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Friday, 9 March 2018

Malaysia the local note traded higher; the local note was quoted at 3.9110/9180 from Thursday’s 3.9070/9100.


Malaysia: The ringgit opened lower against the US dollar today on worries of an international trade war triggered by US-imposed steel tariffs.
At 9am, the local note was quoted at 3.9110/9180 from Thursday’s 3.9070/9100.
Meanwhile, the local note traded higher against a basket of other major currencies.
It rose against the Singapore dollar to 2.9667/9738 from Thursday’s 2.9670/9704, and strengthened against the euro to 4.8129/8227 from 4.8373/8421 yesterday.
It improved against the yen to 3.6654/6730 from 3.6827/6859, and appreciated against the British pound to 5.3968/4068 from 5.4155/5212.

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Thursday, 8 March 2018

#Ringgit opened marginally higher; rose slightly against the Singapore dollar, appreciated against the yen, against the euro, the ringgit rose, depreciated against the British pound.


Malaysia: The ringgit opened marginally higher against the US dollar this morning amid uncertainty over the US’ proposed import tariffs and the resignation of its top economic adviser, Gary Cohn.
At 9am, the local note was quoted at 3.9020/9060 against the greenback from Wednesday's 3.9030/9080.
Meanwhile, the local note was traded mostly higher against a basket of other major currencies.
It rose slightly against the Singapore dollar to 2.9675/9717 from Wednesday's 2.9687/9730, and appreciated against the yen to 3.6777/6825 from 3.6950/6008.
Against the euro, the ringgit rose to 4.8408/8473 from 4.8483/8561, but depreciated against the British pound to 5.4246/4317 from 5.4107/4192 on Wednesday.

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Wednesday, 7 March 2018

Bursa KL Market breadth was negative; Among heavyweights, Maybank and Tenaga eased, Public Bank fell, Daya Materials was unchanged, Sapura Energy lost.


Malaysia – Shares on Bursa Malaysia yielded gains from yesterday to open lower this morning on weak buying sentiment and following the overnight losses on Wall Street.
At 9.15 am, the benchmark FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) stood at 1,846.39, down 1.98 points from 1,848.37 at yesterday’s close.
The key index opened 1.35 points lower at 1,847.02 this morning.
A dealer said the weak buying support was also due to the re-emergence of worries of a United States-led trade war, sparked by the resignation of a key free trade advocate at the White House.
Market breadth was negative with 285 gainers against 102 losers, while 216 counters were unchanged, 1,271 untraded and 21 others suspended.
Turnover stood at 249.41 million shares worth RM106.02 million.
Among heavyweights, Maybank and Tenaga eased two sen each to RM10.48 and RM15.62, Public Bank fell four sen to RM22.96 and CIMB was flat at 7.20.
Of the actively-traded stocks, Daya Materials was unchanged at four sen, Sapura Energy lost three sen to 52.5 sen and MMAG Holdings was one sen better at 20 sen.
The FBM Emas Index declined 33.93 points to 13,036.86, the FBMT 100 Index was 32.31 points weaker at 12,767.49 and the FBM Emas Shariah Index lost 42.06 points to 13,217.88.
The FBM 70 decreased 103.06 points to 15,626.05 and the FBM Ace fell 46.88 points to 5,996.5.
Sector-wise, the Finance Index inched down 19.47 points to 18,105.12, the Industrial Index decreased 4.19 points to 3,198.34 and the Plantation Index lost 18.25 points to 8,071.51.
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Monday, 5 March 2018

Foreign investors continued to sell stocks on Bursa. Bursa Malaysia has attracted RM2.21 billion worth of foreign funds.


Malaysia: The foreign tide into Bursa continued for the third uninterrupted week, albeit at a slightly slower pace, MIDF Research said. •
Malaysia was the only beneficiary of foreign inflows among the seven Asian exchanges last week, the research firm said.
Based on preliminary data from Bursa which excluded off market deals, MIDF Research said the net amount acquired by foreign investors last week amounted to RM160.9 million net, lower than the RM190.9 million bought in the preceding week. •
“Foreign investors were net buyers on Monday and Tuesday. The net inflow on Monday was marginal at only RM29.9 million but foreign buying later spiked to RM206.6 million net on Tuesday,” it said in a note.
MIDF Research said the heavy foreign buying was in tandem with the rally of banking stocks which pushed the FBM KLCI to settle at 1,871 points, the highest closing since 2014. •
However, foreigners reduced their exposure in local stocks on Wednesday, disposing RM26.1 million net after Fed Chair Powell’s testimony revived fears on more rate hikes in 2018, it added.
“The spike in foreign selling on Tuesday was in conformity with other South East Asian peers namely Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines. •
“The situation of global markets did not turn any better on Friday amid President Trump’s protectionism woes which compounded concerns over a more hawkish Fed and the timing of the ending for Japan’s monetary stimulus,” MIDF Research.
“Hence, foreign investors continued to sell stocks on Bursa on Friday to a tune of USD25.3m net.”
February recorded an outflow of RM1.12b net, the first monthly outflow since November 2017.
Meanwhile on a year-to-date basis, Malaysia has attracted RM2.21 billion worth of foreign funds compared to RM1.57 billion recorded in the same period last year. •
The foreign average daily trade value (ADTV) stood above the RM1 billion mark for the ninth straight week at RM1.51 billion, resembling active foreign participation.
The retail market too remained vibrant with an weekly ADTV of RM1.18 billion.
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Friday, 2 March 2018

