Southeast Asian stocks: Indonesia jumps most in nearly five months

30 Nov, 2018

Indonesian shares jumped the most in about five months on Thursday as comments by US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell buoyed investor sentiment toward riskier assets, while Philippine stocks pulled back from a near 11-week top to close slightly lower. The Jakarta SE Composite Index rose 1.9 percent to a seven-month closing high, helped by gains across the board. The unexpected signals from Fed chair's comments and the surprise rate hike by Indonesia's central bank earlier this month are the reasons behind heavy gains, said Taye Shim, head of research at Mirae Asset Sekuritas.
Indonesia's central bank earlier this month had raised its benchmark interest rate for the sixth time this year to shore up the rupiah. Bank Central Asia Tbk PT rose 3 percent and Unilever Indonesia Tbk PT climbed 4 percent, making them the top gainers on the benchmark index. The Philippine Stock Exchange PSEi Index rose 1.4 percent intraday before erasing all of its gains in the last few minutes of trade.
"Today is the last trading day of the month and it coincides with the effectivity of the MSCI balancing for this quarter," said Charles William Ang, an associate analyst with COL Financial Group Inc. The Philippine stock market is closed on Friday for a holiday. Meanwhile, investor sentiment was also subdued ahead of high-stakes trade talks between US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping on Saturday on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Argentina.
Singapore shares closed 0.5 percent firmer after gaining 1.2 percent earlier to a more than seven-week high. City Developments Ltd rose 2.2 percent and Venture Corporation Ltd climbed 0.1 percent. Malaysian stocks rose 1 percent before cutting gains to close 0.6 percent higher. IHH Healthcare Bhd gained 4.8 percent, while Axiata group Bhd rose 4.1 percent.

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