Bangkok Post

HOST OF WORRIES ADD UP TO ROCKY START TO Q4

- NUNTAWUN POLKUAMDEE PORNKAMON TEERAPIBOO­NKUN

RECAP: Global stocks began the fourth quarter on the back foot yesterday as fears are mounting about high inflation, slowing growth, rising interest rates, a global energy crunch that is causing prices to soar, and regulatory risk in China.

The SET index moved in a range of 1,593.32 and 1,639.97 points this week before closing yesterday at 1,605.17, down 1.59% from the previous week, in daily turnover averaging 98.84 billion baht.

Retail investors were net buyers of 6.11 billion baht. Foreign investors bought 2 billion baht and brokerage firms purchased 1.33 billion baht worth of shares. Institutio­nal investors sold 9.45 billion baht worth of shares.

NEWSMAKERS: A vote on a $1.2-trillion US infrastruc­ture bill remains stalled amid infighting among members of President Biden’s own Democratic Party. Progressiv­e Democrats say they will oppose the infrastruc­ture bill unless party moderates commit to an even broader $3.5-trillion social spending package.

The Biden administra­tion is taking aim at so-called stablecoin­s as it begins to lay the ground for stricter regulation of cryptocurr­encies that could shape the future of digital money.

US and EU officials on Wednesday pledged to join forces to deal with a host of technology and trade issues to secure semiconduc­tor supplies and counter China’s dominance.

The US car manufactur­er Ford says it plans to invest $11.4 billion in electric vehicle production, building four new plants that will create 11,000 new jobs by 2025.

A long-planned round of Australia-EU free trade talks has been postponed, a European official confirmed yesterday, amid fury in Paris over Canberra’s decision to cancel a major French submarine contract in favour of an offer for help from Washington acquiring nuclear-powered subs.

Malaysia’s AirAsia X on Monday posted a record quarterly loss of $5.9 billion, eight times more than a year ago, as a multi-billion-dollar provision to cover debts drove operating costs higher.

Hong Kong is experienci­ng an explosion in investment scams, with the number of cases more than tripling in the first seven months of 2021, and the amount of money stolen increasing nearly 20-fold, according to police statistics.

Myanmar’s currency has lost more than 60% of its value since the beginning of September, driving up food and fuel prices in an economy that has tanked since the military coup eight months ago.

The Finance Ministry might pump fresh money into the economy in the fourth quarter and extend stimulus measures in an effort to revive the nation, says minister Arkhom Termpittay­apaisith.

The cabinet on Tuesday approved a public debt management plan that includes new borrowing of 1.34 trillion baht for fiscal 2022, which started yesterday.

The Bank of Thailand believes the economy bottomed out in the third quarter and should gradually pick up from the fourth quarter as the Covid outbreak eases, allowing the government to loosen restrictio­ns to boost local demand and tourism. The central bank held its key interest rate unchanged at 0.5% on Wednesday.

The World Bank has downgraded its economic growth forecast for Thailand this year to 1% from its earlier forecast of 2.2%.

Headline inflation in August contracted 0.02% year-on-year, the first drop in five months, reflecting a decline of fresh food prices and the boost from state stimulus measures to ease the cost of living during the pandemic.

The government plans to introduce more measures to help small and medium enterprise­s

(SMEs) retain workers and create new jobs, with

46.9 billion baht to be allocated.

The Covid outbreak caused the manufactur­ing production index

(MPI) to dip by 4.15% year-on-year to 87.71 points in August, but the index kept growing during the first eight months of this year, the Office of Industrial Economics (OIE) reported.

The Eastern Economic Corridor Office and the Japan External Trade Organizati­on (Jetro) have pledged to work together to encourage Japanese firms and other companies located in the EEC to tap more into digital manufactur­ing platforms to reduce production costs.

The travel industry appears resigned to writing off another high season, with the tourism confidence index at an all-time low, despite reopening plans and domestic stimulus campaigns.

Thailand is looking to Indian tourists for holiday season revenue in the absence of mass-market holidaymak­ers from countries such as China.

The Special Tourist Visa long-stay programme to be extended until Sept 30 next year to attract wealthy foreigners.

Phuket expects to generate tens of billions of baht from 1 million foreign arrivals over the next six months, tourism authoritie­s announced as they outlined their reopening timetable.

The Covid task force has approved the reopening of more businesses, a shorter curfew and quarantine periods and expanded pilot reopening areas, but the state of emergency will remain until the end of November.

The Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) has floated the idea of launching its own crypto token — the TAT Coin — to capitalise on a growing market of holders of cryptocurr­encies, but first needs to consider regulation­s and viability.

Thai Airways Internatio­nal (THAI) has announced it will start selling tickets on select internatio­nal flights to destinatio­ns with high vaccinatio­n rates, from Oct 1.

Having contracted over the past two years, Thailand’s overall food exports are forecast to grow by 3-5% this year, boosted by the recovering economies of Thailand’s key trading partners, baht weakness and progress in vaccine production and inoculatio­ns.

Thailand is on track to export 6 million tonnes of rice this year — still well below the 10 million tonnes or more that it once shipped abroad when it led world producers — due to an anticipate­d uptick in demand, the Thai Rice Exporters Associatio­n said yesterday.

The Ministry of Transport aims to open a national shipping line by next June, in a bid to reduce reliance on foreign ships and promote the export and import sector.

The cabinet has approved a new excise tax structure for cigarettes, effective from Oct 1, according to a Finance Ministry source.

The Tobacco Authority of Thailand (ToAT) plans to set up a subsidiary to move into the hemp business, with the aim of increasing tobacco farmers’ income by three to four times the present level, said governor Phanupol Rattanakan­janapatra.

The Bank for Agricultur­e and Agricultur­al Cooperativ­es has started offering loans to plant cannabis for community enterprise­s and agricultur­al cooperativ­es.

A 3-5% rise in smartphone prices is likely in the second half this year because of the baht’s depreciati­on and a supply shortage, industry executives say.

The SET-listed developer Sansiri Plc will spend 500 million baht to install 1,500 electric vehicle (EV) wall chargers at new housing units being launched in 2021-22 to capitalise on rising EV sales.

T&B Media Global (Thailand) plans to invest 10 billion baht to launch the Translucia metaverse, the first virtual world in Thailand, with the property developer Magnolia Quality Developmen­t Corp.

COMING UP: Canada will release August building permits on Monday and the US will release August factory orders. On Tuesday Australia will release August trade figures and the central bank will announce its latest policy decision. The US will release August trade figures and September non-manufactur­ing, services and composite PMI.

New Zealand’s central bank will announce its policy decision on Wednesday. Due the same day are August retail sales in the euro zone and US non-farm employment in September. Germany will release August industrial production data on Thursday.

China will release the September services PMI on Friday. The US will release September data on hourly average earnings, non-farm payrolls and unemployme­nt. Canada will also release September employment data.

STOCKS TO WATCH: Trinity Securities recommends retail stocks that will benefit from government relief packages to boost local consumptio­n. Its picks are CPALL, COM7, MAKRO, HMPRO, GLOBAL and DOHOME. Electricit­y stocks that will gain from a pickup in economic activity include GULF, GPSC and BGRIM. Petroleum station stocks are also set to benefit from the uptick in travel. Top picks are OR and PTG.

Tisco Securities recommends laggard stocks with prospects for reporting good third-quarter performanc­e, including BBL, JWD, MTC, SFLEX, SMPC, SPALI, SPRC and TWPC.

TECHNICAL VIEW: Tisco Securities sees support at 1,590 points and resistance at 1,660. Trinity Securities sees support at 1,550 and resistance at 1,650.

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