KUALA LUMPUR, March 30 (Bernama) -- Bursa Malaysia’s benchmark index closed lower today, in line with most regional markets, as investors adjusted their risk exposure amid spiralling oil prices driven by the ongoing West Asia conflict, now in its second month. At 5 pm, the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) retreated by 24.75 points or 1.44 per cent to 1,687.90 from Friday’s close of 1,712.65. The market bellwether opened 10.57 points weaker at 1,702.08 and fluctuated between 1,682.79 and 1,702.38. The broader market was bearish, with decliners thumping advancers 956 to 371. A total of 373 counters were unchanged, 1,042 untraded and 134 suspended. Turnover expanded to 3.98 billion units worth RM4.85 billion from last Friday’s 2.97 billion units worth RM3.25 billion.
KUALA LUMPUR (Aug 30): The FBM KLCI ended today's trade 12.02 points or 0.68% higher, after getting 11th hour boost from index-linked CIMB Group Holdings Bhd and MISC Bhd.
The last minute push from CIMB and MISC was due to investors who were on the hunt for good stocks, according to Hong Leong Investment Bank Bhd's retail research analyst Loui Low Ley Yee.
"In a way, the last minute boost was also part of the bourse's 'window-dressing' activity, marking a nice end to August's subdued and sideways trade as investors digest the corporate earnings announcement, which are either in-line or disappoints," Low told theedgemarkets.com in a brief telephone conversation.
At 5pm today, the FBM KLCI closed at 1,773.16 points, from a previous close of 1,761.14 points on Tuesday.
Some 1.83 billion shares, worth RM2.21 billion, were traded at the local bourse today, with gainers outpacing decliners at 449 counters versus 346 counters, while 411 stocks closed unchanged.
Gainers were led by Time dotCom Bhd, UMW Holdings Bhd and CIMB, while Ajinomoto (Malaysia) Bhd was the top decliner.
Sino Hua-An International Bhd was the most active stock, with 217.34 million shares — equivalent to 19.37% of its outstanding shares — traded today.
Japanese shares, on average, recovered all of the previous day's loss, helped by Wall Street's rise and a weaker yen, as worries sparked by North Korea firing a missile over Japan receded, according to Reuters.
The Nikkei, which hit a four-month low on Tuesday and settled 0.5% lower, climbed 0.7% to 19,506.54. Similarly, South Korea's Kospi erased all its 0.2% retreat from Tuesday and closed 0.3% higher as domestic institutions' buying offset foreign selling.
Meanwhile, Hong Kong's Hang Seng index rose 1.2% to 28,094.61 — passing the 28,000 mark for the first time since May 2015 — helped by easing geopolitical tensions and signs that mainland money has continued to flow steadily into the city's bourse, the news agency wrote.
Source: The Edge

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