Sunday, February 3, 2019
Market may trade sideways this week
MANILA, Philippines — The stock market this week may be characterised by follow through buying on Chinese New Year ahead of the release of the January inflation numbers, according to First Metro Investment Corp. vice president Cristina Ulang.
Ulang said investors would closely monitor the corporate earnings report, noting that outperformance versus estimates would hold the key to sustained foreign buying.
Christopher Mangun, head of Eagle Equities, said that there may be lower trading volumes this week.
“This week is the first trading week of February and with only four days of trading we are going to see lower trading volumes as the holiday is in the middle of week and investors may take a break from trading and take the week off,” he said
Thus, he said the market may continue to trade sideways between 8,000 and 8,200.
“The index may end the week lower, but the key is for it to stay above the 8,000 level. If we continue to see heavy foreign inflows, then the market may sustain its current momentum. Local investors have started taking some risk off the table and currently foreign money is supporting the market. With earnings reports set to start coming in this week on top of better inflation numbers for January, we may see the market factor this is and maintain its current trajectory,” he said.
Last week, the market was pulled up by rosy western equities markets which rose after dovish comments from the US Fed.
The main index ended the week 90.96 points higher or 1.13 percent to close at 8,144.16.
In the first three days of trading, there was a pullback, even touching the 7,900 support level.
However, in the last two trading days there was already a complete reversal, eventually breaking above 8,100 in the afternoon trading session on Friday, Mangun said.
Foreign money flooded the market with net foreign buying at P5.74 billion.
In all, the PSEi ends the month of January 7.3 percent higher which is the market’s best performance since March 2016.
source: philstar.com
Sunday, September 15, 2013
Stock market bracing for this week's US Fed decision on stimulus
MANILA - All eyes will be on the US Federal Reserve this week when its holds a key policy meeting, putting an end to months of speculation on the future of its economic stimulus.
As fears about a US-led military attack against Syria dissipates, financial markets are focusing back on the "original" concern – the scaling back of the Fed's $85-billion bond-buying program, considered as "one of the last market-moving news that poses a downside risk to the local market this year."
"It will be a cautious market. We're going to see some weakness and light trading," said Jose Vistan, head of research at AB Capital Securities Inc.
Analysts expect the impact of the Fed decision to be subdued with tapering being priced in as a certainty and debates shifting to the amount of reduction ranging between $10 billion and $20 billion.
"On one hand, this is a good sign that markets have begun to recognize the message a cut-back delivers – the US economy is on the right track to recovering from its worst slump since the Great Depression of the 1930’s, the reversal induced by the bursting of the dot.com bubble before the turn of the millennium, and the slowdown experienced after the 9-11 terrorist attack over a decade back," said Jun Calaycay of Accord Capital Equities Corp.
"On the other hand, the uncertainty of the amount leaves the door an inch ajar for an exit option should it be more than expectations," Calaycay added.
The US central bank's stimulus – the third tranche of what has come to be called “quantitative easing” (QE3) – has been a key driver of equities rallies in the past several months.
Stock markets, particularly emerging markets like the Philippines, have been taking a beating since Fed chairman Ben S. Bernanke signaled in mid-May that the US central bank might cut its massive stimulus program should the world's largest economy show signs of recovery.
After coasting to 31 record highs in the first five months, the news of tapering has dragged the Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) to bear territory twice this year and erased its year-to-date gains.
“Two scenarios are at foresight: first would be that the immediate start of the tapering that could force the main index to revisit 5,900 and second is the rally towards 6,500 if the Fed would delay its announcement to its next meeting in October,” said Abbygayle M. Estrella of AB Capital Securities Inc.
Last week, the PSEi rose 2.65 percent to finish at 6,133.24 on the back of favorable economic data and delayed military action against Syria.
In the week ahead, LT Group Inc and GT Capital Holdings Inc will join the 30-company PSEi benchmark, replacing Belle Corp and Meralco.
source: interaksyon.com
Friday, September 13, 2013
'Hot money' plummets in August amid emerging markets selloff
Foreign funds invested in shares of stock of local listed firms and in other Philippine financial assets dropped sharply last month amid a selloff in emerging markets.