Ringgit rebounded; depreciated against the Singapore dollar; weakened against the yen; decreased against the euro; it rose against the British pound.


Malaysia: The ringgit rebounded from yesterday’s losses to open higher against the US dollar today.
At 9.15am, the local note was quoted at 3.9120/9150 versus the greenback from Thursday’s 3.9270/9300.
The local note, however, was traded mostly lower against a basket of other major currencies.
It depreciated against the Singapore dollar to 2.9600/9630 from Thursday’s 2.9577/9605, weakened against the yen to 3.6812/6851 from 3.6777/6822 and decreased against the euro to 4.7992/8041 from 4.7831/7875 yesterday.
However, it rose against the British pound to 5.3888/3933 from 5.3953/3014 on Thursday.

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Thursday, 1 March 2018

Spotify shares price in private transactions were trading for up to $132.50 each this year, worth $23.4 billion.


NEW YORK: Leading music streaming service Spotify on Wednesday announced a long-awaited initial public offering, seeking up to $1 billion as it lists its shares on the New York Stock Exchange.
In its filing, the Swedish company expressed confidence the streaming revolution it spearheaded will keep up its soaring growth, but also acknowledged that Spotify is still deep in the red.
The papers filed with the Securities Exchange Commission offered the most detailed look yet at the finances of the decade-old company. It said it had 159 million monthly users including 71 million paying subscribers – twice that of closest rival Apple Music.
“While streaming has changed the way many people access music, we believe there is an untapped global audience with significant growth potential,” Spotify’s 35-year-old CEO and co-founder Daniel Ek said in a statement.
Ek cited the model of Facebook, which has about two billion users, and YouTube as proof internet companies can reach “global scale.”
The streaming service is available in 61 countries or territories and has room to expand even in mature markets, Ek said, citing data showing the average American listens to music for 32 hours each week.
Revenue jumped by more than 38 percent in 2017 from a year earlier to 4.09 billion euros ($4.99 billion), and the company said its shares price in private transactions were trading for up to $132.50 each this year, meaning the company is worth as much as $23.4 billion.
But the eye-popping rise of Spotify has yet to translate into a stable bottom line. The company said its net loss widened sharply last year to 1.24 billion euros ($1.51 billion).
“We have incurred significant operating losses in the past, and we may not be able to generate sufficient revenue to be profitable, or to generate positive cash flow on a sustained basis,” the company said as it listed the risk factors.
Spotify, which was founded in 2006 and launched operations in 2008, has led a major shake-up of the music world by allowing users to select on-demand from its library of 35 million songs.
With streaming leading the way, the global recorded music industry for the last two years has produced solid growth for the first time since the jolt of the internet era.
Spotify in its filing boasted that it finally found a way to monetize online music after years of piracy and free online content.
“We set out to reimagine the music industry and to provide a better way for both artists and consumers to benefit from the digital transformation of the music industry,” it said.
“Spotify was founded on the belief that music is universal and that streaming is a more robust and seamless access model that benefits both artists and music fans.”
Despite loud protests against the company in the past by artists ranging from Taylor Swift to Radiohead who say that streaming short-changes the creators, virtually all well-known Western musicians now stream their music on Spotify or its rivals.
Charting out the risks, the company said it had faced six lawsuits since July alleging unlawful reproduction or distribution.
But as of last year, the company said it had paid more than eight billion euros ($9.76 billion) back to rightsholders for the use of their music on the service.
Especially controversial with artists has been Spotify’s free tier, which is backed by advertising.
Spotify in its filing called the advertising-backed service a crucial part of its business model, saying that the tier’s revenue grew 41 percent last year and has helped bring in 60 percent of the users who eventually buy subscriptions.

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