Business World

Top Philippine fund manager says stock market rout not over

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THE Philippine central bank needs to do more to help stocks recover from a slump that has pushed them into bear market territory and made them Asia’s worst performers this year, according to investors.

The Philippine Stock Exchange Index sank 2.3% on Thursday, leaving it down more than 20% from its January peak.

Fritz Ocampo, who manages about $19 billion as chief investment officer at BDO Unibank, Inc. in Makati, said the central bank’s second interest rate hike this year on Wednesday will fail to fuel a sustainabl­e rebound in stocks because it’s not enough to fully arrest the peso’s slide, as inflation has yet to peak.

The Philippine peso has lost 6.7% this year, the biggest drop among Asian currencies.

“The market needs a clear announceme­nt to calm nerves,” Mr. Ocampo said. “We may have not seen the bottom yet. Any rally could be short-lived because internatio­nal investors are unwinding out of emerging markets.”

Over $43 billion in market value has vanished this year as the benchmark slid more than 16%, the world’s worst performer after Turkey. From its record close on Jan. 29, the Philippine Stock Exchange Index has slumped more than 21%, breaching the 7,246.90 level that marks a bear market. The gauge was 7, 134.41 at the noon break in Manila.

“Investors are still jittery,” said Manny Cruz, analyst at Asiasec Equities, Inc. in Manila. “The foreign sell-off remains relentless as the rate increase hasn’t provided a catalyst while prospects escalated that a trade war will erupt between the US and China.”

Today’s sell-off drove Philippine stock index valuations to 15.3 times projected 12-month earnings, its cheapest level since Jan. 26, 2016, and down from 19.9 on Jan. 23. The multiple is more than two standard deviations below its five-year average, a level that preceded rallies in 2013 and 2016.

If the index eventually rallies, its climb may be limited to about 7,600 as it mimics last month’s pattern, Mr. Ocampo said. The index rose over 300 points in two sessions after the May 10 hike and then dropped toward a 14- month low as inflation accelerate­d and the peso slumped to a 12-year low against the dollar.

Investors think another 25-basis point hike may be needed this year to keep inflation in check and stem the peso’s depreciati­on, Mr. Ocampo said. Wednesday’s rate increase may not be enough to keep up with the Federal Reserve, which has indicated that it may lift as many as four times this year, he added.

The latest central bank hike didn’t prevent the iShares MSCI Philippine­s ETF from falling 1.5% overnight in the US, its 10th straight day of declines and longest losing streak since June 2013.

Foreign fund withdrawal­s, which reached $1.14 billion so far this year, could climb to $2 billion by December unless the exodus slows, Mr. Ocampo said. He is overweight property companies because of strong residentia­l sales and project launches. Retailers are also attractive as they can pass on the higher cost of goods.

All 30 components of the benchmark Philippine stock index fell in Manila today led by port operator Internatio­nal Container Terminal Services, Inc., which slumped as much as 5%, and builder Ayala Land, Inc., which declined more than 2%.

“Foreign funds outflow isn’t showing signs of letting up,” Mr. Ocampo said, adding that the index could test 7,000 in the near term as the sell-off may escalate before the benchmark recovers to 8,500 by yearend. “Cash is king for now.” — Bloomberg

 ?? AFP ?? THE Philippine Stock Exchange has slumped since its January peak.
AFP THE Philippine Stock Exchange has slumped since its January peak.

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