FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI(FBM KLCI) Has Hit A New High

Have You Make Your Money in Bursa Malaysia?

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Is Chinese New Year Rally  Coming to Bursa Malaysia?

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Would the FTSE Bursa Malaysia Kuala Lumpur Composite Index (FBM KLCI) Bull Market Sustainable?

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The FTSE Bursa Malaysia Kuala Lumpur Composite Index (FBM KLCI) charted record highs for five days in a row. This is a Good start for a Bull Market in 2011.

This year 2011 will be expected to have  another good year for the Malaysian market after surging over 30 per cent last year.

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The FBM KLCI is breaking into a new high with the FBM KLCI was up 3.84 points to 1,572.21 as losses prompted by profit-taking were well absorbed

It has surpassing its previous record of 1,528 points registered on Nov 10. The Bull got the momentum with  a total of 526 gainers and 324 losers with 301 stocks unchanged.

According to Datuk Yusli Mohamed Yusoff, Bursa Malaysia Bhd chief executive officer, foreign investments funds are expected to continue flowing into the country with more monies going into the capital market.

This massive of foreign investments funds  in the the Malaysian financial market started since September and  this trend expected to be continue.

According to ASEAN Equity Strategy Outlook Report for 2011 by Nomura Securities Malaysia Sdn Bhd, FBM KLCI will rise a further 13 per cent to 1,700 by year-end, sparked by a series of merger and acquisitions (M&A) activities in the consumer and property sectors.

Citigroup Inc said Malaysia’s KLCI index may reach 1,650 by the end of 2011 on increased liquidity.

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I expected The FBM KLCI to continue climbing until the next general election and the Sarawak state election. For the ruling party to win, it’s very important to create a Feel Good factors.

Read more at The FTSE Bursa Malaysia KL Composite Index To Hit Above 2000 Points Soon

Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 was up 0.11% to 10,541.04 and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index was down 0.42% to 23,686.63.

Shanghai’s A index was up 0.52% to 2838.8 while Taiwan’s Taiex Index was down 1.13% to 8782.72.

Seoul’s Kospi Index was up 0.41% to 2086.2, with Singapore’s Straits Times Index fell 0.56% to 3261.35.

Nymex crude oil was down 63 cents to US$93.79 per barrel.

Spot gold was down US$9.30 to US$1,362.40 per ounce.

The ringgit was quoted at 3.071 to the US dollar.

2 Responses to “FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI(FBM KLCI) Has Hit A New High”

  1. ETP expected to give stock market a boost
    By LEE KIAN SEONG

    KUALA LUMPUR: HwangDBS Vickers Research Sdn Bhd expects positive factors like the Government’s Economic Transformation Programme, strong liquidity and a robust economic activities to lift the stock market this year.

    However, any sustained uptrend would still depend on the implementation of the Economic Transformation Programme (ETP) and external factors such as the performance of the US, European and China markets.

    Bank Negara is also expected to increase the overnight policy rate by 50 basis points this year.

    HwangDBS Vickers executive director and head of research Wong Ming Tek said expected 2011 earnings would be 35% higher than before the financial crisis, although the FTSE Bursa Malaysia Kuala Lumpur Composite Index (FBM KLCI) had just breached its pre-crisis levels.

    “In terms of earnings multiples, the market is currently trading at 13 times forward earnings. We expect the FBM KLCI, which closed at 1,572.21 points, to reach the year-end target of 1,730 points.

    “The market had done fairly well in the last few days although there will be some profit taking eventually. We would expect some volatility before reaching the target,” he said yesterday when presenting the Market Strategy and Banking Sector Outlook Media Session for 2011.

    The research house said it had not factored in the effects from a possible general election this year but noted that there would usually be positive buying momentum ahead of it.

    “The appreciation of the ringgit was a positive factor on the market last year, and we expect that to continue into 2011. We expect the ringgit to trade at 2.96 to the US dollar by year-end. In term of gross domestic product growth, we expect 7.2% for 2010 and 5.5% for 2011,” he said.

    HwangDBS’ market strategy this year is to focus on sectors such as construction, banking, oil and gas, property, and plantations.

    On foreign ownership, Wong said it was on the low side of 22% compared with 27% in 2007, adding that timely implementation of the ETP could potentially increase the level of foreign ownership as confidence builds up.

    Despite a growing sense of optimism, Wong said the Government should facilitate more investments and the process of economic transformation.

    For example, it should introduce fiscal incentives to attract investments, remove unnecessary regulations and make it easier to do business.

    On the banking sector, HwangDBS Vickers’ senior analyst Lim Sue Lin said: “Earnings growth will normalise in 2011 after the strong recovery in 2010 mainly due to lower provisioning and higher loans growth. Banks with established sources of non-interest income offer better return on equity prospects in a tighter net interest margin environment.”

    On the possible consolidation of the banking sector, Lim feels RHB Capital may be a good candidate at its cheap valuation of 1.7 times price to book, saying that the banking group has done a lot with its alternative banking channels as well.

