
Jakarta, Singapore stocks rally; currencies muted on tariff jitters
Jakarta's equity benchmark index gained for the sixth consecutive session to touch its highest since June 18. Barito Pacific jumped 16% after MSCI said the conglomerate's associate companies - Barito Renewables, Petrindo Kreasi Jaya and Petrosea - would be eligible for future inclusions to its list.
All the firms soared up to 19%. Investors in Indonesia are also focusing on the central bank policy decision due on Wednesday. Analysts widely expect Bank Indonesia to deliver a rate cut.
Singapore's FTSE Straits Times index hit a record high for the ninth consecutive session, led by strong inflows into industrials, telecoms, and real-estate stocks.
Data showed the city-state's economy grew 1.4% in the second quarter of 2025, rebounding from a 0.5% contraction in the previous quarter and narrowly avoiding a technical recession, ahead of a policy review by the Monetary Authority of Singapore later this month.
"The MAS monetary policy review due later this month may adopt a 'wait-and-see' mode barring downside core CPI risks...," said analysts at OCBC.
Technology-linked stocks led the decline on the Taiwan bourse. The benchmark index fell 0.6%, tracking a dip in U.S. equity futures, as investors assessed latest developments on tariffs by U.S. President Donald Trump.
"The 32% tariff heading Taiwan's way in conjunction with the spate of other tariff measures...has raised a few more questions about how well the economy can handle potential tariff-related disruptions," said Tim Waterer, a market analyst at KCM Trade.
Currencies across emerging Asia slipped marginally against the U.S. dollar, as markets continued to weigh Trump's tariff threats against Mexico and the European Union.
The Mexican peso and the euro both weakened overnight, with the latter slipping to a three-week low. Thailand's baht was steady, while the Taiwan dollar and Philippine peso traded 0.3% lower each.
"We suspect the recent tariff developments are likely to further erode policymakers' confidence that deals would put an end to uncertainty over U.S. trade policy," said analysts at Barclays.
Investors will also look out for the U.S. inflation report, due Tuesday, which would be crucial for the Federal Reserve to consider the next rate cut.
HIGHLIGHTS:
** Singapore economy grows 4.3% in second quarter, advance estimate shows
** Data centre NTT DC REIT makes tepid debut after Singapore's biggest IPO in 4 years - Reuters
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Express
an hour ago
- Daily Express
Japanese auto exports to US dive in June as tariffs bite
Published on: Friday, July 18, 2025 Published on: Fri, Jul 18, 2025 By: AFP Text Size: Japan's auto industry supported roughly 8% of its employment base, led by auto giants Toyota, Honda and Nissan. (Toyota pic) TOKYO: Japanese auto exports to the US tumbled more than a quarter in June, official data showed Thursday, amid growing concern at the failure of Tokyo to strike a deal to avoid the worst of Donald Trump's tariffs. Roughly 8% of jobs are tied to the auto industry in Japan, which is home to the world's top-selling carmaker Toyota as well as Honda, Nissan and other giants. Advertisement The government is seeking relief from 25% US vehicle tariffs and other trade levies due to come into force on Aug 1, but no agreement has been reached despite several rounds of talks. Japan posted a trade surplus in the three months in June, with exports exceeding the value of imports by 153.1 billion yen (US$1.0 billion). Exports to the US fell 11.4% on-year to 1.7 trillion yen, with autos down 26.7%, finance ministry data showed. Shipments of pharmaceutical drugs and auto parts also contributed to the decline, the ministry said. Japan's trade surplus with the US shrank 22.9% year-on-year in June – the second straight monthly contraction, even as imports from the country slipped 2.0%. Japan, a key US ally and its biggest investor, is subject to the same 10% baseline tariffs imposed on most nations plus steeper levies on cars, steel and aluminium. Trump also announced an additional 24% 'reciprocal' toll on Japan in early April but later paused it along with similar measures on other countries. But earlier this month he informed a number of trading partners of new country-specific rates, hitting Japan with a 25% tax, up from the 24% announced in April. The levies will be applied from Aug 1. Reports said US treasury secretary Scott Bessent was expected to visit the World Expo in Osaka this weekend and meet Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba in Tokyo.


