New Straits Times

FBM KLCI SET FOR BEST QUARTER SINCE 2011?

Optimism returning to Bursa on Malaysia’s improved budget discipline and economic fundamenta­ls, says fund manager

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BUDGET discipline and better economic fundamenta­ls are setting Malaysian equities apart.

With a 6.6 per cent rebound, the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) is heading for its best quarter since end-2011, while the MSCI Asia Pacific Index has lost 2.3 per cent. That pushed the valuation of the Malaysian gauge to its highest level since at least 2009 relative to the regional benchmark.

Optimism is returning after a shock election result in May triggered a plunge of as much as 10 per cent in Malaysia’s equity index as foreigners fled the market.

While the outflows haven’t completely stopped, the pace has slowed, with last month’s posting the smallest withdrawal­s in four months.

Morgan Stanley upgraded the nation’s shares last week, noting the recent outperform­ance for a market that tends to be less volatile.

“Investors are starting to come back into the equities market after the post-election selloff because the new government is seen to be more pragmatic towards the country’s fundamenta­ls in prioritisi­ng financial stability over aggressive growth,” said Bharat Joshi, a fund manager at Aberdeen Standard Investment­s.

“This has given investors renewed confidence on the country.”

In a bid to improve fiscal discipline, the new government scrapped some infrastruc­ture projects when it took over and put on hold a high-speed rail link between Malaysia and Singapore.

It implemente­d a new Sales and Services Tax, replacing a consumptio­n levy it eliminated in June and boosting hopes that the step will help increase consumers’ purchasing power.

In a diverging view from Joshi, Danny Wong, the chief executive officer at Areca Capital Sdn, sees more uncertaint­y from the new government’s policies, in addition to external risks, and has raised his fund’s cash holdings. He’s waiting for “potential opportunit­y” in the final quarter of this year.

“I am wary of liquidity tightening and corporate-earnings growth of certain sectors slowing down significan­tly,” said Wong.

“External uncertaint­ies like the trade-related issues and emerging market currencies’ weakness cloud over the fundamenta­ls.”

Aberdeen’s Joshi favours some banking shares as interest rates rise and consumers stocks on the expectatio­n that private spending will keep growing along with the economy.

 ??  ?? Investors are coming back to Bursa Malaysia after selloffs post14th General Election as the new government is seen to be more pragmatic towards the country’s fundamenta­ls.
Investors are coming back to Bursa Malaysia after selloffs post14th General Election as the new government is seen to be more pragmatic towards the country’s fundamenta­ls.

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