KUALA LUMPUR, May 7 (Bernama) -- Bursa Malaysia closed marginally higher today, supported by continued buying in banking heavyweights following Bank Negara Malaysia’s decision to maintain the overnight policy rate (OPR) at 2.75 per cent. At 5 pm, the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) rose 1.98 points, or 0.11 per cent, to 1,758.85 from Wednesday’s close of 1,756.87. The benchmark index, which opened 5.94 points higher at 1,762.81, moved between 1,758.42 and 1,768.46 during the day. Market breadth was positive with gainers beating losers 660 to 583. A total of 593 counters were unchanged, 815 untraded, and nine suspended. Turnover eased to 3.78 billion units worth RM4.24 billion, compared with 3.98 billion units worth RM3.97 billion yesterday.
US retailers are scrambling to adjust their strategies as tariff rules shift again, adding fresh uncertainty to consumer spending and profit outlooks in 2026. Key Takeaways Tariff rate raised to 15% after Supreme Court ruling Retailers warn of “policy whiplash” complicating planning Companies reluctant to raise prices amid cautious consumers Middle East tensions add new shipping and fuel cost risks Tariff Landscape Shifts Again The US government lifted temporary import levies to 15% , up from 10%, after the Supreme Court struck down emergency duties. Retailers say the bigger problem isn’t just higher tariffs — it’s unpredictability. Key Point: Policy volatility, not just tariff levels, is the main risk for retailers. Companies can plan for higher costs — but not for rules that change week to week. Who Is Most Affected? Abercrombie & Fitch Factored the 15% tariff into forecasts Estimated 70 basis-point hit (~US$40 million) Previously projected US$90 million impact Best Buy Heav...