Philippine stocks started the trading week in the red largely as investors took profits after previous week’s rally.
The 30-company Philippine Stock Exchange index declined by 13.14 points, or 0.20 percent, to close at 6,398.77, while the broader all-shares index dipped 7.19 points, or 0.21 percent, to settle at 3,479.47.
“Philippine shares started the second half of 2024 softly as investors brace themselves for a new batch of economic data,” Regina Capital Development Corp. head of sales Luis Limlingan said.
Limlingan said investors would await the release of US manufacturing data, the Federal Open Market Committee meeting minutes and other key economic data
Investors will monitor the release of June inflation rate data slated on Friday.
Among the six sectoral indices, only financials managed to end in the green, rising by 0.12 percent.
Holding firms declined 0.56 percent, followed by service which dropped 0.47 percent and mining and oil by 0.24 percent.
Value turnover was thin at P3.34 billion. Foreign investors were net buyers by P88.92 million.
Meanwhile, the euro rose and Paris equities surged Monday on signs France’s far right would not win enough seats for an overall majority in legislative elections.
The single currency had come under pressure in recent weeks on worries Marine Le Pen’s National Rally (RN) would storm to victory and push through big-spending policies that could put the country on a collision course with the European Union.
However, while polls suggested the party was on course to win the most seats in the 577-member National Assembly, it was unclear if it could garner enough to take full control.
President Emmanuel Macron called for a “broad” alliance against the far right in the second round, which will see run-off votes where there was no outright winner in the first round.
The euro climbed to as high as $1.0777 Monday, with some predicting it could rise further as other parties embark on horse-trading to limit the RN’s gains.
Paris’s CAC 40 rose more than two percent, while Frankfurt and London were also in the green.
“A hung parliament looks very possible,” said Neil Wilson at Finalto trading group. “This could reduce the chance of a big spending splurge, but wouldn’t exactly help sort France’s fiscal position, which is already quite fragile.”
The yen, meanwhile, held its own against the dollar after the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) index — the Federal Reserve’s preferred gauge of inflation — eased further in May.
The reading provided fresh optimism that the Fed will cut interest rates this year, while traders at the same time bet on the Bank of Japan lifting borrowing costs at its next meeting.
Traders are now looking ahead to the release of key non-farm payroll figures at the end of the week.
“The door to a September cut is wide open, but three payrolls and three (consumer price indexes) ahead for the September meeting still need to go by without giving (decision-makers) too much to be nervous about,” said Taylor Nugent at National Australia Bank.
“That’s far from guaranteed.”
Traders are keeping a close eye on developments in forex markets after Japanese officials warned they were ready to step in to support the yen if it continued to weaken. The unit is hovering just below 161 per dollar, having hit a 38-year low last week.
Equity markets in Asia mostly rose after a tepid lead Friday from Wall Street, where all three main indexes struggled to hold early gains and ended slightly lower.
Still, they are up handsomely in 2024 so far, with the S&P 500 piling on more than 14 percent.
Tokyo edged up as the BoJ’s key Tankan survey of Japan’s largest manufacturers showed business confidence rose for the first time in two quarters.
There were also gains in Shanghai, Seoul, Singapore, Taipei, Mumbai, Jakarta and Wellington, though Manila, Bangkok and Sydney edged lower.
Hong Kong was closed for a holiday.
There was little major reaction to data showing Chinese factory activity shrank for a second straight month in June, highlighting ongoing weakness in the world’s number two economy ahead of a key political gathering this month. With AFP