Kuala lumpur: Late bargain hunting of consumer-related stocks pushed Bursa Malaysia to close at its intraday high on Wednesday, allowing the market to recover losses in the previous two sessions. At 5 pm, the FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) bounced 10.39 points, or 0.68 percent, to close at an intra-day high of 1,529.79 from yesterday’s close of 1,519.40. The benchmark index opened 0.08 of a point higher at 1,519.56 and moved between 1,519.48 and 1,529.79 throughout the trading session.
According to BERNAMA News Agency, gainers led losers in the broader market 627 to 387, while 496 counters were unchanged and 969 untraded, with seven suspended. Turnover jumped to 3.27 billion shares worth RM2.26 billion from 2.82 billion shares worth RM2.05 billion on Tuesday. UOB Kay Hian Wealth Advisors Sdn Bhd head of investment research Mohd Sedek Jantan said the FBM KLCI closed the day on a firmer footing as the market sentiment was lifted following Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim’s announcement of a one-off RM100 cash handout, which drove renewed interest in consumer-related stocks.
Mohd Sedek noted that regional markets also posted broad-based gains, supported by improved sentiment after the United States agreed to impose a reduced 15 percent import duty on selected Japanese goods, excluding strategic items such as steel and aluminium, which remain subject to elevated tariffs. He mentioned this marked a de-escalation from the previously threatened 25 percent levy scheduled to take effect on Aug 1 in the absence of a bilateral agreement.
Similarly, Rakuten Trade Sdn Bhd equity research vice-president Thong Pak Leng stated that the key index closed higher as major regional bourses staged a strong rebound after US President Donald Trump announced a ‘massive deal’ with Japan. He expressed that despite heightened external volatility, Malaysian equities remain fundamentally resilient. The benchmark index is attempting to reclaim the 1,530 level, and a breakout supported by strong volume could pave the way for a sustained upward trajectory.
Regionally, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng advanced 1.13 percent to close at 25,413.48, Singapore’s Straits Times Index improved 0.47 percent to 4,227.85, and South Korea’s Kospi gained 0.44 percent to 3,183.77. Japan’s Nikkei 225 rallied 3.51 percent to 41,171.32. Of the heavyweight stocks, Maybank earned six sen to RM9.59, Tenaga Nasional was 16 sen better at RM13.94, and CIMB gained 12 sen to RM6.67. IHH Healthcare improved two sen to RM6.62, CelcomDigi added four sen to RM3.83, while Public Bank dropped two sen to RM4.29.
Top gainers were led by Nestle, which jumped 94 sen to RM76.90, while Fraser and Neave and Hong Leong Industries added 26 sen to RM28.70 and RM13.26, respectively. UMW was 19 sen better at RM2.24, while Vitrox and Sam Engineering gained 17 sen each to RM4.74 and RM4.19. Among the most active stocks, NexG gained 1.5 sen to 52 sen, while Tanco and Ekovest both added half-a-sen to 91.5 sen and 39.5 sen, respectively. Zetrix was two sen better at 94.5 sen, and Green Packet topped up half-a-sen to five sen.
On the index board, the FBM Emas Index climbed 74.81 points to 11,494.54, the FBMT 100 Index rose 72.22 points to 11,254.16, and the FBM Emas Shariah Index advanced 69.13 points to 11,516.48. The FBM 70 Index added 88.22 points to 16,644.09, while the FBM ACE Index gained 40.45 points to 4,665.05. Sector-wise, the Financial Services Index bounced 119.58 points to 17,430.25, the Energy Index edged up 3.01 points to 743.18, the Industrial Products and Services Index rose 1.39 points to 155.43, and the Plantation Index gained 15.29 points to 7,411.44.
The Main Market volume expanded to 1.44 billion units valued at RM1.89 billion from yesterday’s 1.18 billion units valued at RM1.73 billion. Warrant turnover increased to 1.52 billion units worth RM257.66 million from 1.31 billion units worth RM205.15 million previously. The ACE Market volume slipped to 315.55 million units valued at RM97.33 million from 322.4 million units valued at RM109.22 million previously. Consumer products and services counters accounted for 248.46 million shares traded on the Main Market; industrial products and services (234.92 million), construction (157.21 million), technology (229.14 million), SPAC (nil), financial services (64.41 million), property (210.56 million), plantation (16.56 million), REITs (22.51 million), closed-end fund (9,200), energy (59.21 million), healthcare (73.52 million), telecommunications and media (61.65 million), transportation and logistics (30.99 million), utilities (29.37 million), and business trusts (285,700).