Philippine Daily Inquirer

Market rebound

- Den Somera

LAST week was a perplexing period for the local equities market: Trading on Monday started relatively strong but ended weak with the main index down by 25.89 points or 0.43 percent at 6,015.30. This was followed by a larger loss of 129.29 points or 2.15 percent on Tuesday, with the market settling at the session’s low of 5,886.01.

The market appeared to be in trouble, seemingly on the verge of another major breakdown that scared the wits of market participan­ts. Foreign investors made their biggest selloff for theweek.

On Wednesday, the market did not breakdown as feared. It made a surprising recovery, gaining 22.4 points or 0.38 percent, on good news. But like in the previous two days, it closed lower at 5,908.41.

Certain market strategist­s doubted the sustainabi­lity of the recovery as this was the first time the market reacted positively to positive leads.

The market has been behaving differentl­y. It has been observed to tank instead of float on favorable leads and positive news.

But themarket climbed again on Thursday on good news. It was up by 6.18 points or 0.10 percent to 5,914.59 points.

Because the gain was too small despite successive advances, there was still little expectatio­n that themarket has returned to normal behavior.

Came Friday and the market made an impressive advance of 96.55 points or 1.63 percent, and unlike previous closings, it settled next to the session’s high for the day. Also on this day, it was back at the 6,000 level at 6,011.14, seen as a staging point for recovery.

Over the weekend, I found myself asking whether the downtrend was now behind us or there was still room to run on the downside.

Following one popular argument, the market pullbacks in the last month or so have rendered the market “oversold.” This meant stock prices are at very low levels. They should cause enough trading interests to produce amarket rebound.

Low prices, however, are no guarantee that the market is ripe for the picking. As seen in the past, stock prices can go down much lower than what they should be worth.

Trading directions at the moment are influenced mainly by global factors which, when you look closer, are but issues relative to individual or combined economic health of the United States, China and the Euro zone.

One significan­t issue that affected trading results last week on Wall Street was the US nonfarm payroll for January.

As said in a market report, this “will provide more clues on the health of the world’s largest economy, and could determine how the Federal Reserve will proceed with the tapering of its monthly asset purchases.”

There were two contrastin­g interpreta­tions in the nonfarm payroll report. On one end, it was said to be a disappoint­ment. It was below the 180,000 new jobs estimate. On the other end, it was good news because the 113,000 reported figure actually consisted of 142,000 new jobs were it not for the 29,000 jobs lost in the government sector. Unemployme­nt was 6.6 percent, lower than the forecast of 6.7 percent.

The nonfarm payrolls figure might have been higher were it not for the cold weather that caused serious operating disruption­s.

The major indices ofWall Street last Friday posted their “best gains in four months” as “US investors decided that the nonfarm payrolls report wasn’t so terrible after all.”

Along with additional market commentari­es that “US corporate earnings are holding just fine” and that “much of the angst in emerging markets may have been possibly priced into stock prices” earlier last week, Wall Street could really be in for a rebound.

Bottom line spin

I agree that our local market at the moment remains heavily influenced by sentiments driving Wall Street.

I also accept the factors that have propelled the major Wall Street indices last week to some performanc­e highs as some “compelling arguments for it to rebound.”

And while I might be wrong, I could not help feel that these arguments seemed to fade away from the thought that “the priceto-earnings ratios of the market have not yet fully come down” at themoment.

(The writer is a licensed stockbroke­r of Eagle Equities Inc. You may reach the Market Rider at marketride­r@inquirer.com.ph , densomera@msn.com or at www.kapitaltek.com

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