The price of gold dropped by THB100 per baht weight in morning trade on Thursday despite a decline in the US bond yield and uncertainty over rising inflation.
AGold Traders Association report at 9.27am showed the buying price of a gold bar at THB27,950 per baht weight and selling price at THB28,050, while gold ornaments were priced at THB27,439.60 and THB28,550, respectively.
At close on Wednesday, the buying price of a gold bar was THB28,050 per baht weight and selling price THB28,150, while gold ornaments were priced at THB27,545.72 and THB28,650, respectively.
The spot gold price on Thursday was US$1,895 (THB59,270) per ounce compared to the price on Wednesday, when it rose by $3.30 to $1,903.80 per ounce.
The Hong Kong gold price on Thursday dropped by HK$130 to $17,540 (THB70,690) per tael, the Chinese Gold and Silver Exchange Society reported.
The baht opened at 31.27 to the US dollar on Thursday, strengthening from Tuesday’s close of 31.37.
The Thai currency is likely to move between 31.25 and 31.35 during the day, Krungthai Bank market strategist Poon Panichpibool said.
He predicted that the baht would weaken slightly depending on the dollar’s performance and purchases of the US currency.
Poon also suggested that Covid-19 across Asia should be monitored as it was a factor that could influence Asian currencies, making them fluctuate.
He said the baht was supported by the gold trade, so the currency will not weaken sharply. Exporters aimed to sell the baht when it moved near 31.40-31.50 per US dollar, he added.
Stocks tied to a broader economic reopening led gains on Wednesday amid easing concern the Federal Reserve would boost rates sooner than expected. The dollar climbed.
Energy producers and retailers in the S&P 500 advanced, while tech companies were little changed. The Russell 2000 Index of small caps climbed 2%, outperforming major U.S. equity benchmarks. The Dow Jones industrial average — which made its debut 125 years ago — fluctuated throughout most of the session. Banks advanced after the chief executive officers from the largest lenders testified before Congress.
Investors have been weighing prospects for an economic rebound against the threat of price pressures. While there are multiple factors that could prompt jitters as stocks trade near all-time highs, this week’s reassurance from Fed officials has bolstered the market. As they look to damp concern that inflation would translate into a bond-buying slowdown, interest-rate volatility has tumbled.
“The market really today is hitting that sweet spot where macro fears are in decline, and simultaneously, microeconomic reality is improving,” said Lawrence Creatura, a fund manager at PRSPCTV Capital LLC. “Anything that indicates a less hot environment is positive because it means that the Fed can sit on their hands that much longer. The interesting phenomenon that’s occurring simultaneously is that consumer-facing companies are reporting sizzling results.”
For Craig Johnson, technical market strategist at Piper Sandler & Co., economic uncertainty and volatility could still remain high as traders await clarity on inflation trends and tapering prospects.
“Investors appear to be giving the Fed the benefit of the doubt with their transitory inflation forecast, but we suspect the window of confidence could close without supporting evidence in coming months,” he said.
These are some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
– The S&P 500 rose 0.2% as of 4 p.m. EDT
– The Nasdaq 100 rose 0.3%
– The Dow Jones industrial average was little changed
– The MSCI World index rose 0.2%
Currencies
– The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose 0.3%
– The euro fell 0.5% to $1.2193
– The British pound fell 0.2% to $1.4122
– The Japanese yen fell 0.3% to 109.15 per dollar
Bonds
– The yield on 10-year Treasurys advanced two basis points to 1.58%
– Germany’s 10-year yield declined four basis points to -0.21%
– Britain’s 10-year yield declined three basis points to 0.75%
Commodities
– West Texas Intermediate crude rose 0.2% to $66 a barrel
– Gold futures were little changed
Published : May 27, 2021
By : Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Rita Nazareth, Vildana Hajric
A global agreement that could reshape the tax landscape for the biggest corporations is approaching a crucial first stage as the Group of Seven nations hone in on an accord that might feature both a minimum rate and encompass digital giants.
If finance ministers due to meet virtually on Friday and in person next week can find enough common ground, that could pave the way for a wider consensus to form within the Group of 20, building a foundation for the worldwide deal that is in negotiators’ sights.
“We are in the final phase of getting an agreement,” German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz said on Wednesday in a virtual press conference with his French counterpart Bruno Le Maire. “It’s not done yet but looks like we will be there very soon.”
European governments are increasingly confident of an initial accord within the G-7, according to people familiar with the matter, while Japan is also anticipating progress, a finance ministry official said.
The insistence by countries including France on the need for an arrangement that can capture tax from digital businesses such as Amazon.com is perhaps the most controversial issue in the talks.
Convincing low-tax jurisdictions such as Ireland to agree on a minimum rate will also be a challenge to a final deal being pursued in talks between 139 nations at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
That is the area where ground has shifted the most in recent days, after the Biden administration last week floated a global tax floor of at least 15%, less than the 21% rate it has proposed for the overseas earnings of U.S. businesses — a level that countries including the U.K. regarded as too high.
While European nations warmly received that offer, they’ve been holding out for the U.S. to focus on measures to ensure big technology firms pay more of their tax in the countries where they operate. U.S. officials have opposed efforts to target specific industries for taxation.
European governments see a deal nearing as there is progress in talks toward meeting their demand of ensuring that all digital firms be covered by new rules, according to the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the talks are ongoing.
