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STI on fourth straight day of losses

This article is more than 12 months old

Markets hit as oil prices fall and future of US tax reforms stay uncertain

The local bourse caught the negative vibe that swept across Asia owing to the risk-off tone overnight in Wall Street as oil prices tumbled and the outlook of United States tax reforms remained uncertain.

The key Straits Times Index notched up its fourth straight day of losses. It retreated 30.39 points, or 0.9 per cent, to finish at 3,368.7 yesterday.

Other key Asian bourses followed suit, with Japan's Nikkei 225 down 1.57 per cent, Hong Kong's Hang Seng falling 1 per cent and China's Shanghai Composite losing 0.8 per cent.

Analysts also felt that the correction was waiting to happen given the extended rally in global financial markets.

Global stocks markets continued their bull run last month, which was largely led by rising confidence as a result of the strength and breadth of the recovery in emerging and developed economies.

"With less than two months to go until the year end, investors are harvesting good returns so far for this year and squaring off position could lead to unconventional risk on/risk off market patterns," said DBS Group Research.

Tumbling oil prices gave a good excuse for profit-taking.

Oil prices fell after the International Energy Agency raised doubts over the outlook for next year and lowered its forecast for crude demand and a mild early winter that could weigh on purchases.

The news follows recent gains in oil prices that were fuelled by a production cut by Opec and tensions in the Middle East.

Still, DBS Group has a sanguine outlook on the direction of oil prices and has raised its average Brent crude oil price forecast for next year by US$5 to US$60 to US$65 a barrel.

The closely watched European Central Bank conference on Tuesday did not directly mention rates but there seems to a concerted effort from key central banks on "talking investors out of easy money", said Maybank FX Research.

"This should imply a slow brewing process of monetary stimulus removal. It should not warrant a persistent sell-off in risk assets if economic growth continues to firm and can be broadly felt across sectors/industries benefiting consumers (and) corporates," said the research house.

"But we do not rule out knee jerk (risk-off plays) reaction heading into year end."

Turnover on the local bourse stood at some two billion shares worth $1.3 billion, versus the previous day's 2.6 billion shares worth $1.7 billion.

Losers outpaced gainers, with 323 counters seeing declines and 134 counters going up.

Singapore's three banking stalwarts closed in the red, with DBS Bank down 15 cents, or 0.6 per cent, at $23.61. OCBC Bank lost 14 cents, or 1.2 per cent, to $11.55, while United Overseas Bank slipped 19 cents, or 0.8 per cent, to $24.88.

RHT Health Trust jumped 8.5 cents, or 10.5 per cent to 89.5 cents.

Its controlling shareholder, Fortis Healthcare, has proposed to acquire the trust's entire asset portfolio for 46.5 billion Indian rupees (S$966 million).

Both parties have entered into a term sheet to negotiate exclusively for 60 days.

Olam International fell 5 cents, or 2 per cent, to $2.23.

Its earnings scorecard for the third quarter saw net profit grow nearly 18 per cent to $24 million from a year ago on the back of a 42 per cent increase in revenue to $6.71 billion.

For full listings of SGX prices, go to http://btd.sg/BTmkts