SET, Vietnam shares outperform other SE Asian peers
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SET, Vietnam shares outperform other SE Asian peers

Thai stocks recovered from early losses to close at 1,802.80 points on Thursday. (Photo by Pornprom Satrabhaya)
Thai stocks recovered from early losses to close at 1,802.80 points on Thursday. (Photo by Pornprom Satrabhaya)

The Stock Exchange of Thailand main index rose, while Vietnamese shares extended gains to a fresh 10-year closing high on Thursday.

The Thai index reversed their course and ended 7.88 points, or 0.44% higher, to close at 1,802.80 on the back of gains in energy stocks. Energy Absolute Plc jumped 10.25 baht, or 19.25%, to 63.50. PTT Plc rose 2 baht, or .043%, to 472 and Banpu Plc climbed 0.46 baht, or 0.43%, to 21.80.

Vietnam shares rose for a fourth straight session, buoyed by financial and energy stocks. Joint Stock Commercial Bank for Foreign Trade of Viet Nam climbed 1.4%.

The index has gained in 13 sessions out of 14.

The Philippine Stock Exchange PSEI Index declined as much as 2%, its biggest since March 2017, before closing 1.2% lower.

"The weakness on Wall Street could have been a catalyst for a profit-taking from the global rally seen across most regions," said Fio De Jesus, an equity research analyst with RCBC Securities in Manila.

The three major US stock indexes ended lower overnight after a choppy trading session as investors worried that China would slow US government bond purchases and that US President Donald Trump would end a key trade agreement.

Asian shares ex-Japan also dropped due to concerns about rising US protectionism, while bonds rebounded after China's regulator said a report about Beijing slowing or halting of its US bond buying was possibly wrong.

Losses were largely broad-based in the Philippines, with index heavyweight PLDT Inc ending 3.5% lower and real estate company Ayala Land closing down 2.9%.

"A lot of the proxy stocks that have big weighting on the index are seeing some profit-taking, although the fundamentals haven't really changed," De Jesus said.

Malaysian shares declined for a third straight session, dragged down by telecom and consumer stocks, even after data showed industrial production rose 5% in November from a year earlier.

Axiata Group Bhd fell 0.9%, while Genting Bhd ended down 2.3%.

Indonesia edged up with financials accounting for more than half of the gains. Bank Central Asia Tbk PT closed 1.1% higher.

An index of the country's 45 most liquid stocks rose 0.3%.

Southeast Asian stock markets

 

 

Current

Previous

% change

Thailand

1,802.80

1,794.92

+0.44

Indonesia                

6,386.33

6,371.17

+0.24

Malaysia                

1,816.88

1,822.92

-0.33

Philippines                 

8,813.25

8,920.29

-1.20

Singapore                 

3,518.34

3.520.45

-0.06

Vietnam       

1,048.17

1,038.11

+0.97

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