Business

Bursa Malaysia retreats after yesterday's gains to open lower

Benchmark index expected to hover within the 1,440-1,450 range today.

Updated 7 months ago · Published on 13 Oct 2023 10:26AM

Bursa Malaysia retreats after yesterday's gains to open lower
Stock market investors at Bursa Malaysia await the tabling of Budget 2024 later today. Twitter pic.

KUALA LUMPUR – Bursa Malaysia retreated from yesterday's gains to open lower on Friday, taking the cue from Wall Street’s weaker performance overnight as the US consumer price index (CPI) report for September showed no signs of weakening. 

At 9.10am, the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) eased 2.64 points to 1,441.18 from Thursday’s closing of 1,443.82. 

The index opened 0.45 points of-a-point lower at 1,443.37.

On the broader market, decliners outpaced gainers 165 to 139, while 248 counters were unchanged, 1,803 untraded and 25 suspended.

Turnover stood at 183.01 million units worth RM77.05 million.

Rakuten Trade Sdn Bhd equity research vice-president Thong Pak Leng said the US CPI data consequently pushed the US 10-year yield higher to 4.697 per cent and that the US Federal Reserve may need to hike rates next month. 

He said the Dow Jones Industrial Average declined 0.51 per cent overnight while the Nasdaq Composite dipped 0.63 per cent.

"In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index surged 345 points underpinned by the emergence of Central Huijin which is part of China’s Sovereign wealth fund, mopping up shares of several banks, namely ICBC, Construction Bank, Bank of China and Agriculture Bank," he told Bernama. 

Back home, he said as investors await the tabling of Budget 2024 later today, he remained quite optimistic that there may be some pleasant surprises in store.

"Nonetheless, we expect the benchmark index to hover within the 1,440-1,450 range today.

"Again, we advocate investors to focus on value stocks like banks and telecommunications plus sectors like construction, industrial products and property as dark horses," he added. 

Among the heavyweights, Petronas Chemicals rose one sen to RM7.28, Maybank and Public Bank lost three sen to RM8.96 and RM4.15 respectively, CIMB slid four sen to RM5.62, while Tenaga Nasional was flat at RM10.00. 

Of the actives, Widad edged up half-a-sen to 55 sen, Tanco and Malaysian Resources Corporation eased half-a-sen each to 56 sen and 48.5 sen, respectively, while KNM Group and Sapura Energy were flat at 12 sen and five sen respectively.  

On the index board, the FBM Emas Index shed 14.82 points to 10,681.49, the FBMT 100 Index gave up 14.53 points to 10,343.00, the FBM Emas Shariah Index decreased 4.06 points to 10,916.71, the FBM 70 Index inched down 0.69 of-a-point to 14,226.19, while the FBM ACE Index perked up 3.73 points to 5,181.50.

Sector-wise, the Financial Services Index slid 28.71 points to 16,249.81, the Industrial Products and Services Index fell 0.05 of-a-point to 173.99, the Energy Index was 2.23 points lower at 873.22, while the Plantation Index advanced 2.17 points to 6,848.94. – Bernama, October 13, 2023

TAGS: Bursa Malaysia, Wall Street, Rakuten Trade, Thong Pak Leng, Budget

Related News

Business / 2mth

SC, Bursa Malaysia pledge speedier IPO approvals in 3 months for main, ACE markets

Malaysia / 4mth

What Malaysians can look forward to in Budget 2024

Malaysia / 5mth

Shafie, Bung Moktar pan poor usage of federal funds in Sabah

Malaysia / 5mth

Sarawak presents largest-ever budget

Malaysia / 6mth

RM19 bil for Home Ministry to strengthen national security: Saifuddin

Malaysia / 6mth

Parliament passes Budget 2024 at policy stage via voice vote

Spotlight

Malaysia

Travel agencies misusing tourist, umrah visas for haj will lose licence, warns govt

By Stephen Then

Malaysia

Authorities bust human trafficking syndicate, arrest 8 Bangladeshis

Malaysia

RTD mulls going undercover to nab those renting cars to foreigners without driving licence

Malaysia

Remembering Karpal, his legacy

Malaysia

Go hard on those wanting to cause chaos, Anwar tells police

Malaysia

Economy grows 4.2% in first quarter