SE Asian Stocks-Mostly lower, Vietnam gains for 5th day
By Yvonne Cheong
SINGAPORE, June 17 (Reuters) - Most Southeast Asian stock markets fell on Tuesday, pulled lower by losses in shares such as CapitaLand (CATL.SI: Quote, Profile, Research), but Vietnam's main index carved out a fifth straight gain on news its trading band will be widened on Thursday.
Singapore .FTSTI was off 0.3 percent after the city-state posted its sharpest fall in exports since January 2006. [nSIN280930]
"We expect more weakness this week. We don't like the inflation figures in the U.S.," said equity sales trader Joe Tiong at Phillip Securities in Singapore. "Our export figures didn't look good either. I'd think it's a sign of the economy getting affected due to global weakness."
Shipping firm Neptune Orient Lines (NEPS.SI: Quote, Profile, Research) dropped 4.5 percent, while property heavyweight CapitaLand (CATL.SI: Quote, Profile, Research) fell 3.1 percent after a Credit Suisse report said a global slowdown and lower rents would hold back shares in the sector. [nSIN293794]
Rival City Developments (CTDM.SI: Quote, Profile, Research) slipped 2.1 percent.
In Vietnam, the VNI index .VNI advanced 1.7 percent in its biggest one-day gain since it started recovering from a 6-week slide last Wednesday. The index has slumped nearly 60 percent this year, making it the worst performer in the world, as the emerging economy struggled with double-digit inflation and growth concerns.
The trading band is to be extended to 3 percent from 2 percent as the market has been recovering. [nSP263161]
"Widening the band may have a big impact on upcoming sessions. However, the market will have a firm uptrend once macroeconomic difficulties are solved," said Vo Quoc Khanh, head of research at FPT Securities.
The Philippine index .PSI gained 0.6 percent, despite job figures indicating a slowing economy, but Malaysia and Indonesia .JKSE both fell 0.8 percent, while Thailand .SETI lost 1.3 percent as banks suffered amid fears that higher interest rates could hit loan demand.
Siam Commercial Bank SCB.BK and Kasikornbank KBAN.BK gave up 1.9 and 2 percent, erasing the previous day's gains, while top lender Bangkok Bank BBL.BK fell 0.8 percent.
Energy shares PTT PCL PTT.BK and PTT Exploration and Production PTTE.BK dropped 1.3 percent and 2.8 percent respectively as world oil prices eased CLc1, but coal miner Banpu BANP.BK gained 1.5 percent to a record high on optimism about higher profits.
Political uncertainty and inflation worries weighed on Malaysian stocks, as the country's Premier Abdullah Badawi remained ambiguous about when he will handover power [nKLR283563] and analysts forecast inflation rising to a 16-month high. [nKLR278613]
State utility Tenaga Nasional (TENA.KL: Quote, Profile, Research) fell 2.4 percent, while lenders Bumiputra Commerce BUCM.KL and Maybank (MBBM.KL: Quote, Profile, Research) fell 2.2 and 1.4 percent. (Additional reporting by Pham Hong Hanh, Editing by Ian Geoghegan)
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