Data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) showed that foreign portfolio investments -- also called "hot money" because of their flighty nature -- fell 60 percent to $999 million in August from $2.5 billion the month before. Inflows also slipped 20 percent from $1.3 billion in August of last year.
Outflows also accelerated from $868 million last year to $1.4 billion this year, thus last year's net inflows of $387 million reversed to net outflows of $442 million last month. This narrowed the year-to-date net inflows from $2.2 billion last year to $2 billion this year.
The BSP blamed the net outflow on the shortened trading brought about by bad weather, and on the traditional unwinding of stock market positions during the "ghost month" of August, an inauspicious time to invest for those who believe in luck. Eight out of every nine dollars of portfolio inflows were invested in Philippine stocks.
Also responsible for the outflow was the US Federal Reserve's hints that it may unwind its economic stimulus this month, the BSP said. Nearly eight out of every 10 dollars that pulled out of the Philippines went back to the US.
Foreign funds have been scaling back their exposure to emerging markets like the Philippines amid signs that the US economy is on the mend, a trigger for the Fed's decision to remove its economic stimulus. The Fed's monthly $85-billion bond-buying -- the third tranche of what has come to be called "quantitative easing" (QE) -- has been responsible for equity rallies around the world.
As a resut of the foreign fund pullout, the Philippine Stock Exchange index has trimmed its gains from a record high of more than 20 percent to seven percent in recent sessions.
source: interaksyon.com
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
Unease over US Fed leaves global markets at one-month low
LONDON - World shares sank to their lowest level in more than a month on Tuesday as unease about an expected cut in U.S. stimulus and a related rise in bond yields left markets on edge.
Europe's main stock markets opened down 1 percent following a fourth straight day of falls on both Wall Street and in Asia to leave MSCI's global index, which tracks shares in 45 countries, at its lowest level since July 12.
Wednesday's minutes from the most recent Fed meeting could offer fresh hints on when the U.S. central bank will start winding down its $85 billion-a-month support program, a tricky process markets have been nervous about for months.
The uncertainty has broadly driven up bond market borrowing costs in recent weeks. The upward pressure on U.S. government bonds eased overnight, leaving the benchmark 10-year Treasury just off a 2-year high at 2.83 percent.
As has been the recent pattern, German government bonds, Europe's equivalent benchmark, moved in lockstep with yields edging down to 1.879 percent having topped 1.9 percent on Monday.
On European share markets, a 10.8 percent jump to 19.38 points in the Euro STOXX 50 Volatility Index .V2TX indicated uncertainty over the near-term outlook, though the measure remained below its 2013 peak of 26.80 points.
Ramin Nakisa, a global macro strategist for UBS in London, said market turbulence was bound to pick up as the Fed starts to switch the direction of its policy.
"We expect volatility... People will start to wonder whether there is anything in the fixed-income world that really is safe," he said adding that there was also likely to be another short selloff in share markets.
Emerging woes
The jitters about the U.S. moves continued to batter emerging markets where there are fears an end to cheap money and improvement outlooks in advanced economies could see a stampede of investment leaving already-strained markets.
Indonesia and India had another torrid session with their stock markets down 4 and 1 percent respectively as their currencies also continued to tumble.
Japan's Nikkei slumped too, falling 2.7 percent, reflecting the exposure of many Japanese companies to India and Indonesia.
"India's problems are nowhere near resolution because New Delhi has not done anything - there is no focus on improving productivity, infrastructure or getting FDI (foreign direct investment) back," said Nomura credit analyst Pradeep Mohinani in Hong Kong.
"It's all about stemming the flow of currency and that is not the cause of the problem."
Despite the focus on the Fed, the dollar was steady against a basket of major currencies. There was also little movement in the euro and sterling.
Emerging market volatility did spur the yen however. "The yen tends to attract buying when tensions in the market increase," said Satoshi Okagawa, senior global markets analyst for Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation in Singapore.
In commodities, copper prices dropped to $7,264.75 per tonne, while gold eased to $1,361.66 per ounce after snapping a three-day winning streak on Monday and moving away from a two-month high hit that session.
