remains elevated. With AFP

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