Bank Negara Malaysia declared a RM5 billion dividend for 2025 , maintaining payouts to the government despite a moderation in earnings . Earnings Ease After Strong Prior Year BNM reported net profit of RM12.45 billion in FY2025 , down 5.7% YoY from RM13.16 billion. The decline was driven by: Lower total income (RM14.35 billion vs RM14.98 billion) Costs related to reserve management and monetary operations Despite softer earnings, the central bank sustained its second consecutive RM5 billion dividend , following a record RM5.25 billion payout in 2024 . Strong Reserves Provide Stability A significant portion of profits — RM7.45 billion — was allocated to the risk reserve , which rose to RM155.31 billion . This reserve acts as a financial buffer against: Exchange rate volatility Global financial market fluctuations BNM highlighted that 85% of its assets are denominated in foreign currencies , re...
Market Daily Report: KLCI rebounds at 11th hour despite gloomy sentiment amid intensifying trade tension
KUALA LUMPUR (June 3): The FBM KLCI rebounded into positive territory at the 11th hour today, believed to be driven by foreign buying activities, after remaining subdued below its previous close for most of the day.
At 5pm, the benchmark index closed 4.55 points or 0.28% higher at 1,655.31 points, with a day range between 1,642.66 points, and 1,656.68 points.
Malacca Securities Sdn Bhd senior analyst Kenneth Leong told theedgemarkets.com that market sentiment earlier today was dampened by intensifying trade tension between US and Mexico, and US and China.
“The market was relatively quiet today, due to the mid-week Hari Raya break, and volume was lower as well.
"The climb in the final hour today was likely to be foreign buying,
we are still waiting for today’s market participation details from
Bursa, but foreign funds have been recording net buying since last
Thursday,” he noted.
Earlier, Reuters’ report on the Southeast Asian market mentioned that the Philippine shares climbed for the fifth straight session on Monday after the Central Bank governor's promise of further policy easing on Friday, while other Southeast Asian equities declined due to heightened Sino-US tensions over the weekend.
In the Asian region, Japan’s Nikkei fell 0.92%, Hong Kong Hang Seng declined 0.03% while South Korea Kospi gained 1.28%.
Back home, total volume traded on Bursa Malaysia was 1.6 billion worth RM1.55 billion. There were 266 gainers versus 577 losers, with 355 counters remaining unchanged.
Notable gainers included Malaysia Airports Holdings Bhd and Tenaga Nasional Bhd, while losers included Telekom Malaysia Bhd and Allianz Malaysia Bhd.
Hang Seng Index Structured Put Warrant (HIS-H6S) was the most actively traded counter with 87.46 million shares done, followed by Hibiscus Petroleum Bhd with 47.74 million shares traded.
Source: The Edge
Earlier, Reuters’ report on the Southeast Asian market mentioned that the Philippine shares climbed for the fifth straight session on Monday after the Central Bank governor's promise of further policy easing on Friday, while other Southeast Asian equities declined due to heightened Sino-US tensions over the weekend.
In the Asian region, Japan’s Nikkei fell 0.92%, Hong Kong Hang Seng declined 0.03% while South Korea Kospi gained 1.28%.
Back home, total volume traded on Bursa Malaysia was 1.6 billion worth RM1.55 billion. There were 266 gainers versus 577 losers, with 355 counters remaining unchanged.
Notable gainers included Malaysia Airports Holdings Bhd and Tenaga Nasional Bhd, while losers included Telekom Malaysia Bhd and Allianz Malaysia Bhd.
Hang Seng Index Structured Put Warrant (HIS-H6S) was the most actively traded counter with 87.46 million shares done, followed by Hibiscus Petroleum Bhd with 47.74 million shares traded.
Source: The Edge

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