President Donald Trump’s ever-changing tariff onslaught is overshadowing the Philippines’ sound economic fundamentals and will likely keep banks selective in deploying funds, according to the head of the group representing fixed-income traders.
“I haven’t seen this level of uncertainty,” Justin Robert Ladaban, president of the Money Market Association of the Philippines, said in an interview late Monday. “Unlike in the pandemic where responses were pretty much similar across jurisdictions, it’s not the case now.”
Global markets saw intense volatility last week, with multiple markets seeing record losses and gains as the Trump administration rolled out tariffs, pared them back for most countries and ended up hiking them dramatically for China. The flip-flops have been keeping investors on edge as they seek assets that can hold out against the unprecedented shocks to global trade.
Still, for the Philippines, the 17% threatened tariff on its exports to the US was lower than for Southeast Asian neighbors like Vietnam, Thailand and Indonesia.
Read: Punch Drunk Traders in Asia Ready for a Week of Drama
During the Covid-19 pandemic, it made more sense for banks to buy bonds than to lend to consumers, said Ladaban, who’s also the head of trading at Philippine Bank of Communications.
“Now the play is really for the spreads rather than the trading gains,” he said. “If you can deploy your funds and generate a consistent income, why not? That’s also why we’ve seen some bias towards lending.”
Growth in personal incomes can help fuel demand for consumer loans, Ladaban said, noting that the country’s “relatively subdued inflation” makes consumer lending attractive “given the spreads that we see.”
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas last week resumed easing, cutting its key interest rate by 25 basis points to 5.5% and signaling more to come, thanks to restrained price pressures.
“Like the rest of the world, we’re looking at slower growth, but unlike the rest of the world, we’re looking at lower inflation,” Governor Eli Remolona said at an April 10 briefing in Manila.
Ladaban expects the central bank to continue easing.
“We’ve been seeing a relatively weak dollar these last couple of weeks,” he said. The peso has gained roughly 1.6% against the dollar this year. “If that persists and inflation remains under control, I don’t see why the BSP would consider a halt in cutting its key rates.”
Governor Remolona last month said uncertainty indexes are close to their levels at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic and exceed those during the global financial crisis.
In its financial stability report, the BSP said that the high household borrowing, including unsecured consumer loans, raises concerns over bad debts and liquidity stress.
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.
InterGlobe Aviation, parent of IndiGo, is expanding into hospitality through a new partnership with French hotel major Accor. The two…
New Delhi: Union Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal said on Monday that India is well poised to convert the…
Here’s a quick look at stocks likely to be in focus in today's trade.WiproIT major stock will remain in focus…
The Trump tariffs whacked stocks. Wall Street knew they were coming, but an average rate of almost 30% on trillions…