    She reckons that CIMB Bank may be interested in RHB Capital.

    This is because CIMB has always wanted to build its retail deposit franchise and RHB Capital can fill the gap, while RHB Capital’s business in Indonesia can complement CIMB’s operations there.

    For the construction industry, senior analyst Chong Tjen-San said the sector looked promising on initiatives under the ETP and the 10th Malaysia Plan, noting that there had been an increase in investments with projects coming up such as toll highways and the redevelopment of strategic government land.

    Among construction companies, he said TRC Synergy Bhd, which recently clinched the RM950mil Kelana Jaya LRT extension job, could be a good ideal acquisition target.

    fr:biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/1/8/business/7756038&sec=business

  2. Does the rally have more hop?
    By YVONNE TAN

    The stock market barometer hit a historical high recently. Will it have more bounce or could it hit a bump in the Year of the Rabbit?

    CALL it the January effect, a pre-lunar rally or a pre-election run. In fact, call it whatever you want but this is the fact the stock market has never, in its history, risen to current levels before.

    Investors cheered at the beginning of this week when the 30-stock key benchmark index, the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KL Composite Index hit a fresh high of 1,533, up 14.5 points or 0.96%.

    In the first week alone, it has risen more than 2.5% in ringgit terms and 2.3 % in US dollar terms.

    Daily trading volumes have also been robust, crossing the average 2 billion mark against the average of some 1 billion last year.

    “Granted, the index is not the perfect gauge as it is only made up of 30 component stocks but the positive sentiment is contagious and it is spilling over,” remarks a market observer.

    The reasons for such exuberance includes stoked expectations of a general election in the first half of this year, massive global liquidity arising from quantitative easing in the Western world, a rising ringgit and commodity prices and a firm economic outlook, or at least economic recovery stories in most parts of the world.

    This begs the question is the current upswing more than just a flash in the pan?

    Laggard compared to the rest

    Noteworthy is that the Malaysian stock market, relative to most of its Asean counterparts, has not gone up as much in the past one year.

    For example, last year, markets in Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines were up 54%, 61% and 52% in US dollar terms as opposed to Malaysian equities which had risen 31%.

    “That alone is more like reaching the top step of the kitchen ladder rather than the stars in the sky,” says Gerald Ambrose, the head of Malaysian operations at Aberdeen Asset Management.

    Ambrose is quite confident that the current rise in the Malaysian stock market will continue. “It is real and the momentum appears to be intact,” he tells StarBizWeek. Naturally, no one quite knows how long the rise will continue.

    “It could go on for the whole year to produce a huge equity bubble by the end of it. Or it could all go wrong tomorrow!,” says Ambrose.

    Vincent Khoo, head of research at UOB KayHian writes in his 2011 market strategy report that macro domestic conditions in the first half of the year are favourable for a healthy market, with benign inflation and a firm economic outlook, boosted by the unfolding of the New Economic Model (NEM) which brings with it various degrees of financial liberalisation and mega infrastructure projects.

    However, the second half of the year’s performance, he says, would have less upside and as such, Khoo is advising clients to switch to being defensive, in anticipation of a “jerkier” market due to possible resumption of interest rate hikes here and less accommodative monetary policies in the West.

    OSK Research head Chris Eng shares the same sentiment with Khoo, saying that the first half of the year is well positioned for a robust stock market while the remaining two quarters of the year could see some volatility largely due to the same reasons.

    “For the time being, you can call it a pre-lunar rally, an election rally or the Capricorn effect, but the effect is the same!” says Ambrose.

    Liquidity Rush

    The massive amounts of liquidity totalling hundreds of billions of US dollars released from the credit and quantitative easing (QE) measures by the US and other developed countries such as Japan, European Union (EU) zone and Britain are currently flowing into high growth countries including Malaysia, in search of better returns.

    “With the present low interest rate regime globally, hence low yields on fixed income and deposit instruments, it makes sense to be overweight on equities and Asia will be the focus of global investment funds given their growth potential,” says Danny Wong, CEO of fund management firm Areca Capital.

    In this regard, a recent report by Credit Suisse Group AG showed that net foreign buying in Malaysian stocks surged to RM2.6bil in December from RM900mil the month before.

    From the foreign exchange point of view, the weak US dollar is also a push factor for the influx of funds into Asia, encouraging investors to put their money into Asian equities, says Wong.

    Last year, the ringgit appreciated more than 11% against the greenback.

    “With this influx of investment money into Asia, Malaysia will gain from the spillover effect, if not directly benefit from the inflows,” says Wong.

    The macro perspective

    From the economic fundamental point of view, major economies such as the US and the EU zones are showing uneven recovery from their last crises, but economists are expecting some stabilisation of sorts in the near-term.

    A slew of positive economic indicators from the US recently, for example, suggests that things could be getting better there.

    On Tuesday, figures showed that new orders for US goods rose while the reading for the US Purchasing Managers Index a headline indicator for economic activity was also higher at 57% in December. A reading above 50% reflects growth.

    Employment figures another key economic barometer were also healthier, rising 100,000 in December, the most since November 2007, according to Bloomberg.

