Related Articles
Outlook. The PSEi is in a correction mode, testing the support of 7,200, as the market has fully digested improving outlook on slowing inflation, steady peso and easing crude prices. The correction is triggered by mounting fears of a global economic slowdown after China’s external trade data for November missed consensus by a hefty margin (exports +5.4% vs expected +10%; imports +3% vs +14.5%).
Key economic data and events this week are: Philippine external trade (Dec. 11), Monetary Board (MB) meeting (Dec. 12), and China’s retail sales for November (Dec. 14).Market Review. The PSEi rose for the fourth straight week, up 1.3% (+93.21 points) week-on-week (w/w) to close on Friday at 7,461.06, fueled by optimism over the US-China trade war truce at the week’s onset. It hit a high of 7,703.92 on December 4. However, the rally was short-lived as doubts emerged that US-China deal resolution would not be met before a 90-day deadline. From 7,703, the index has gone down by 4.8%. Year-to-date (YTD), PSEi has trimmed its losses to 14.1% (as of December 10).
Market Flows.. Net foreign buying returned last week totaling P800.4mn, bringing the YTD tally to P98.2bn (excluding the FB block sale of P39.2bn).
Regional Markets.. The Philippine was the top gainer (+1.3% w/w) in Asia last week, followed by Indonesia (+1.2%) and China (+0.7%). YTD, India is still the only gainer in the region (+4.7%), while China (-21.2%), South Korea (-15.9%) and Hong Kong (-12.9%) are the top laggards.
Currencies.. The Philippine peso retreated by 0.5% to end on Friday at P52.71/$, reversing eight successive weekly gains. YTD, the peso has shed 5.3% of its value. For Most Bought/Sold Stocks, see table in next page.
Philippine Statistical Authority (PSA) reported that trade deficit for the first ten months of the year ballooned to $33.9bn, 68.5% higher from the same period last year. This was driven by surging imports which have expanded by double-digit since April 2018 to 16.8% YTD or $91bn. Meanwhile, exports remained flat (-1.2% YTD) to $57.1bn. Exports have been mainly supported by sustained expansion in electronics (+5.2% YTD), albeit October figure for electronics was noticeably slower (0.6% year-on-year, y/y) vs previous months, amid declines in other major exports. On the other hand, all major imports commodity group have been rising double-digit YTD led by capital goods (+16.8% y/y), raw materials and intermediate goods (+16.7%), fuels (+25.5%) and consumer goods (+11.2%).
Analysts widely expect the Monetary Board (MB) to keep policy rates at 4.75% in their upcoming meeting on December 12, after it fired off five consecutive rate hikes since May that raised policy rates by 175 bps this year. The outlook is anchored on decelerating inflation as indicated in the November print which saw consumer price upticks slowed to 6% y/y or -0.2% month-on-month (m/m) after hitting a 9-year high of 6.7% y/y in September. The slower inflation was attributed to food supply normalization and sharp decline in global oil prices. However, an analyst cautioned that rising core inflation at 5.1% in November vs 4.9% in October may prompt the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to take action, especially as the country’s real rate is still the lowest among its peers. We (house view) likewise expect the MB to pause its rate hiking until next year amid easing inflation.Manila Electric Company (MER) will invest $40mn over five to seven years in electricity distributor Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG), with the takeover set on February 2019. The Meralco-Aegernia consortium is expected to pour $581mn in the next five to seven years of the 20-year concession period. MER has 30% stake in the consortium, Aegernia has 19%, while a combined 51% is shared by Ghanaian firms. MER closed yesterday at P366.20/share, up 12.7% YTD.
Read full article here.Related Articles
We use third-party cookies in order to personalize your site experience