Manila Bulletin

Energy, retail in focus

- By JAMES A. LOYOLA

Stock analysts are divided on whether there is yet to be a Christmas rally or local stocks may have peaked in the previous week in what should have been called a “Thanksgivi­ng rally.”

While Philippine shares posted some gains last week, some analysts are worried about global headwinds which pared off gains at the latter part of the week.

Abacus Securities Corporatio­n noted that, the PSEi’s rally recently met resistance and was not able to stay above its key moving average line of 7,581 — thus the rally is showing signs of waning, “signaling that a bout of profit-taking may be in the offing.”

Papa Securities Analyst Arbee Lu said it “looks like the PSEi is continuing its way down our nearest resistance at 7,381. That's just another 1 percent drop away. We should begin to see some names starting to pick as we expect the index to bounce as we approach that level.”

However, Eagle Equities Head of Research Christophe­r Mangun noted that, “trading volumes have been increasing for the last 5 weeks which is a very good sign. Foreign funds have been trickling back. With inflation getting better and the currency getting stronger, there is still strong indication that investors will begin to see the market in a better light and start getting back in.”

For his part, BDO Unibank Chief Market Strategist Jonathan Ravelas said “(last) week's close at 7,461.06 signals momentum is accelerati­ng. The rally still has some steam to carry it towards the 7,800/8,000 levels in the nearterm.”

Online brokerage firm 2TradeAsia.com is a bit more cautious, saying that, “if conditions go well in maintainin­g momentum, there might be chances for gauges to test 7,900-8,000. The only condition that could jolt this trend, is if the US-China trade issue spirals anew and nerve-breaking calls are made In OPEC.”

In this light, 2TradeAsia.com said “expect volatile swings before yearend, as large fund managers re-tool their portfolios based on their internal risk-return matrix. The approach on equities might be tilted more on defensive plays, possibly reposition­ing cash In favor of sectors that are at their nascent recovery stage (1.e., energy, retail).”

Among the top picks of Abacus and COL Financial is First Gen Corporatio­n which had announced that it has found a foreign partner for its planned liquefied natural gas terminal.

“It will allow FGEN to proceed with the constructi­on of new plants and will protect the company when Malampaya's reserves run out by 2024,” said Abacus.

COL Financial is also recommendi­ng a BUY for Petron Corporatio­n given the improvemen­t in its yields arising from its expansion plans. “Moreover, valuation remains attractive,” the firm said.

For index stocks, Abacus has recommende­d that investors “look for longer term returns from laggards like SCC, PGOLD and even SMC.”

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