    Over in Europe, China has pledged its support for the zone, promising to help it out of its debt crisis by signing multi-billion contracts and buying up its bonds.

    Domestically, growth is expected to be slower this year, coming from a high-base effect last year. Economists are predicting the economy to grow at about 5.3% this year from roughly 7% in 2010.

    However, the equity market will continue to be supported by still relatively high double-digit corporate earnings buoyed by underlying domestic and global economic activities, says Areca’s Wong.

    The country’s economic transformation programme (ETP) which includes plans to build a RM36bil mass rapid transit system, if wholly and successfully implemented, is likely to galvanise private investments.

    Along with the Government’s support of domestic consumption spending, the private sector will benefit from the economic growth, notes Wong.

    “The implementation of the Greater KL for instance will benefit the construction, property and financial sectors with indirect spillover effect to other related sectors such as raw materials and other infrastructure industry,” he says.

    Wong, as a fund manager believes that the confidence and perception towards Malaysia have somewhat improved among foreigners of late, largely due to the recent investment-friendly measures announced.

    The lifting of certain controls and restrictions such as foreign holding limits in the financial sector, efforts to cut subsidies and the plan to reduce the country’s budget deficit are among the contributing factors to a better perception of the country’s transformation, he adds.

    One fund manager says the promotion of Malaysia as a global Islamic financial hub has also put Malaysia on the radar screen of global investors.

    “Once there is confidence, our “domestic champion businesses” such as the oil palm, glove, oil and gas and gaming sectors will be magnets to foreign funds,” Wong says.

    Further supporting these fundamentals are that investors appear to already be overweight on neighbouring markets like Indonesia, Singapore and Thailand, says Aberdeen’s Ambrose.

    Data-wise, foreign institutions’ holdings in Malaysian equities, although off their lows, are only about 22% now versus the peak levels of 27% in 2008.

    Adds Ambrose: “Whilst valuations for Malaysian stocks are hardly at bargain basement levels by our calculations, our portfolio is on about 16 times 2011 earnings with earnings growth at a conservative 5% neither does it look anywhere near overvalued.”

    In terms of FBM KLCI targets, UOB KayHian has a year-end target which is pretty similar to most research houses in town. It is targeting for the index to reach 1,654 by year-end based on a 2012 forecast price earnings of 14.5 times.

    Wong notes many market trend followers believe that the market should enjoy “good times” for the next two to three years since the last financial crisis was in 2007 to 2009 and the market just started rebounding in the second quarter of 2009.

    “Further, the expectations of an early election may provide a feel-good factor for a rally,” he adds.

    Analysts also note the Government’s efforts in reducing its stakes in major Government-linked companies including in Telekom Malaysia Bhd, Tenaga Nasional Bhd and Malaysia Airport Holdings Bhd, which will likely enhance participation from the retail market and foreign investors.

    The downside

    What could throw a spanner in the works in the current surge? Plenty, according to experts.

    The issue of hot money and how quickly these funds could flow out as it has come into the Asian markets is one main risk.

    Everyone knows that Asian economies are currently seeing strong inflow of funds as Western investors try to diversify from the horrors of holding US dollar, Euro and Sterling, Ambrose notes.

    Because of this, several emerging economies have imposed various new measures to control excessive inflows of hot money.

    “Malaysia has not joined in any of these measures so far (which has restored a lot of credibility in my view), but this remains a great uncertainty for Asian markets this year,” says Ambrose.

    He emphasises that the various austerity measures taken up by the US Fed and the European Central Bank to tame their respective deficits in the wake of the financial mess they are in are unprecedented and could result in unforeseen consequences.

    Example, Spain said last year it would reduce public investment, slash public wages by 5% and freeze them this year while suspending a raise in pensions.

    “Unprecedented measures can result in unforeseen consequences. There could be more collapses in peripheral EU countries as a result of the measures, which can then derail everything,” Ambrose says.

    Inflation could also derail the current rise in regional and global equities. Inflation, particularly cost push inflation caused by higher food and fuel prices hurts the man in the street in terms of higher prices.

    Just earlier this week, the price of RON 97 petrol went up by 10 sen to RM2.40 a litre.

    “It’s possible that inflation could force Bank Negara to raise rates, hence slow money supply, thus making equities less attractive,” Ambrose says.

    OSK Research warns of political instability including the possibility of wars specifically between North and South Korea as factors which can drag the market down.

    In our view, however, the largest potential risk we see for 2011 will be if investors lose confidence in the US economy, and specifically the US dollar,” it says.

    Geopolitical risks, contagion effects of sovereign indebtness, a double-dip recession. All these are risks.

    Wong from Areca probably sums it up best when he says: “As always, it is advisable for investors to diversify their investments into various assets classes.”

    In terms of fixed income, investors should keep to short-duration liquid bonds as inflation, likely to be driven by cost-push factors such as energy and food price hikes and subsidy cuts, may kick-in soon.

    fr:biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/1/8/business/7735892&sec=business