Philippine stocks opened the week in the green on hopes of a possible rate cut following the easing of the June inflation data.
The 30-company Philippine Stock Exchange index added 36.68 points, or 0.56 percent, to close at 6,529.43, while the broader all-shares index rose 15.43 points, or 0.44 percent, to finish at 3,524.42.
“Philippine shares continued their upward trajectory as investors brace for another week that could hints to the timing of the US Federal Reserve rate cut,” said Regina Capital Development Corp head of sales Luis Limlingan.
Investors await the US June inflation data which could provide a big clue on the US Federal Reserve’s next policy direction.
Sectoral indices ended mixed. Financials rose 2.66 percent, while industrial and mining and oil rose by 0.59 percent and 0.57 percent, respectively. Services declined by 0.50 percent, followed by holding firms which retreated 0.50 percent. Property went down 0.09 percent.
Foreign buying contributed to the market’s gain as net foreign inflow reached P143.69 million. Value turnover stood at P4.81 billion.
Meanwhile, European stock markets edged up Monday after early losses as investors digested snap French elections in which a hung parliament appeared the likeliest outcome.
In France, the left was set to emerge as the biggest group in a new parliament, beating out a resurgent far-right in a vote called by President Emmanuel Macron three years ahead of schedule.Macron’s centrist alliance will have fewer seats in parliament, but held up better than expected.
The outcome, in which no bloc is expected to have an outright majority, has left the country in a “thick fog” of uncertainty, according to one pollster, with the euro dropping around 0.4 percent from Friday’s levels before clawing back most of the losses.
“The best that can be said is that neither the (left-wing) NFP nor (far-right) National Rally will be able to implement their respective electoral manifestos in full, which would most worry investors fretful about France’s fiscal situation,” Alvin Tan of RBC capital markets said.
While “the worst outcome for the euro has been averted for now”, Tan added, uncertainty remains “and the fiscal balance is unlikely to improve significantly as a result”.
Paris’s CAC 40 benchmark stocks index sank at the open Monday, but recovered to post modest gains in morning trade, as did Frankfurt’s DAX. The FTSE 100 index in London also inched up.
Asian markets mostly sank, with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index down more than 1.5 percent at the close.
Tokyo’s Nikkei index seesawed in and out the red throughout the day before finally ending slightly down, while the broader Topix shed more than one percent after hitting a new high last week.
Taipei was a rare bright spot, posting solid gains on the back of a surge in shares of chipmaking giant TSMC, which added nearly three percent over the course of the day.
Sydney, Seoul, Mumbai, Jakarta and Singapore were down, while Manila rose.
Thousands of workers in South Korea walked off the job at tech giant Samsung on Monday morning as they kicked off a three-day general strike, according to a union rep, who warned key memory chip production would be affected.
Samsung Electronics is the world’s largest memory chip maker and accounts for a significant chunk of global output.
Workers gathered outside the company’s foundry and semiconductor factory in Hwaseong, Gyeonggi, an hour south of Seoul, with National Samsung Electronics Union head Son Woo-mok warning: “Today’s general strike is just the beginning.”
However, the tech giant’s shares were slightly up from Friday’s price, which was buoyed by a company forecast that second-quarter profits would beat expectations by more than 25 percent.
On Wall Street, the Nasdaq and S&P 500 hit fresh highs on Friday, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average also ticked upwards after official data showed the US labour market cooling, raising expectations of a September interest rate cut.
Investors will be looking for more clues in an appearance by Federal Reserve boss Jerome Powell before the US Senate banking committee on Tuesday, as well as fresh consumer price index data due later in the week. With AFP