Singapore’s benchmark Straits Times Index opened today at 2,778.59 points, up by 1.21 per cent or 33.92 points and ended 58.10 points or 2.08% higher to 2851.25. STI came off from its intra-day peak of 2851.25 and low of 2822.28 Wall Street's unexpected bounce on Friday helped add some stability to Asian markets on Monday, enabling the Straits Times Index (STI) to jump 58.1 points or 2.1 per cent to 2,851.25. Turnover however, remained low and concentrated in the 30 index stocks - the entire market traded just 1.1 billion units worth S$942 million of which S$697 million or 74 per cent was generated by STI components.
LOCAL BOURSE
Singapore Exchange (SGX) has launched a new index business, SGX Index Edge, that will offer comprehensive services aimed at addressing the rising demand for index-linked investment in Asia.
Market forecast:
STI is expected to be bullish tomorrow. STI has the resistance at 2860. If it breaks this level it is expected to go up till 2875. STI has its support at 2820. The bullish trend is supported by weak U.S. job data which has eased out the fear of U.S. rate hike by FED.
STI COUNTER SPECIFIC NEWS
- Ascendas Reit has kicked off bookbuilding on its much-anticipated Singapore dollar perpetual non-call 5, with guidance offered in the 5 per cent area.
- OSIM International is down 1.23% at $1.605 after Taiwan's Food and Drug Administration reportedly found excessive levels of pesticide residues in OSIM's majority-owned TWG Tea's "Chamomile Green Tea" that was exported from India.
- Two senior US-based energy executives have left commodity trader Noble Group in the past week.
GLOBAL FACTORS AND WORLD INDICES:
- Hong Kong stocks bounced sharply on Wednesday from the previous session's two-year lows, wrapping up a tumultuous quarter in which the benchmark Hang Seng Index plunged more than 20 per cent. At market close, the Hang Seng was up 1.4 per cent, to 20,846.30, while the China Enterprises Index gained 1.9 per cent, to 9,405.50 points.
- China's stocks rose, paring the biggest quarterly loss since 2008, as the government struggled to halt a US$5 trillion rout and the world's second-largest economy showed signs of a sharper slowdown.
- European stocks advanced, rebounding from Tuesday's decline, as investors paused to assess value in what is heading for the worst quarter in four years. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index jumped 1.8 per cent to 345.43 at 8:07 am in London.
- Nikkei The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index rose 2.2 per cent. The euro zone's blue-chip Euro STOXX 50 index advanced 2.5 per cent.
- Hong Kong stocks closed 1.62 per cent up on Monday. The benchmark Hang Seng Index gained 348.41.79 points to end at 21,854.5.
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