The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Asian shares head for best week in months on trade deal hopes; currencies fall
Stock markets in emerging Asia were headed for their best week in several months on Friday, driven by optimism around trade deals with the United States, and an increasingly dovish tilt at regional central banks. The MSCI gauge of emerging Asia stocks touched its highest in more than three years and was set to end the week 1.6% higher. Stocks in Taiwan, which make up over a fifth of the index, rose 1% to a more than four-month high. TSMC, the world's largest contract chipmaker, rallied more than 2% after posting a record quarterly profit on Thursday. An MSCI index of ASEAN equities, dominated by Singapore, surged to a more than nine-month high. Singapore's stocks touched a record high for the tenth straight day, which also marks its longest ever rally. Indonesian equities jumped more than 1% to an over seven-month peak, led by data centre service provider DCI Indonesia, which surged over 16% to a record high, and Barito Renewables Energy, which gained about 8%. A trade deal with the U.S. at a lower than previously announced tariff rate, alongside an increasingly dovish stance by the central bank, has helped drive inflows into equities. Domestic investors have net bought 6.21 trillion rupiah ($380.86 million) so far this month, as per exchange data. In Thailand, the benchmark index rose 1%. It has surged almost 7% for the week and was set for its biggest gain since June 2020, driven by inflows on news of the government proposing a new central bank chief with a dovish bias. Elsewhere, Malaysian stocks jumped 0.4%, while those in the Philippines ticked marginally higher. India's Nifty 50 slipped 0.7% to a more than three-week low. Currencies in the region were mixed. Indonesia's rupiah, the Philippine peso, Thai baht, and Singapore's dollar advanced modestly against the U.S. dollar, while Malaysia's ringgit and the Indian rupee slipped. Asian currencies have lost some ground over the past few sessions as the dollar index recovered from a more than two-year low hit earlier this month. "Asian currencies have come under pressure amid an incipient rebound in the U.S. dollar, driven by renewed market focus on tariffs," MUFG senior currency analyst Lloyd Chan said. "And while markets still hold net short positions on the U.S. dollar, some unwinding of those trades could lend support for the recent U.S. dollar rebound." HIGHLIGHTS: ** Indonesia's 10-year benchmark yield slips to 6.558% ** Indonesia still negotiating tariff details ** Malaysia's economy likely grew 4.5% y/y in Q2 ** Singapore's exports rise 13% annually in June - Reuters


Free Malaysia Today
3 hours ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Malaysian growth unexpectedly quickens despite trade risks
Malaysia's gross domestic product rose 4.5% in the April–June period from a year earlier. PETALING JAYA : Malaysia's economy grew faster than expected in the second quarter, driven by the services sector, even as the country contends with US President Donald Trump's rollout of global tariffs. Gross domestic product (GDP) rose 4.5% in the April-June period from a year earlier, according to advance estimates from the statistics department. That's higher than the 4.2% median estimate in a Bloomberg survey, and faster than the 4.4% expansion in the first three months of the year. The latest economic print may give breathing space to policymakers as they review their 4.5%-5.5% growth projection for 2025. Malaysia has been threatened with a 25% US import levy and officials are racing to negotiate the tariff lower before they take effect on Aug 1. Exports unexpectedly declined 3.5% in June from a year earlier, the statistics agency said in a separate statement. Analysts' median estimate was for an increase of 5.4%, according to a Bloomberg survey. Imports rose 1.2%, while total trade fell by 1.2%. The data suggests that the effect of frontloading of shipments to the US are wearing off, according to Lavanya Venkateswaran, analyst at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. 'Overall, we see the incoming data as mixed, suggesting weakening external demand amidst better domestic demand conditions,' she said. She maintained an annual GDP forecast of 3.9% growth, and expects another 25-basis-point cut in interest rates by the central bank this year. The central bank last week cut interest rates by a quarter point to preemptively support the economy, warning that 'the balance of risks to the growth outlook remains tilted to the downside'. Manufacturing growth slowed to 3.8% in the second quarter, from 4.1% in the first three months of the year, according to the statistics department. Growth in the services sector accelerated to 5.3%, from 5% in the previous three months, with key contributions from wholesale and retail trade, along with transportation and storage businesses. 'Malaysia's economy is estimated to have expanded by 4.4% in the first half of 2025,' the government agency said. The construction sector moderated, but still saw an 11% expansion, the sixth straight double-digit quarterly increase. The advance GDP estimates are based on available information from April and May, along with estimates. Preliminary GDP data, which will provide a detailed analysis of the second quarter, will be released on Aug 15.