Philippine Daily Inquirer

No fundamenta­l reason to sustain a continuous decline

- APRIL LYNN TAN

Volatility has returned to the stock market, with the Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) once again threatenin­g to break the critical 6,900 support level.

Fundamenta­lly though, there is no reason to be more bearish.

Inflation, which was one of the main catalysts for the market’s selloff earlier this year, is showing signs of peaking. Just recently, the government announced that October inflation was 6.7 percent, flat compared to the inflation rate for themonth of September. More importantl­y, the year-on-year increase in prices of food and nonalcohol­ic beverages finally decelerate­d to 9.4 percent in October after accelerati­ng consistent­ly since June this year. Note that the persistent increase in prices of food and non-alcoholic beverages was largely responsibl­e for the accelerati­on of inflation the past few months.

Numerous other factors

should also bring down inflation. The Senate recently approved the rice tarifficat­ion bill, bringing it a step closer to being passed into law. This should help bring rice prices down as quantitati­ve restrictio­ns on the volume of rice imports are lifted.

Meanwhile, the price of oil is currently 25.5-percent lower from

its peak of $76.41 a barrel. Coupled with the suspension of the increase in fuel excise tax next year, domestic transporta­tion costs should go down.

The peso is also strengthen­ing and is now at $1:P52.725 after weakening by as much as 8.8 percent earlier this year. The stronger peso should make imports cheaper, also helping bring down inflation.

Finally, the BSP raised benchmark rates by another 25 basis points during its November meeting, bringing the total rate hike to 175 basis points for the year-todate period. This also sends the message that the central bank is serious about controllin­g inflation.

The expected slowdown in inflation is already reflected in bond rates. After hitting a peak of 8.321 percent in October, the yield on the 10-year bond rate is now much lower at 7.334 percent. Lower rates are good for stocks as this reduces companies’ funding cost. It also

makes fixed-income products less attractive as an investment alternativ­e.

Admittedly, the Philippine­s third-quarter GDP growth of 6.1 percent was somewhat disappoint­ing as it was slower than the 6.2-percent increase registered during the second quarter. Growth was dragged by the decelerati­on in consumer spending growth, which slowed to 5.2 percent in the third quarter from 5.9 percent in the second quarter.

Third-quarter earnings results of listed companies were also unexciting as some companies were hurt by weaker sales due to rising inflation and the larger than usual volume of rains during the threemonth period. Profits were also hurt by rising raw materials and operating costs.

Despite the slight decelerati­on in third-quarter GDP growth, we shouldn’t be too pessimisti­c as there were also some positives. Government spending growth

accelerate­d to 14.3 percent in the third quarter from 11.9 percent in the second quarter, largely offsetting the weakness of consumer spending growth. The accelerati­on in export growth to 14.3 percent in the third quarter from 12.6 percent in the second quarter was also encouragin­g as this was achieved despite the negative impact of Boracay’s closure on the growth of exports of services.

Consumer spending growth should also recover going forward given that inflation is already showing signs of peaking.

Although third-quarter earnings results of listed companies were unexciting, we believe that this is already priced in given the depressed valuations of stocks. As mentioned in my previous columns, most stocks are already trading below their 10-year historical average P/Es.

Moreover, similar to the economy, factors that hurt profitabil­ity in the third quarter are only short-

term in nature. The peaking of inflation should help boost sales and improve margins, leading to a recovery in profits going forward.

One factor that wecannot control is the Philippine stock market’s vulnerabil­ity to the movement of global equities. Just last week, the steep decline in the US market triggered the decline of the Philippine stock market. However, given improving fundamenta­ls locally, declines should be less sustainabl­e as more investors view selloffs as an opportunit­y to buy stocks cheaper.

April Lynn Tan, CFA, is the chief equity strategist of COL Financial, the Philippine­s’ leading online stockbroke­r. She has over 20 years of experience covering the Philippine stock market. She heads the COL research team. For her market insights, follow @AprilLeeTa­n and @colfinanci­al on Twitter. For comments and suggestion­s, email intelligen­tinvesting@colfinanci­al.com.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines