A
victory for the tough former Mayor of Davao City in the 2016 election contest
ended a month of volatile activity in the Filipino markets as stocks rallied
and the peso gained against its major Asian competitors.
Rodrigo
Duterte, looked to calm investors in his triumphant speech on Monday as he
announced his cabinet. The Philippine Stock Exchange Index reacted with a 2.7%
jump.
“The
recent rally is mostly due to relief of investors. I think the markets are just
happy the whole process has being completed without major violence or
controversy” said James Summers, Global Co-Chief
Operating Officer of Equities at Acom Alliance, whose firm manages around $4bn
in Asia. “A smooth transition is expected.”
With
Duterte holding an unassailable lead in the polls, his thoughts will now turn
to winning the confidence of investors who spurred on 6.1% economic growth
under the former leader of the country Benigno Aquino, while also delivering on
his promises regarding crime.
Investors
had shied away before the election process due to a fairly vague economic
strategy and markets fell more than 4% last month, wiping out most of the
nation’s gains for the year. The peso sank 1.7 percent last month.
“Last month
was unstable, I want to reach out to my competitors,” the new President
commented in a press release in Davao after the voting. “Let’s start the
healing process.”
The
Filipino Index gained for the first time in three weeks, even though local
markets were closed at the start of the week. The peso jumped 0.6% to
46.79 per dollar at the close, after first sinking as much as 0.4 percent from
last week. The nations bonds, due in 2041, progressed for a fourth consecutive
day.
Duterte
said to journalists on Monday that he may bring in Carlos Dominguez as economic
minister. Dominguez and Duterte were childhood friends and Dominguez was
agriculture minister for the late President Aquino.
Once
thought of as Asia’s “poor man,” the country of 102 million has earned
accolades from the World Bank as the continent’s “rising star” under Aquino,
with its 6.1 percent growth rate outperforming previous decades.
Regardless,
poverty rates remained at unacceptable levels and Duterte made the issue a
running policy, gaining popular support. Increased growth and 3.5 million jobs
created in Aquino’s term resulted in a massive increase in car sales, but also
had a negative effect on Manila’s already overworked roads as spending on
infrastructure failed to keep pace with the economy.