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Friday, November 15, 2024

Stocks rally; BPI leads gainers

The stock market rallied Friday on selective bargain hunting and on news that the Philippines successfully sold $2 billion in 10-year bonds amid strong demand from international investors.

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The Philippine Stock Exchange Index rose 95.18 points, or 1.1 percent, to P8,915.92 on a value turnover of P10.02 billion. Losers, however, beat gainers, 127 to 105, with 54 issues unchanged.

Bank of the Philippine Islands, the third-biggest lender in terms of assets, surged 7.4 percent to P123.50, while Megaworld Corp., the largest lessor of office spaces, gained 3.6 percent to P5.13.

GT Capital Holdings Inc. of tycoon George Ty climbed 6.3 percent to P1,392, while Wilcon Depot Inc. advanced 4.4 percent to P9.03.

The rest of Asian markets, meanwhile, mostly rose Friday after another positive week across trading floors but investors’ appetite was being tested by profit-taking and worries about a possible US government shutdown.

Wall Street came off record highs to end lower as Washington lawmakers bicker over a federal funding deal, which must be passed by midnight on Friday US time.

The House of Representatives passed a bill on Thursday but there are increasing concerns the Republicans do not have enough votes in the Senate to send the budget to President Donald Trump’s desk.

Failure to find agreement—with Democrats looking for concessions on immigration—would see various parts of government shut down. Trump told reporters a closure “could very well” happen.

An extended shutdown in 2013 hit the US economy and led to a downgrade of its sovereign debt rating, though analysts are not too concerned at the moment.

“As usual, the focus is back on Washington,” said Stephen Innes, head of Asia-Pacific trading at OANDA.

“Of course, a government closure will have minimal impact on the US economy and the sun is sure to rise on Monday, but the markets will temporarily wobble in predictable unthinking fashion if lawmakers fail to table a last-minute agreement.”

With an eye on developments in Washington, Hong Kong, which has broken to record levels this week, was 0.1 percent lower, while Sydney was down 0.2 percent. Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur and Jakarta all fell.

However, Shanghai climbed 0.4 percent a day after data showed China’s economy grew a forecast-busting 6.9 percent last year, which was much better than the government’s target and the first annual increase since 2010.

Tokyo ended 0.2 percent higher, while Seoul was 0.2 percent up and Singapore added 0.5 percent. There were also gains in Taipei and Wellington.

Unease over Washington’s uncertainty is adding to pressure on the dollar, which is down against its major peers as well as most high-yielding currencies.

While the US economy is purring, the greenback has fallen in recent weeks on expectations central banks around the world—buoyed by a global pick-up—are moving towards winding back stimulus measures put in place during the financial crisis. With AFP

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