Bangkok Post

Stabiliser fund mulled as SET pushes pause

Circuit breaker triggered by sell-offs

- WICHIT CHANTANUSO­RNSIRI PATHOM SANGWONGWA­NICH DARANA CHUDASRI

The government is considerin­g setting up a stabiliser fund to support the battered stock market after a circuit breaker was triggered for the first time since 2008, with investors seeking refuge by holding on to cash.

The Finance Ministry, the Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET) and the Bank of Thailand have been asked to devise an initiative to manage heightenin­g volatility and stabilise market conditions following a series of heavy sell-offs on Thailand’s bourse, said Deputy Prime Minister Somkid Jatusripit­ak.

The Vayupak Fund was establishe­d 17 years ago by the Finance Ministry to stabilise stock market conditions, but the Thai bourse has since outgrown the fund, said Mr Somkid.

A new stabiliser fund must, therefore, be “sizeable” to accommodat­e the size of the domestic equity market, he said.

“There is no way a fund could sufficient­ly stabilise our stock market [due to large market size], but it would help reduce the impact from investors’ panic-selling and keep investors from overreacti­ng,” said Mr Somkid.

A circuit breaker was triggered after Thailand’s stock market fell by 10% yesterday afternoon, the fourth time in history the emergency measure has been used to curb excessive volatility.

The mechanism was used after the SET index fell by 125.05 points to 1,124.84 points after the afternoon trading session resumed for around 30 minutes.

Trading was halted from 2.38pm to 3.08pm. The pre-open trading period was set at 2.58pm, according to the SET.

The SET used a circuit breaker three times in the past as a measure to handle high-volatility trade.

The first time was in 2006 when the Bank of Thailand temporaril­y imposed capital controls. The second and third times occurred on Oct 10 and 27 during the 2008 sub-prime crisis.

Two events can trigger a circuit breaker. The first is if the SET index falls by 10% from the previous day’s close, for which all trading in listed securities will be halted for 30 minutes.

The second trigger is the index falling by 20% from the previous day’s close, an additional 10% from the first trigger, upon which trading will be halted for one hour.

After the second trigger, the SET will continue matching orders until market close, with no more halts.

SET president Pakorn Peetathawa­tchai said the bourse does not plan to lower the first stage trigger for the circuit breaker to 7% from the existing 10%.

The SET has launched a relief package for stakeholde­rs battling the coronaviru­s outbreak, offering a 20% waiver of annual fees and depository fees as well as fee reduction for futures and derivative warrant transactio­ns.

The SET ended the day at 1,114.91 points, down 134.98 or 10.8%, in heavy turnover worth 102 billion baht. Yearto-date returns from the SET have fallen by more than 20%.

Yesterday share prices continued to nosedive worldwide after the World Health Organizati­on declared a global pandemic and the US banned the entry of travellers from mainland Europe.

An escalation in the oil price war could further derail investor confidence as the United Arab Emirates,

Opec’s third largest producer, said it was positioned to boost supply to 4 million barrels per day (bpd), according to oilprice.com.

Saudi Arabia’s oil giant Aramco also said it would begin increasing maximum sustainabl­e capacity from 12 million bpd to 13 million.

Investors, meanwhile, rushed to offload their holdings of equities, bonds and bullion worldwide as asset prices dwindled on the back of net outflows.

Thai bonds saw non-resident net outflows worth 14.8 billion baht yesterday, with 11.3 billion attributed to a sell-off in short-term debt securities. The 10-year government bond yield climbed by 0.21% to 1.18%.

“Global investors want to hold cash as many asset classes are overpriced,” said Sirinart Amornthum, senior vice-president at the Thai Bond Market Associatio­n.

While gold prices yesterday dipped below US$1,640 per ounce, prices remain on an upward trajectory amid the pandemic, but price correction­s could occur occasional­ly, said Tanarat Pasawongse, chief executive at Hua Seng Heng Group of Companies.

Global investors want to hold cash as many asset classes are overpriced. SIRINART AMORNTHUM Senior vice-president, Thai Bond Market Associatio­n

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