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Outlook. We expect the market to trade sideways especially during the start of the week as thin trading continues. US and UK markets are closed on Monday while several ASEAN markets - Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand are closed on Tuesday for Vesak holiday. Investors are still waiting for market moving events that will push the market to a certain direction. But there’s downward bias on the back of expected outflows by end-May due to MSCI Rebalancing. Key economic data to monitor are: US GDP on Wednesday and US unemployment rate on Friday.
Market Review. The market traded flat, down by 0.32% week-on-week (w-o-w), as investors stayed on the sidelines amidst geopolitical concerns and the lack of domestic catalysts. W-o-w, the market was the fifth best in Asia while year-to-date (y-t-d), the market was the worst performer, down 10.6%. Main drivers last week were:
According to the Bureau of Treasury (BTr), only $2bn space is left for the government’s samurai and second global bond sale under its programmed foreign commercial loans this year. For 2018, the national government planned to get $2.5bn funding through official development assistance and $4.2bn from foreign commercial loans. With the $2bn 10-year dollar denominated global bonds issued last January and $230m renminbi-denominated three-year panda bonds last March, only $2bn is left for external bond sales which will be offered by third or fourth quarter as per Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez. The remaining $2bn will be split between samurai bond sale and dollar denominated bond offering. Meanwhile, global debt watcher Moody’s warned that further peso depreciation will be “credit negative” for the Philippines. According to the agency, pressures on the peso may worsen debt-affordability amidst an already tightening financial conditions resulting in higher yields. The weaker peso also affects the country’s ability to settle outstanding foreign debts which account for more than a third of total obligations. Despite these concerns, Moody’s noted that current conditions are nowhere near the magnitude in 2013. The agency also added that PH’s large dollar reserves of $80.062 in April (equal to 7.8mos worth of imports and above the three-month standard) could serve as a buffer against exchange rate shocks.
Globe Telecom (GLO) is planning to hike its $850m capital requirements for 2018 to expand network coverage and capacity. The expansion is attributed to the growth in data usage which grows 20% every quarter. In 1Q2018, mobile data traffic surged 37% to 180 petabytes from 131 petabytes and is expected to continue growing as smartphone penetration grows 70% in 2018 (vs 40% in 2015). More details will be released in Q3 2018.
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