SE Asia Stocks-Mostly rose, Singapore down on U.S. concerns
By Chua Baizhen
SINGAPORE, Dec 28 (Reuters) - Southeast Asian stocks mostly
rose on Friday, brushing off earlier fears of global unrest
sparked by an assassination in Pakistan, but financials such as
DBS Group (DBSM.SI) dragged on Singapore as lingering concerns
over the health of the U.S. economy weighed.
Singapore's Straits Times Index .STI dropped 0.9 percent and Philippine stocks .PSI closed 1.3 percent lower.
Malaysian .KLSE and Vietnam shares .VNI both climbed 0.6 percent, stocks in Indonesia .JKSE added 0.2 percent while Thailand's benchmark index .SETI was 0.7 percent higher. "The events in Pakistan should remain contained. For Singapore, trading volumes are quite low and the sell-down is not a reflection of news of the assassination," said Kwok Chern Yeh, an investment manager at Aberdeen Asset Management.
Earlier in the day, news of the assassination of Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto sent jitters across Southeast Asian stock markets on fears of possible political instability in the region.
Traders said the sell-off was also caused by Wall Street's weak performance overnight, after an analyst warning of larger mortgage-related write-offs hit financials there and a disappointing durable goods report dampened sentiments on the U.S. economy's outlook. [ID:nN27430181]
In Singapore, top bank DBS Group fell 1.6 percent, bourse operator Singapore Exchange (SGXL.SI) was down 2.3 percent, Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp (OCBC.SI) slid 1.1 percent and United Overseas Bank (UOBH.SI) ended 0.3 percent lower.
The city-state's benchmark index, whose financial component stocks are among the region's most sensitive towards Wall Street, had gained 15 percent this year but was the region's worst-performing index for the period.
UBS analyst Min Lan Tan said in a note that the Singapore stock market would remain cautious in 2008, with a potential upside of 15 percent from current levels.
"We prefer quality big caps, stocks with structurally-driven growth and (stocks with) a reasonable dividend yield, as opposed to small caps and liquidity-driven stocks," she said.
In Malaysia, plantation giant Sime Darby's (SIME.KL) 1.7 percent rise helped lift the benchmark index, which had gained 32 percent this year. KL Kepong (KLKK.KL) and IOI Corp (IOIB.KL) added 1.8 percent and 0.7 percent respectively as investors continued to play high crude palm-oil prices.
But top lender Malayan Banking (MBBM.KL) capped gains,
falling 0.8 percent after it said it would consider selling a
stake in its Islamic bank. [ID:nKLR186288]
Energy firms in Thailand tracked global oil prices, which were up for the fifth session to $97 a barrel on Friday, with top oil and gas firm PTT PCL (PTT.BK) up 1.1 percent and its unit PTT Exploration and Production (PTTE.BK) 1.9 percent higher.
The Thai stock market was up 26 percent for the year, compared to the Philippine index's 21 percent rise and Vietnam's gain of 23 percent.
The Jakarta Composite Index rose the most in the year so far, up 52 percent, with mining stocks such as PT International Nickel Indonesia (INCO.JK) and Aneka Tambang (ANTM.JK) lifting the index to a record high this month. (Editing By Ovais Subhani)
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