
Bursa rises after soft start, tracks Wall Street gains
At 9.10 am, the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) rose 0.06 of a point to 1,541.54 from Wednesday's close of 1,541.48.
The benchmark index had earlier opened 0.98 of a point lower at 1,540.50.
Market breadth was slightly negative, with decliners outpacing gainers 176 to 131. A total of 261 counters were unchanged, 1,937 untraded, and nine suspended.
Turnover stood at 139 million shares worth RM68.11 million.
Rakuten Trade Sdn Bhd vice-president of equity research Thong Pak Leng said the stronger overnight performance on Wall Street was buoyed by an additional US$100 billion investment by Apple Inc, bringing its total planned spending to US$600 billion over the next few years.
"However, investors remain cautious on the latest report that Trump may impose a 100 per cent tariff on imported semiconductors.
"Additionally, trading has been lacklustre due to the absence of fresh catalysts. Therefore, we expect the local bourse to mirror this trend and anticipate the index to hover within the 1,535–1,545 range today," he told Bernama.
Among the heavyweights, Maybank and Tenaga Nasional gained two sen each to RM9.65 and RM13.20, respectively, while Public Bank, CIMB and IHH Healthcare fell two sen each to RM4.28, RM6.79 and RM6.93.
On the actively traded list, Pharmaniaga and SNS Network Technology inched down one sen each to 17.5 sen and 51 sen, TWL was flat at 2.5 sen, while Inari Amertron added three sen to RM1.89, and Top Glove rose half a sen to 62 sen.
On the broader market, the FBM Emas Index fell 2.75 points to 11,530.15, the FBMT 100 Index slipped 2.42 points to 11,301.44, while the FBM Emas Shariah Index inched up 1.17 points to 11,537.76.
The FBM 70 Index declined 15.92 points to 16,543.14, while the FBM ACE Index edged down 2.48 points to 4,598.41.
By sector, the Financial Services Index eased 1.63 points to 17,541.01, the Industrial Products and Services Index trimmed 0.23 of a point to 157.53, the Energy Index shed 2.21 points to 735.41, and the Plantation Index slipped 2.42 points to 7,345.29.
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The Star
5 hours ago
- The Star
Ringgit poised for cautious trading as US tariff concerns linger
KUALA LUMPUR: The ringgit is anticipated to trade cautiously against the dollar this week as investors monitor external developments, particularly regarding US tariffs. In a research note, Kenanga Investment Bank Bhd stated that the ringgit should find support from domestic economic stability and a softer US dollar, likely holding near current levels. 'President Donald Trump's proposed chips and pharmaceutical tariffs will likely dampen sentiment in risk assets. Investors are also tracking pressure on BRICS and signs of strain in the US-China trade detente. 'Trump's rapid-fire policy moves and media headlines continue to drive market uncertainty,' it said. Hence, the research house said the ringgit traded higher last week, hovering within the range of 4.23 to 4.24 after a weaker-than-expected US jobs report pulled the greenback lower. On a Friday-to-Friday basis, the ringgit ended last week higher against the greenback, closing at 4.2420/2480 versus 4.2750/2815 previously. However, the local note traded lower against a basket of major currencies. The ringgit depreciated vis-à-vis the Japanese yen to 2.8720/8763 last Friday from 2.8407/8452 the previous week, declined against the British pound to 5.7034/7114 from 5.6208/6293 and eased versus the euro to 4.9381/9451 from 4.8752/8826. The ringgit also trended lower against Asean currencies. The local note slipped against the Singapore dollar to 3.3014/3064 at the end of last week from 3.2907/2960, inched down versus the Thai baht to 13.1173/1419 from 13.0058/0319, slid versus the Indonesian rupiah to 260.3/260.8 from 258.8/259.4 and edged down against the Philippine peso to 7.43/7.44 from 7.35/7.36 in the preceding week. — Bernama


The Star
5 hours ago
- The Star
Bursa Malaysia likely to retain uptrend this week on positive data flow
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The Star
6 hours ago
- The Star
Exporters weigh options to deal with new US levy
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While escalating tariffs pose an existential threat to small enterprises like Twenty Second Miles, the larger ones are considering coping tactics including relocating production lines to countries with a lower tariff barrier, tapping buyers in other geographies and exploring acquisitions in the United States. Gokaldas Exports Ltd, one of India's largest apparel exporters that earns about 70% of its revenue from the United States, plans to ramp up production in its factories in Kenya and Ethiopia which face just a 10% US levy. 'Africa is looking like a good source at the moment,' Gokaldas' managing director Sivaramakrishnan Ganapathi said in an interview. 'We are seeing a huge amount of inquiries for production from that region from American customers.' The mitigating strategies will be a gut punch for Prime Minister Narendra Modi's flagship 'Make in India' initiative and puncture any prospects to position India as an alternative manufacturing hotspot to China. Economists forecast that Trump tariffs could clip India's gross domestic product (GDP) by as much as 1%. Trump has peppered his tariff onslaught with jibes about how the South Asian nation's trade barriers were 'obnoxious' and its economy 'dead' – remarks that have drawn counter from India's central bank. But businesses are hoping for more than just retorts. Businesses thought 'there would be more predictability,' according to Rohit Kumar, founding partner at public policy consultancy The Quantum Hub. 'In the short term, this threatens our China+1 strategy that India was positioning itself to benefit from. In the longer term, even this rerouting may not work for longer as policies could change,' Kumar said, referring to companies trying to recast supply chains. 'The additional 25% oil penalty tariff would take the hit to US-bound exports to 60%, dragging GDP by 0.9%. 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This risks crowding out the smaller firms. — Bloomberg