Singapore shares rose to a 14-month high tracking a regional rally
Friday as investors cheered upbeat U.S. economic data and reassurances by the
European Central Bank chief to support troubled euro-zone economies.
Underpinning the rally were better-than-expected weekly jobless claims and factory-order data in theU.S. as well as ECB President Mario
Draghi's affirmation Thursday of the central bank's plan to purchase bonds from
European states that request assistance.
The 30-share Straits Times Index ended 0.7%, or 21.23 points, higher at 3,107.87--its highest closing level since Aug. 3, 2011. For the week, the index closed up 1.6%.
However, while Thursday'sU.S. jobless-claims data may have boosted
expectations slightly, "much hope rests on tonight's lottery of the U.S. employment
report," UOB Economic-Treasury Research said in a note. "The risk
here is for a marginal beat to disappoint." "So here we sit again
with the chance that risk assets could be boosted whichever way the number
prints," as a weak reading might be seen as a precursor to more stimulus
steps by the U.S. Federal Reserve, Jason Hughes, head of premium client
management at IG Markets Singapore, said. "Cynics out there might be right
in assessing that this non-farm number doesn't really matter all that much
then."
Some cautiousness ahead of theU.S. jobs data
due later in the global day helped drag trading volume down to 1.35 billion
shares from 1.6 billion shares traded Thursday.
Gainers outnumbered decliners 277 to 163. Although only 14 of its 30 components ended higher, the STI held on to gains supported by strong performance by Jardine-linked heavyweights. Jardine Cycle & Carriage, the index's best performer, surged 6.9% to S$53.26, as analysts flagged an upbeat outlook for its 50.1%-owned Indonesian automotive unit, Astra. Credit Suisse expectsIndonesia
to pass low-cost green car regulations in the next six months, and Astra
expects to launch its models by the second half of 2013, while its competitors
are tipped to launch only at the end of 2013.
Palm oil company Golden Agri-Resources snapped a three-day losing streak, rising 2.4% to S$0.645 as crude palm oil prices recovered from recent sharp drops.
Some property stocks also gave the benchmark index a lift. CapitaLand and rival City Developments both extended recent gains, with CapitaLand ending 0.3% higher at S$3.30 and City Developments adding 0.2% to close at S$11.95.Hongkong
Land rose 0.8% to end at
US$6.08.
Underpinning the rally were better-than-expected weekly jobless claims and factory-order data in the
The 30-share Straits Times Index ended 0.7%, or 21.23 points, higher at 3,107.87--its highest closing level since Aug. 3, 2011. For the week, the index closed up 1.6%.
However, while Thursday's
Some cautiousness ahead of the
Gainers outnumbered decliners 277 to 163. Although only 14 of its 30 components ended higher, the STI held on to gains supported by strong performance by Jardine-linked heavyweights. Jardine Cycle & Carriage, the index's best performer, surged 6.9% to S$53.26, as analysts flagged an upbeat outlook for its 50.1%-owned Indonesian automotive unit, Astra. Credit Suisse expects
Palm oil company Golden Agri-Resources snapped a three-day losing streak, rising 2.4% to S$0.645 as crude palm oil prices recovered from recent sharp drops.
Some property stocks also gave the benchmark index a lift. CapitaLand and rival City Developments both extended recent gains, with CapitaLand ending 0.3% higher at S$3.30 and City Developments adding 0.2% to close at S$11.95.
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