Senin 20 Oct 2014 14:23 WIB

Indonesia leads among Asia's stock rises on Monday

A man passes in front of trade screen at Indonesian Stock Exchange (IDX) in Jakarta. (illustration)
Foto: Republika/Wihdan Hidayat
A man passes in front of trade screen at Indonesian Stock Exchange (IDX) in Jakarta. (illustration)

REPUBLIKA.CO.ID, BANGKOK - Southeast Asian stocks rose on Monday, with Indonesian shares hitting their highest in more than two weeks amid expectations of a cut in fuel subsidy and easing political tensions.

Former Jakarta Governor Joko Widodo was sworn in as Indonesia's seventh president at a ceremony in parliament on Monday. One of his first jobs will be cutting back generous fuel subsidies to avoid breaching a legal limit on the budget deficit.  

Among the outperformers, Indonesia's key index was up 1.02 percent at 5,080.42 after hitting 5,101.21, the highest since Oct. 2. Inflows lifted large caps with Bank Mandiri and Telkom Indonesia among the top actively traded stocks.

Gains in the region were also supported by brighter sentiment regarding global risk assets. Japanese stocks led a rally in Asia on Monday, after solid US data and earnings calmed tumult in global financial markets and reassured investors worried about the health of the world economy. Brokers in the region cited expectations about the US interest rates. 

"Expectations grew for the US Fed to maintain interest rate at a low level until the second half of 2015 and while the ECB pledged to begin its asset purchase soon, which could lead to a relief rise after a week of sharp correction," Bangkok-based broker KGI Securities said.

The Thai SET index traded up 0.64 percent at 1,538.56. Shares of Kasikornbank jumped more than 3 percent and Bangkok Bank rose about 1 percent after both of them reported better-than-expected July-September earnings.  

Stocks in Singapore and Malaysia extended their gains for a second consecutive session, further recovering from recent weakness due to concerns about the health of the global economy.

sumber : Reuters
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