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Cautious Markets As Global Investors Watch Fed Moves And China’s Surprise

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The Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) closed Monday down 0.2% at 6,140.35, a modest retreat that nonetheless reflects broader investor hesitation. Market participants appeared to trade defensively ahead of Friday’s crucial inflation report, with value turnover subdued at ₱4.2 billion and foreign flows largely tepid.

This caution mirrors a global pattern. Asian markets moved mostly higher, with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index rallying 2.2% and China’s CSI 300 gaining 0.6%. The positive sentiment was triggered by better-than-expected Chinese manufacturing data, a much-needed breather for the world’s second-largest economy, which has been struggling with slowing growth and property sector woes. However, Japan’s Nikkei 225 slid 1.2%, as markets reacted nervously to a U.S. court ruling that declared most of Trump-era reciprocal tariffs illegal. The ruling adds a new layer of uncertainty to U.S.-China trade relations, already a sensitive fault line for global investors.

Meanwhile, U.S. bond markets were closed for a holiday, leaving investors looking ahead to fresh manufacturing and employment data later this week. With the Federal Reserve already in a precarious balancing act, fighting inflation while ensuring growth does not stall, these data points could be decisive in shaping policy signals. The fact that the Bureau of Treasury in Manila was able to award ₱25 billion in T-bills at lower rates reflects a global environment still hungry for yield, but also one that remains uncertain about the trajectory of U.S. monetary tightening.

Commodities markets added another layer of complexity. Dubai crude edged up 0.7% to $68.91 per barrel, coal fell 1.4%, and copper gained 0.8%. The divergence illustrates how supply-demand imbalances continue to ripple across sectors, keeping investors on edge about inflation risks even as some cost pressures ease.

For Philippine equities, the confluence of local and global pressures creates a “wait-and-see” mood. Traders are holding back until inflation prints and Fed signals provide a clearer picture. The downside risk: if inflation surprises on the upside, markets could face renewed volatility, especially with the peso trading softer at ₱57.17 against the dollar.

The broader takeaway is that global markets are caught between cautious optimism—thanks to China’s manufacturing rebound—and a cloud of uncertainty over U.S. monetary policy and trade disputes. For now, investors are keeping their powder dry, ready to reposition once the data and policy outlook come into sharper focus.

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