Global markets entered Tuesday with a mixed tone as investors rotated out of some of the year's biggest technology winners, even as AI-related semiconductor stocks continued to surge to fresh highs. While Wall Street's major indices weakened overnight, Singapore equities showed resilience, supported by domestic liquidity, retail participation, and continued government-backed market initiatives. Market Snapshot The Straits Times Index (STI) opened higher, rising 0.3% as buying interest remained healthy despite global market volatility. Key drivers supporting sentiment include: Continued deployment of Singapore's S$6.5 billion Equity Market Development Programme (EQDP) Strong retail participation Renewed interest in undervalued small- and mid-cap stocks This contrasts with the more volatile environment seen in global technology markets. AI Trade Faces Its First Reality Check The biggest story overnight was not the decline in US indices. It was the divergence within technology...
KUALA LUMPUR (Oct 9): The FBM KLCI finished 7.56 points or 0.48% lower at 1,551.23 today as the broadening US-China dispute over trade and foreign policy weighed down world markets.
Reuters reported that the US State Department announced the visa restrictions just a day after the US Commerce Department cited the mistreatment of Uighur Muslims in China in its decision to add 20 Chinese public security bureaus and eight companies to a trade blacklist.
It was reported that the US' moves cast a pall over US-China trade talks in Washington, where deputy negotiators met for a second day to prepare for the first Minister-level meetings in more than two months on Thursday and Friday.
"Asian stocks fell the most in a week on Wednesday as the US and China's broadening dispute over trade and foreign policy showed little sign of coming to an end, weighing on global economic growth," Reuters said.
In Malaysia today, Malacca Securities Sdn Bhd senior analyst Kenneth Leong told theedgemarkets.com the KLCI remained downbeat after languishing in negative territory for the entire trading session, spooked by the renewed US share trade volatility at Wall Street overnight.
“Moving forward, the KLCI's losses might be cushioned by the upcoming tabling of (Malaysia's) Budget 2020 (on Friday) in anticipation of higher development expenditure," Leong said.
Across Bursa Malaysia today, turnover ended at 1.9 billion shares worth RM1.68 billion after broad-based selling across the exchange.
All indices on the bourse closed down except the palm oil, energy and transportation indices. The index for small market capitalisation stocks lost 19.47 points or 0.15% to close at 13,164.89.
Within the KLCI, Top Glove Corp Bhd was the top-percentage decliner followed by Malaysia Airports Holdings Bhd (MAHB). Top Glove closed down 10 sen or 2.24% at RM4.37 while MAHB fell 16 sen or 1.84% to RM8.53.
Source: The Edge

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