Business World

Philippine shares fall ahead of MSCI rebalancin­g

- A.H. Halili

PHILIPPINE SHARES declined on Tuesday as investors positioned ahead of the Morgan Stanley Capital Internatio­nal (MSCI) rebalancin­g and await the passage of the US debt ceiling bill.

The Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) fell by 82.49 points or 1.25% to close at 6,510.67 on Tuesday, while the broader all shares index went down by 35.36 points or 1% to end at 3,475.05.

“The index was dragged down by foreign selling as various institutio­nal investors rebalanced portfolios ahead of the effectivit­y of MSCI adjustment­s and with the trading month drawing to a close,” China Bank Capital Corp. Managing Director Juan Paolo E. Colet said.

“The PSEi is again critically hovering above its 6,500 support, which could mean a potentiall­y volatile session tomorrow on the back of last-minute window dressing,” Mr. Colet added.

Globalinks Securities and Stocks, Inc. Head of Sales Trading Toby Allan C. Arce said that shares fell on Tuesday amid continued uncertaint­y over the US debt limit deal.

“Despite [Monday’s] cheer over the prospect that the world’s largest economy will avert a major debt default, markets are not out of the woods yet. Although an agreement had been reached “in principle,” it came just as lawmakers were hitting the road for the Memorial Day holiday in the US and are not expected to return until June 4,” Mr. Arce added.

Over the weekend, US President Joseph Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy reached a tentative deal to suspend the $31.4-trillion debt ceiling until Jan. 1, 2025, and would be ready for voting in Congress, Reuters reported.

If approved, the deal will prevent the US government from defaulting on its debt and comes after weeks of heated negotiatio­ns between Mr. Biden and House Republican­s.

It still needs to pass through a narrowly divided Congress before June 5, when the US Treasury says it would run short of money to cover all of its obligation­s.

The agreement would suspend the debt limit through Jan. 1, 2025, cap spending in the 2024 and 2025 budgets, claw back unused COVID funds, speed up the permitting process for some energy projects and include extra work requiremen­ts for food aid programs for poor Americans.

Back home, all sectoral indices closed lower on Tuesday. Mining and oil decreased by 205.28 points or 2.01% to 9,963.43; industrial­s fell by 146.31 points or 1.56% to 9,230.80; financials shed 24.26 points or 1.32% to end at 1,804; services dropped by 20.04 points or 1.29% to 1,533.62; holding firms went down by 69.10 points or 1.05% to 6,503.04; and property declined by 24.88 points or 0.91% to 2,704.61.

Value turnover rose to P4.46 billion on Tuesday with 1.11 billion shares changing hands from the P3.29 billion on Monday with 599.74 million issues traded on Friday.

Decliners outnumbere­d advancers, 127 versus 42, while 43 names closed unchanged.

Net foreign selling stood at P85.53 million on Tuesday versus the P143.21 million in net buying seen on Monday. —

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