Brent crude prices fell 0.5 percent to $109.36 a barrel, pressured by the Fed speculation but supported by the loss of Libya's oil exports as well as concerns that continuing unrest in Egypt could spread and interfere with supply.
source: interaksyon.com
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Fed likely to back low-rate policies despite gains
WASHINGTON (AP) - The US economy is strengthening on the fuel of more job growth, rising home prices and solid retail sales. Just don't expect the Federal Reserve to let up in its drive to keep stimulating the economy with record-low interest rates.
Not yet, anyway.
That's the view of economists as Fed policymakers hold a two-day meeting that starts on Tuesday.
On Wednesday, the Fed will issue a policy statement and update its economic forecasts, and Chairman Ben Bernanke will hold a news conference.
source: straitstimes.com
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Mortgage Prepayment Rate Reaches Highest Level Since 2005
(Bloomberg) — Mortgage prepayment rates have soared to the highest in seven years as homeowners take advantage of the lowest borrowing costs on record to refinance.
Home loans were repaid in August at a pace that would erase 25 percent of the debt in a year, according to Lender Processing Services Inc. (LPS), a Jacksonville, Florida-based data provider that tracks 40 million mortgages.
The cost of 30-year loans dropped to 3.4 percent last week, helping push refinancing applications to a three-year high, after the Federal Reserve said it will buy $40 billion of mortgage securities per month to stimulate the economy. That followed government efforts to increase refinancing with new rules designed to expand eligibility and reduce costs.
“There should be a lot of opportunity for people to refinance,” Herb Blecher, senior vice president at LPS Applied Analytics said in an interview. “The interest rate environment is favorable even for folks who refinanced recently to get a new loan.”
Prepayment speeds also reflect borrower defaults and debt retired in home sales, which increased in August to a two-year high as the housing market showed signs of recovery.
Refinancing applications climbed almost 20 percent last week to the highest since April 2009, leaving this year’s average pace 56 percent greater than in 2011, according to a Mortgage Bankers Association index released today.
Repeat Refinancing
Borrowing costs for typical 30-year fixed-rate loans have declined from last year’s high of 5.05 percent, according to Freddie Mac surveys. That’s spurred a wave of repeat refinancing activity. Prepayment speeds in August rose the most among loans made last year, climbing 23 percent, LPS data show.Read full article from Bloomberg
source: thenichereport.com
Monday, September 17, 2012
The Real Impact of the Fed on the Housing Market

(TheNicheReport) — The September announcement of the Federal Reserve with regard to monetary policy and economic stimulus was well-received by market insiders and institutional investors, but what about the average participant of the American housing market? How much do home shoppers and borrowers benefit from the Fed’s commitment to keep mortgage interest rates low and purchase mortgage-backed securities.
For borrowers who have refinanced their mortgage in the last twelve months, the Fed’s announcement does not open a great incentive to refinance again -unless the principal amount is near the loan limit and borrowers intend to stay in their homes for the remainder of the term. Borrowers who have not been able to qualify for a refinancing or a loan modification due to negative equity should benefit from increased home values as buyers and investors feel they have more time to find good deals and lock into low rates.
Extended Relief
The Fed’s stimulus comes at a time when unemployment is still high and the economy is recovering at a pace that is slower than expected. Home sales and prices have recorded monthly increases since January 2012, but real estate investors have been behind a good portion of the purchase transactions. Now that home prices have recovered a bit, house hunters are ever more dependent on low mortgage interest rates.
For investors and home shoppers who thought the low rates would only last until the end of 2012, the Fed’s stimulus plan gives them more time to find their dream homes or investment properties. There is also a chance that mortgage interest rates could hit a new record low from now until 2015. If the benchmark 30-year fixed descends towards 3.25 percent, 20 and 15-year fixed home loans will be attractive. The same goes for adjustable rate mortgages.
This extended relief favor house hunters and investors, but should the government amend the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) to include even more troubled borrowers, the recovery could be accelerated significantly.
The Right Time to Make a Move
Borrowers, home buyers and investors should not trust that the good times will last through 2015. If median home prices continue to recover, the Fed may slow down on its purchases of mortgage-backed securities and mortgage rates could climb higher. Investors are likely to continue their bidding in regional markets where home prices have rapidly appreciated, but a high number of foreclosures may cool down those markets.
