MIDF: Foreign Outflow Of Malaysian Equity Fell Slightly To RM58.7 Mil For 5th Week

Foreign selling of Malaysian equity extended for the fifth consecutive week, albeit at a slower pace of RM58.7 million last week, from RM211 million the prior week.

MIDF Research, in its weekly fund flow report today (May 29) said foreign investors net bought RM10.0 million on Monday (May 22) and RM42.6 million on Friday (May 26), but were net sellers from Tuesday (May 23) to Thursday (May 25). Foreign investors have been net sellers for 15 out of 21 weeks this year, with a total net foreign outflow of RM2.45 billion.

‘Dual Network pricing will not be more expensive than now’

Telecommunications companies and users will not have to pay more or be at a disadvantage in terms of the wholesale price arising from the nation’s transition to the Dual Network (DN), says Communications and Digital Minister Fahmi Fadzil

“The top three sectors that saw net foreign inflows were Transportation & Logistics (RM103.8 million), Technology (RM58.6 million), and Telecommunication & Media (RM50.4 million), while the top three sectors that saw net foreign outflows were Financial Services (RM122.8 million), Consumer Products & Services (RM68.3 million), and REITs (RM21.9 million).

“Local institutional investors turned net sellers last week at -RM32.4m (million), after four weeks of net buying. They only net bought on Tuesday at RM29.1m and net sold for the rest of the week. Year to date, they have been net buyers for 15 out of 21 weeks, with a total net buy of RM2.41 billion,” MIDF said, adding, local retailers turned net buyers at RM91.1 million last week, after three weeks of net selling.

“Every trading day was a net buying day except on Friday, with a net sale of RM4.5 million. Year to date, local retailers have been net buyers for 10 out of 21 weeks. The total net buying year-to-date amounted to RM39.9 million,” they said.

In terms of participation, there was an increase in average daily trading volume (ADTV) across the board — retailers (+1.4%), local institutions (+12.6%) and foreigners (+18.2%).

Commenting on the international scenario, major markets saw a mixed trading week, as investors continued to track the United States’ debt ceiling negotiation. It was reported that U.S. President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy eventually reached an agreement in principle on Saturday (May 27), to lift the debt limit for two years and cap government spending.

“Market movements at the end of the week were somewhat hampered, on the back of a stubborn inflation data. The core personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index, which is the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge, rose to +4.7%y-o-y (year-on-year) in Apr-23 (Mar-23: +4.6% y-o-y), raising possibilities of another rate hike.

MIDF cited the CME FedWatch Tool indicated a 64.2% probability of a 25bps hike in the June meeting. Out of the 20 major indices that we track globally, 12  finished in the red last week, with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index being the worst decliner at 3.62%, followed by the CSI 300 (-2.37%) and the CAC 40 (-2.31%).

The top three advancers were the Nasdaq Composite Index (+2.51%), Taiwan’s Taiex (+2.04%) and India’s Sensex (+1.25%) on the back of a tech-driven rally, with the optimism of the potential growth in the artificial intelligence space (AI), they added.

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