Stocks face Middle East volatility as analysts flag core inflation risks
Local equities market faces renewed wave of investor caution as mounting geopolitical tensions in the Middle East threaten to stall a two-week rally.
While the Philippine Stock Exchange index climbed 3.53 percent over the past two weeks, underlying market participation remains weak. Daily value turnover averaged ₱5.55 billion last week, indicating that recent gains driven by bargain hunting lack deep institutional conviction, according to Japhet Tantiangco, research manager at Philstocks Financial Inc.
Though foreign investors injected a net ₱3.76 billion over six consecutive trading days, localized risks continue to cloud the outlook. A potential escalation in the Middle East could trigger a spike in global crude prices, reigniting inflation and adding downward pressure on an already fragile peso, Tantiangco noted. Elevated global treasury yields also continue to draw capital away from emerging market equities.
Domestic price pressures are further complicating the outlook for equities. June core inflation accelerated to a 31-month high of 4.4 percent from 4.1 percent, signaling that secondary price effects are broadening across the economy, local brokerage 2TradeAsia.com said in a note to clients.
The firm expects the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas to implement an additional 50 to 75 basis points of interest rate hikes by the end of the year, which would push the benchmark policy rate toward 5.5 percent.
Against a backdrop of anemic corporate performance—with consensus estimates projecting a two percent decline in average earnings per share growth—analysts are advising a highly selective strategy ahead of second-quarter corporate earnings reports. Commercial banks are projected to maintain resilient net interest margins, as recent regulatory waivers on electronic transfer fees are expected to have a negligible impact on bottom-line results.
For investors seeking defensive positioning, parent holding companies present a risk-reward profile, according to 2TradeAsia.com. These conglomerates are trading at historically wide discounts of 10 percent to 50 percent relative to their net asset value, offering a cost-effective vehicle to capture the eventual margin recovery of their underlying business units. Energy equities also remain a viable direct hedge against shifting oil prices.