One concern by some analysts and observers is that the Fed’s powerful influence could suddenly turn the market and leave some participants out. While that might be the case, the high number of pending foreclosures could have the opposite effect. Another factor to consider is optimism, which could return to the housing market, as it usually does, after the presidential election.
source: thenichereport.com
Friday, September 14, 2012
Oil rises in Asia on Fed stimulus

SINGAPORE - Oil prices rallied in Asia Friday as traders welcomed a fresh, third round of bond-buying, or quantitative easing, announced by the US Federal Reserve, analysts said.
New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in October surged 91 cents to $99.22 a barrel in the afternoon and Brent North Sea crude for November delivery added 63 cents to $116.51.
Crude markets rose after traders' hopes for stimulus announcements at the end of a two-day Fed meeting Thursday were met, IG Markets said in a report.
The Fed on Thursday announced the new, open-ended $40 billion per month programme that it said would remain in place until there was substantial improvement in the jobs market.
"Never fear, QE3 is here. At long last the markets got what they wanted as (Fed chief Ben) Bernanke finally announced another ambitious bond-buying programme he hopes will lead to a sustainable recovery in the US economy," the report stated.
"The icing on the cake announced last night was that no defined time limit was announced for QE3."
The Fed also pledged to keep its benchmark interest rate at ultra-low levels until at least mid-2015.
source: interaksyon.com
Fed bets big in new push to rescue US economy

WASHINGTON - The Federal Reserve launched another aggressive stimulus program on Thursday, saying it would pump $40 billion into the U.S. economy until it saw a sustained upturn in the weak jobs market.
The central bank's decision to tie its controversial bond buying directly to economic conditions was an unprecedented step that marked a big escalation in its efforts to drive U.S. unemployment lower. Stock prices jumped, while gold hit a six-month high as investors braced for higher inflation.
Unlike in its two previous bond-buying sprees, the Fed said it would only purchase mortgage-backed debt, hoping in part to unstick a housing sector that Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke called "a missing piston" in the U.S. recovery.
One top Republican charged that the move was a bid to help President Barack Obama ahead of November's closely contested presidential election. Republican nominee Mitt Romney's campaign said it confirmed the failure of Obama's policies.
Bernanke dismissed talk the Fed was taking sides, saying it acted solely because of the dire state of the U.S. labor market.
"The employment situation ... remains a grave concern," Bernanke told reporters. "While the economy appears to be on a path of moderate recovery, it isn't growing fast enough to make significant progress reducing the unemployment rate."
The economy created just 96,000 jobs last month, less than needed to keep up with population growth. While the unemployment rate edged down to 8.1 percent, it was only because many Americans gave up on the search for work.
By buying mortgage-linked debt, the Fed hopes to press mortgage rates lower, helping the housing market and also encouraging investors in MBS to switch into other assets, lowering their yields as well.
Those lower borrowing costs should spur more lending and foster faster economic growth, officials believe. U.S. growth cooled in the second quarter to a tepid 1.7 percent annual rate, and forecasters do not see the economy doing much better now.
In an additional move, the Fed said it was not likely to raise overnight interest rates from their current near-zero level until at least mid-2015. Previously, it had set such guidance at late 2014.
To underscore its resolve, it said it would pursue an easy monetary policy "for a considerable time" even after the economy strengthened.
"If the outlook for the labor market does not improve substantially, the committee will continue its purchase of agency mortgage-backed securities, undertake additional asset purchases, and employ its other policy tools as appropriate until such improvement is achieved in a context of price stability," the Fed said in a statement.
Asked repeatedly during a post-decision news conference to amplify on that pledge, Bernanke said the Fed wanted to see a convincing improvement in the economy that could deliver sustainable job creation and a gradual decline in unemployment.
"There's not a specific number we have in mind, but what we have seen in the last six months isn't it," he said.
U.S. stocks shot higher on the Fed's move, with the S&P 500 closing at its highest level since December 2007 and the Dow Jones industrial average adding more than 200 points.
