KUALA LUMPUR (March 1): Bursa Malaysia struggled to make significant progress above the 1,550 level and ended lower on Friday due to profit-taking activities following recent gains.
At 5pm, the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) eased 13.42 points to close at 1,538.02 from Thursday’s close of 1,551.44.
The benchmark index, which opened 1.72 points firmer at 1,553.16, moved between 1,537.11 and 1,556.22 throughout the day.
On the broader market, losers outpaced gainers 679 to 396, while 448 counters were unchanged, 737 untraded and 23 others suspended.
Turnover narrowed to 4.82 billion units worth RM3.09 billion versus 5.34 billion units worth RM7.01 billion on Thursday.
SPI Asset Management managing partner Stephen Innes said in the current market landscape, there's a noticeable disparity among different markets.
“While major US indices, particularly those dominated by mega tech companies in the artificial intelligence sector, continue to hit record highs despite concerns over rising US inflation and robust personal income growth, local stocks are grappling with challenges such as higher US yields and weaker manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) data from China.
“The latter indicates ongoing contraction in the manufacturing sector, which is weighing on investor sentiment,” he said.
Meanwhile, Rakuten Trade Sdn Bhd equity research vice president Thong Pak Leng said Bursa Malaysia trended lower as profit taking continued following the recent rally.
“Meanwhile, key regional indices trended higher following positive economic data from China.
“Official data revealed that China's manufacturing PMI for February matched the Reuters poll forecast at 49.1, while, the private Caixin manufacturing final PMI recorded a slightly higher figure of 50.9, up from the previous month's 50.8.
“At the same time, the US January personal consumption expenditures price index came in within estimates, fuelling expectations that the Federal Reserve will implement interest rate cuts by June,” he said.
Among the Bursa Malaysia heavyweights, Maybank Bhd lost eight sen to RM9.45, Public Bank Bhd slid four sen to RM4.36, CIMB Group Holdings Bhd trimmed 12 sen to RM6.34, and Petronas Chemicals Group Bhd edged down seven sen to RM6.93. However, Tenaga Nasional Bhd rose four sen to RM11.30.
As for
the actives, Harvest Miracle Capital Bhd inched up half a sen to 15 sen,
RGB International Bhd gained 2.5 sen to 31.5 sen, and TWL Holdings Bhd
shed half a sen to 3.5 sen, while Borneo Oil Bhd and Velesto Energy Bhd
were flat at one sen and 28.5 sen, respectively.
On the index board, the FBM Emas Index declined 81.51 points to
11,410.31, the FBMT 100 Index went down 83.43 points to 11,074.77, the
FBM Emas Shariah Index decreased 56.44 points to 11,471.55, the FBM 70
Index fell 61.43 points to 15,384.72, and the FBM ACE Index edged down
7.77 points at 4,760.36.
Sector-wise, the Financial Services Index dropped 141.28 points to 17,175.22, the Utilities Index slipped 14.36 points to 1,524.64, the Industrial Products and Services Index eased 0.5 of a point to 175.78, and the Energy Index reduced 15.05 points to 909.65, but the Plantation Index was 29.19 points higher at 7,223.86.
The Main Market volume narrowed to 3.29 billion units valued at RM2.83 billion from 3.69 billion units valued at RM6.74 billion on Thursday.
Warrants turnover fell to 931.75 million units worth RM125.0 million from 1.11 billion units worth RM145.80 million the day before.
The ACE Market volume grew to 579.47 million shares worth RM131.61 million from 546.8 million shares worth RM127.64 million previously.
Consumer products and services counters accounted for 411.86 million shares traded on the Main Market, industrial products and services (1.31 billion); construction (152.78 million); technology (263.16 million); SPAC (nil); financial services (148.72 million); property (325.54 million); plantation (97.16 million); REITs (35.47 million), closed/fund (54,200); energy (313.38 million); healthcare (54.11 million); telecommunications and media (25.69 million); transportation and logistics (39.75 million); and utilities (111.54 million).
Source: The Edge
Comments
Post a Comment