Shares on Bursa Malaysia traded mixed on Thursday, the last day of trading for the year, bucking the uptrend of most regional bourses.
There were few leads for investors on Thursday ahead of the long weekend, especially with some bourses already closed for the year and some on shortened trading hours.
Overnight, Wall Street’s major indices closed flat on light volume despite positive economic data on the manufacturing sector. The Chicago purchasing manager's index rose to 60 in December from 56.1 in November, the highest since January 2006 and above expectations.
Except at the opening and closing minutes, the FBM KLCI was in negative territory almost the entire day. A late surge of buying interest lifted the benchmark index up 1.7 points at 1,272.8.
Market breadth was broadly mixed throughout the day, but turned positive at the close with advancing stocks beating declining ones by a 3-to-2 ratio. Volume rose from 586 million to 602 million shares.
Lower liners made up most of the actively traded stocks, such as Linear, IRCB, SAAG, Ho Hup and KNM. Major gainers include Manulife, Rubberex and its warrants, DiGi, KPJ and Public Bank-foreign. Losers include Hai-O, MAS and MISC.
Thursday’s performance caps a very good year for the local stock market – and indeed global equity bourses for 2009. The year had started off on a bad note as the financial crisis was in full storm following the collapse of Lehman Brothers in Sept 2008, with declines extending into March before rebounding strongly.
For the year, the FBM KLCI gained a total of 396 points or 45.2% after rising from 876.8 at the start of the year and ending at 1,272.8. At its lowest point, the index fell to 838 in March.
While the gains were slightly less than most regional bourses, it should be noted that the local stock market and domestic economy was also relatively more resilient during the crisis.
As a comparison, key market indices in China, India, Taiwan and Indonesia surged 78%-87% for the year. Hong Kong was up 52%, South Korea rose 50% and Singapore was up 64%, but Japan lagged the region with a 19% gain.