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Saturday, November 23, 2024

Stocks end three-day rise; Converge leads advancers

Stocks fell Wednesday to end a three-day advance as another positive US inflation report that fanned hopes of a slowdown in the Fed’s rate hike campaign was offset by fresh geopolitical concerns over Ukraine and profit-taking.

The PSE index, the 30-company benchmark of the Philippine Stock Exchange, fell 26 points, or 0.4 percent, to close at 6,392.09 as three of the six subsectors ended in the red.

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The broader all-share index also lost 3 points, or 0.1 percent, to settle at 3,376.30 on a value turnover of P7.2 billion. Gainers outnumbered losers, 92 to 82, while 49 issues were unchanged.

Four of the 10 most active stocks ended in the green, led by Converge ICT Inc. which jumped 8.2 percent to P15.08 and International Container Terminal Services Inc. which rose 2 percent to P187.50. Ayala Land Inc. was up 1.8 percent to P27.809.

Meanwhile, most Asian markets also traded lower Wednesday. World markets have rallied since last week after data showed US consumer prices rose much less than expected in October, suggesting months of monetary tightening by the Federal Reserve was kicking in.

The news was followed Tuesday by a below-forecast reading on wholesale prices, providing extra room for the central bank to take its foot off the pedal when raising borrowing costs and possibly easing pressure on the economy.

Still, central banks’ tough battle against inflation was highlighted Wednesday by data showing UK prices rose more than 11 percent last month, a fresh four-decade high.

The optimism had been further enhanced by China’s pledge to provide much-needed support to the country’s beleaguered property sector as well as ease some of the strict Covid-19 restrictions that have played a major role in dragging the economy down.

However, the positive mood that had flowed through markets was dealt a blow after Poland said a missile—“most probably Russian-made”—had struck a village in the country’s east, killing two people.

Warsaw put its military on alert and US President Joe Biden and other Western leaders met in an “emergency roundtable” Wednesday on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Indonesia.

The news sparked fears that if it was proved to be an attack on Poland, a NATO member, the nine-month war in Ukraine could escalate.

Biden told reporters that allies would support Poland in probing “exactly what happened” but that preliminary information showed it was probably not fired “from Russia”.

And France urged “utmost caution” on the origin of the missile.

The comments helped ease concern on trading floors, though profit-taking after three days of healthy gains weighed on buying sentiment.

Tokyo, Singapore and Mumbai edged up but Hong Kong fell after surging about 14 percent over the previous three days.

There were also losses in Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Wellington, Manila, Bangkok, Jakarta and Taipei.

“Even if the missiles that crossed the Polish border were indeed deemed Russian and not Ukrainian anti-missile interceptors, the case would fall short of triggering an escalation at this point,” said SPI Asset Management’s Stephen Innes

“Hence the markets are deferring to a wartime mistake, believing this to be a case of misfire.”

Still, he added: “While the market is not in full risk-off mode while deferring to a wartime mistake, the risk of a NATO-Russia clash is growing and real.”

On currency markets, the dollar also saw sharp swings against its peers in reaction to the news out of Poland, while oil slipped after initially spiking on reports of the strike. With AFP

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