Philippine Daily Inquirer

PSEi up slightly

- Doris Dumlao-Abadilla

THE LOCAL stock barometer firmed up after a sluggish start yesterday as regional markets drew optimism from the rebound in oil prices and the G20 finance ministers’ summit in Beijing.

The Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) firmed up by 2.04 points or 0.03 percent to close at 6,771.30, led by the gains eked out by utility Meralco. In morning trade, the PSEi was down 30.72 points.

Citigroup said in a research note yesterday that sentiment continued to improve ahead of the G20 meetings that began in Shanghai. Overnight, it noted that equities had risen alongside oil prices and most G10 and emerging market currencies outperform­ed the US dollar and the Japanese yen.

“We are not convinced of a sustainabl­e bullish break, but recognize factors supporting a counter-trend rally,” Citi said.

G-20 or Group of Twenty (G20) is a forum on internatio­nal economic cooperatio­n and decisionma­king participat­ed in by 19 countries plus the European Union. They represent about 85

percent of global gross domestic product, more than 75 percent of global trade and two-thirds of the world’s population. The members are Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Republic of Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Turkey, United Kingdom, United States and European Union.

At the local market, the small gain was driven by the industrial, holding firm and mining/oil counters. On the other hand, the financial, property and services counters ended lower.

Value turnover for the day amounted to P6.46 billion. There were 94 advancers that edged out 83 decliners while 42 stocks were unchanged.

Meralco led the PSEi higher, rising by 3.51 percent. The utility an- nounced a 4-percent growth in core net profit to P18.9 billion in 2015 and projected roughly the same amount for 2016. Parent conglomera­te Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp. also gained 2.09 percent.

On the other hand, Petron slumped by 3.55 percent while ALI, BPI, AC and DMCI all fell more than 1 percent. PLDT, Globe and AGI also slipped.

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