Stephen Stanley, an economist at Pierpont Securities in Stamford, Connecticut, said that by tying its purchases to progress reducing U.S. unemployment, the Fed had "basically locked on the handcuffs and swallowed the key."
Pushing on a string?
Economists said the Fed could eventually buy more than $1 trillion in debt given the open-ended nature of its new policy. Capital Economics estimated purchases could top $1.4 trillion.
The plan fueled some nervousness in financial markets over the potential for inflation, even though the Fed would pull back on its buying if the economy strengthened.
Bernanke stated explicitly that pushing up prices was not the Fed's intention.
The price of gold, a traditional inflation safe haven, hit a six month high, while oil also gained on expectations investors would pile into riskier assets such as commodities and equities.
Prices for most U.S. Treasury debt rose, although the 30-year bond fell, reflecting both disappointment that government debt was not on the Fed's purchase list and inflation worries.
The decision comes in the face of widespread questions about the likely effectiveness of a further foray into unorthodox monetary policy, including from Romney. The Fed has already bought $2.3 trillion in U.S. government and housing-related debt it two rounds of so-called quantitative easing.
Those programs, dubbed QE1 and QE2, bought bonds closer to a pace around $100 billion per month.
Senator John Cornyn, head of the Senate Republican Campaign Committee, said the Fed appeared to be "trying to juice the economy" ahead of the November 6 election, while Lanhee Chen, policy director for the Romney campaign, argued that the Fed's decision pointed to a need for new policies from the White House.
"We should be creating wealth, not printing dollars," Chen said.
The White House, which scrupulously avoids commenting on Fed decisions, declined to be drawn into the debate, but other Democrats rallied to defense of Bernanke, who once served as an adviser to Republican President George W. Bush. It was Bush who first nominated Bernanke to the Fed.
"It is unfortunate that Republicans already have expressed disappointment in this action and are clearly upset that they were unable to intimidate the Fed into putting partisan politics ahead of national economic interests," said Democratic Representative Barney Frank.
The Fed also caused ripples aboard. Brazilian Finance Minister Guido Mantega said he would monitor the impact of the action on Brazil's real currency. Mantega had accused the Fed's earlier bond buying of unfairly weakening the U.S. dollar.
Brighter outlook
In its statement, the Fed said the fresh MBS purchases, which it will start on Friday, would come on top of its so-called Operation Twist program, in which it is selling short-term bonds to buy longer-term Treasury debt.
With its new MBS purchases, the Fed said it would now be buying about $85 billion in long-term securities each month.
In a reflection of optimism over their new policy path, officials lowered their forecast for the unemployment rate at the end of 2014 to a 6.7 percent to 7.3 percent range, down from a range of 7.0 percent to 7.7 percent in June.
Still, even in 2015, they believe the jobless rate will be above the 5.2 percent to 6 percent range where they think it should eventually settle.
One official, Richmond Federal Reserve Bank President Jeffrey Lacker, dissented against the decision, as he has at every FOMC meeting this year.
source: interaksyon.com
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Oil rises in Asia on Fed stimulus hopes
SINGAPORE - Crude advanced in Asia on Thursday as hopes rose that the US Federal Reserve would kickstart the economy of the world's largest oil consumer, analysts said.
New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in October rose 43 cents to $97.69 a barrel and Brent North Sea crude for October delivery gained 48 cents to $115.39.
Hopes for a fresh round of quantitative easing from the Fed were boosted Wednesday when minutes of its last policy meeting were published, IG Markets said in a report.
The minutes from the Federal Open Market Committee meeting three weeks ago showed there was support by "many members" for additional stimulus to the US economy soon unless economic data turns around.
"Having spent the last few months watching from in the stands, QE3 is now sitting on the bench waiting for the call to come on as a last-gasp substitute," the IG report said, referring to a new round of quantitative easing.
"That is how things look this morning after Fed minutes stated that another round of large-scale asset purchases could happen 'fairly soon'."
The minutes said: "Many members judged that additional monetary accommodation would likely be warranted fairly soon unless incoming information pointed to a substantial strengthening in the pace of the recovery."
source: interaksyon.com