鈥淎 JUNGLE.鈥
That鈥檚 how the trading floor appeared to Mica Tan, who was then in her teens when she walked in the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) in high school uniform.
The colossal electronic board, its dizzying figures, bewildering codes, and people shouting from different corners formed an almost intimidating world that the curious Ms. Tan, with a backpack slinging on her shoulder, still set out to explore.
Her first mission was to find herself a mentor. Perhaps amused with finding a kid in a sea of coats鈥慳nd鈥憈ies, the head of a brokerage firm agreed to teach her the ropes.
鈥淚 saw how important it was for them to make decisions in a second,鈥 recalled Ms. Tan, who founded of an investment firm called MFT Group of Companies at the age of 20. In an interview, she shared the first lessons from she learned on the trading floor: which stocks to buy, how much, if they should hold or if they should sell. 鈥淎nd they鈥檙e not talking about some change,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e talking about millions.鈥
Ms. Tan is part of an ongoing shift in the stock market now seeing an influx of 鈥渕illennials,鈥 the generational cohort born between the early 1980s and the early 2000s, a long way from the market being formerly dominated by the 鈥渙ld boys鈥 club.鈥

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Jose T. Pardo, the 75鈥憏ear鈥憃ld chairman of the PSE, compares this to his own career history, reeling in the time where he started trading in his late 30s. With 鈥渧ery limited funds,鈥 he said, he invested only in 鈥渧ery select鈥 dividend鈥憄aying stocks.
鈥淭he PSE has joined the digital age, it is now information technology [I.T.]鈥慸riven,鈥 the chairman said. 鈥淭he millennials, being tech鈥憇avvy, are quick to adapt so we鈥檙e seeing an upsurge of younger stock market investors.鈥
As a result, brokerage firms have been prompted to change their strategy in a bid to cash in on this market.
Ramon Tejero, head of retail equities鈥慹.commerce of Maybank ATR Kim Eng, has observed that millennials are aggressive and are risk takers. His company regularly mounts coaching sessions for young people interested in investing in the stock market.
鈥淭hey value speed, they鈥檙e highly mobile, and they want to do it themselves,鈥 he said.
While millennials are known to value experiences more than material things, according to a聽聽conducted by Harris and sponsored by Eventbrite, they may opt to go to the stock market because of its competitive nature. Mr. Tejero said that while millennials are 鈥減robably not yet at a stage where acquisition is more important to them, it鈥檚 all about experience.鈥 He added that people who get a high in winning in sports also enjoy trading. 鈥淚t also gets you high because it鈥檚 like a win. Not only are you聽sikat聽(popular), you have money in your pocket.鈥
Millennials have a higher risk appetite than their senior counterparts. They trade more often but in smaller amounts, while the older ones trade less often but pour in huge chunks of money.
鈥淪ince the seniors also trade in bigger amounts, they tend to be deliberate. They tend to be sure. They tend to study the trade before they enter it,鈥 Mr. Tejero said. 鈥淭he more senior clients would be still a handover from the previous generation which is a buy鈥慳nd鈥慼old generation. For millennials, it鈥檚 price action. You trade what you see.鈥
The PSE has joined the digital age, it is now IT鈥慸riven. The millennials, being tech鈥憇avvy, are quick to adapt so we鈥檙e seeing an upsurge of younger stock market investors.
The younger investors might be more inclined to say: 鈥Tutal naman听鈧20,000听lang 鈥榯o, pwede ba 鈥榯ong听迟谤补诲别听na 鈥榯o? Sige na, may聽target price聽naman ako.鈥 (Since it鈥檚 just 鈧20,000, can I trade this? Come on. I have a target price anyway.)
Their actions are also driven by the 鈥渇lexible鈥 nature of their jobs鈥攁 lot of them coming from, say, business process outsourcing鈥攚hich allows them to devote more time on their online portfolio and on monitoring the market, compared to the seniors who may be executives with very little spare time.
The main difference between the millennials and the Gen X? They trade daily, weekly, or monthly, unlike the latter who wait for a year or more.
