Most Asean markets fall, Philippines loses most


A Investment Management said despite the volatility in the markets and concerns over the trade wars,

BENGALURU: Most Southeast Asian stocks fell on Monday in a lacklustre trading, with Philippines leading losses, as optimism about a trade deal between the United States and China waned.

The Philippine benchmark index fell 0.6 percent ahead of the country's inflation data, expected on Tuesday.

Industrials and financials dragged the index with SM Investments Corp and BDO Unibank Inc dipping 1.6 percent and 0.9 percent, respectively.
 
Investors were skeptical about the actual progress made at the talks, especially with regard to core U.S. demands for structural policy changes in China.

Several people briefed on the talks said that while Chinese negotiators engaged U.S. officials on intellectual property and technology transfer practices, they did not bring any new proposals to the table. 

"Views are a tad too rosy, hopes rather elevated and optimism getting ahead of far more sobering realities. Which is to say that underlying vulnerabilities and consequent volatility may not be put to bed, not just yet," said Vishnu Varathan, senior economist at Mizuho Bank in a note.  
    
Financials and consumer staples pulled the Indonesian index  0.3 percent lower. Bank Central Asia Tbk PT lost 1.9 percent, while Unilever Indonesia Tbk PT dropped 1.3 percent.    
    
Malaysian stocks led gains in the region, rising 0.4 percent and were on track to snap four sessions of losses. 
    
Utility and healthcare stocks underpinned the index with IHH Healthcare Bhd rising 1.4 percent and Tenaga Nasional Bhd firming 1.7 percent. 
    
The Philippine central bank looks certain to leave interest rates on hold for a second straight meeting on Thursday, with inflation expected to have slowed to 4.5 percent in January, according to a Reuters poll.
    
The central bank last week said January annual inflation is likely to settle within a 4.3-5.1 percent range, which is ahead of the 2-4 percent target of the bank.

"The underlying bias despite a rate hold this time around is to tighten if elevated inflation does not soften soon enough," Varathan said.
    
Thai stocks rose 0.3 percent, boosted by energy counters amid strong oil prices.  
    
PTT Exploration and Production PCL rose 1.2 percent while CP All PCL firmed 0.7 percent.
    
Malaysia and Singapore markets are to close early today ahead of a public holiday, while Vietnam's financial markets are shut for Lunar New year. - Reuters

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