鈥淭he frame of mind of the millennial is more different. They鈥檙e more opportunistic. They鈥檙e more risk takers,鈥 Mr. Tejero said.
This makes online trading a perfect platform for the youth. Aside from providing mobility, it allows them to open an online account for as low as 鈧5,000 and start trading real鈥憈ime, unlike before when investors would have to call their brokers to place an order, and wait, because with the limited resources that they had, brokers might prioritize those with higher bids.
Online stock market accounts grew 35.6% to 236,669 in 2015,聽 from the 2010 count of 35,559, data released last year by the PSE showed.聽In the same statement, PSE president and CEO Hans B. Sicat said: 鈥淲e expect online trading to continue to drive growth in stock market accounts. We are hopeful that the rate of expansion we saw in the last five years will be sustained especially as more trading participants start offering online trading services.鈥
鈥淚f I could google 鈥榤entors鈥 10 years ago, I would鈥檝e done that,鈥 Ms. Tan said. 鈥淏ut now, my eight鈥憏ear鈥憃ld niece would ask me if she could buy Apple Inc. stocks because she owns an iPad.鈥
鈥淔rom old boys鈥 club to the rich kids鈥 club, I partly agree that there is a big transition,鈥 Ms. Tan said. 鈥淏ut I also think that it鈥檚 not only the rich kids who get to appreciate it now. There鈥檚 a growing number of middle class tapping into stocks because they鈥檙e more educated on what to do with their money.鈥
The PSE affirms this view, noting that the income profile of investors has 鈥渂ecome more skewed鈥 to the lower income bracket.
Those earning half a million pesos or less every year took up 40.9% of investor accounts in 2015, from just 29.1% in 2010 when聽bulk of them earned more than P1 million (36.7%).
鈥淭echnology levels the playing field in providing access to our stock market as shown by the higher share of online investors from Visayas and Mindanao,鈥 PSE鈥檚 Mr. Sicat said.
Even as majority or 72.7% of retail investors still come from Metro Manila, those from Luzon increased to 15% from 14.4% in 2010. Those from Visayas and Mindanao comprised 5.6% (from 2010鈥檚 4.3%) and 2.8% (from 2010鈥檚 1.8%) of the total accounts, respectively.
Investors based overseas accounted for 2.6% of the retail accounts, higher than the 1.2% share registered in 2010.
鈥淚t all ties down to the Philippines鈥 financial inclusiveness. It hasn鈥檛 reached yet that certain level that will allow us to be more aggressive to a higher level of financial inclusiveness,鈥 Mr. Tejero said.
He said the fact that 鈥90% of the Philippine population is below economic class C puts us way behind in terms of penetration rate.鈥
The gamification of the stock market thus seems to widen the access to the formerly old boys鈥 club鈥慸ominated floors, letting in millennials who get a high from registering their first profit or their first dividend check. 鈥淚n the terms of millennials,鈥 Mr. Tejero said, 鈥淎chievement unlocked.鈥
Yet at the same time, not all endings are happy. 鈥淭here are people who also lose money,鈥 Mr. Tejero added. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why education is important. You have to start the right way.鈥
For Ms. Tan, who remembers already having more than a passing concern about her future and her finances even as early as six, and who also remembers not having enough cash to buy stocks when she was a teenager, the stock market is like a 鈥渇ast鈥慺orward button鈥 that will allow you to go faster wherever you want to go.
鈥淏eing in the stock market allows you to think the way big businesses do,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 would pretend I鈥檓 in Wall Street, when I鈥檓 in Ayala Triangle.鈥
In her own office at the Bonifacio Global City鈥攁 concrete jungle far larger than the trading floors she had since conquered鈥攕he looked back to the day she saw one company go public at the trading floor. 鈥淚 said, 鈥極ne day, I鈥檇 like to make that happen.鈥欌
听补苍诲听聽contributed to this story
The author wrote this feature as a cover story for聽大象传媒 University Edition聽when she was still on the PSE beat as a reporter for聽大象传媒. Ms. Magturo is now an equity analyst.
To learn more about Maybank ATR Kim Eng鈥檚 coaching sessions, visit their website聽
The Philippine Stock Exchange has a market education site at聽