Asked on Wednesday about that specific case of Amazon, Le Maire said resolving the issue is one of three conditions set by France, along with ensuring the overall package is coupled with a deal on minimum tax and the rate for the levy is credible.
“When I say all important digital companies, it means all important digital companies,” Le Maire said. “Our assessment is that we are not far from having these three conditions met today, which means we are not far from having an agreement for the next G-7.”
An accord within that group would signal support building toward a broader deal at the July meeting of the G-20, which has been managing talks on international taxation. The plans will still need to find agreement within the OECD framework.
“There is the working situation we have in the inclusive framework around the OECD, there will be a report to the G-20 and we always discuss this question also at the G-7 level,” Scholz said on Tuesday in a Bloomberg webinar. “If I see it right, it looks like now we are going to the end of this game and we will get a solution.”
Australian Treasurer Josh Frydenberg, in an email, said his country “welcomes the United States’ commitment to continue to engage in the OECD-led discussions seeking to agree a globally consistent approach to the tax challenges posed by the digitalization of the economy.”
Australia, though not a G-7 member, is one of the vice chairs of the OECD’s Steering Group of the Inclusive Framework for Base Erosion and Profit Shifting.
The OECD effort seeks to replace the digital services taxes a growing number of countries are enacting. Countries have been vexed in particular with how to ensure they get a share of taxes on Amazon, which has unusual status as a low-margin tech giant.
A U.S. Treasury Department proposal, which was distributed to other governments in April and has been seen by Bloomberg, would subject about 100 of the “largest and most profitable” companies to greater taxation in countries where the firms’ users and consumers are located, as opposed to the countries where they’re headquartered.
It didn’t call for specific numbers, but both revenue and profitability thresholds would have to be set high to capture just 100 companies.
Japan supports that U.S. initiative, and sees the proposed 15% minimum rate as pushing talks forward, according to a finance ministry official. The person, who declined to be named because of ministry policy, expects progress at next week’s G-7 meeting to contribute to a broader G-20 agreement.
Published : May 27, 2021
By : Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · William Horobin, Yuko Takeo, Tim Ross
Bitcoin bounces off highs as crypto market volatility increases
Bitcoin fluctuated around the $40,000 level as chartists refocus on key technical factors that may provide clues on where it can go next.
The digital asset on Wednesday bounced off its 200-day moving average — around $40,600 — highlighting how difficult it may be for it to regain its upward momentum. The coin gave up some of its earlier gains after failing to breach that key level — it was up 3.8% to trade at $38,612 as of 11:28 a.m. in New York, down from earlier highs of $40,866.
The Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index advanced 6.2% — also down from highs of as much as 11% reached earlier in the session. The gauge had one of its worst stretches ever last week.
Virtual currencies have swung wildly in recent weeks after billionaire Elon Musk sparked a selloff by criticizing bitcoin’s energy consumption and said Tesla Inc. was suspending payments using the token. Tough regulatory rhetoric on cryptocurrencies from China exacerbated the moves, which saw leveraged investors unwind positions.
“We’re going to see this volatility story play out in decreasing manner as the maturity of the sector evolves,” Caroline Bowler, chief executive officer of BTC Markets, said on Bloomberg TV. “But it’s certainly a feature that’s going to be sticking around for the shorter term.”
As digital coins claw back losses, some cryptocurrency adherents are taking the latest swings in stride.
“Bitcoin is infamously volatile, people are aware of that. I wouldn’t be dissuaded by it — it’s kind of a know feature of the system,” Nic Carter, founding partner at Castle Island Ventures, said on Bloomberg TV. “For something that is absolutely scarce, where there’s no possible supply response to changes in demand, it’s going to be very difficult to accommodate new inflows without that being expressed in volatility.”
Home to a large concentration of the world’s crypto miners, China has long expressed displeasure with the anonymity provided by bitcoin and other crypto tokens. The latest blow came last week when the country reiterated a warning that it intends to crack down on cryptocurrency mining as part of an effort to control financial risks.
Other commentators are more circumspect about the recent swings.
The end of bitcoin’s streak “above the 200-day average, and the gigantic spike in volatility, are not good signs if history is any kind of a guide at all here,” Sundial Capital Research Inc. founder Jason Goepfert wrote in a note.
Musk in February plowed $1.5 billion of Tesla’s corporate cash into the token and said the electric-vehicle maker would accept it as payment, before rescinding the latter decision this month.
While Musk has since said he strongly believes in cryptocurrencies as long as they don’t drive a massive increase in fossil fuel use, digital tokens are still nursing losses from his spate of recent actions and comments.
The volatility, regulatory scrutiny and worries about bitcoin’s environmental profile have dented the argument that the largest token will inevitably draw more mainstream investment.
Bitcoin is about $25,000 shy of its mid-April record of almost $65,000. The value of more than 7,000 tokens tracked by CoinGecko has dropped over $700 billion to about $1.8 trillion from a May peak.
Over longer time periods, virtual currencies are still sitting on big gains. Bitcoin is up 358% in the past year, Ether more than 1,300% and meme-investment Dogecoin some 14,000%.
Published : May 27, 2021
By : Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Eric Lam, Vildana Hajric
Markets wrap: Stocks drop as economic data outweigh Fed remarks
Stocks retreated as inflationary signals from the latest economic reports overshadowed dovish reassurances from several Federal Reserve officials. Treasuries climbed.
The S&P 500 fluctuated throughout most of the trading session after a gauge of new U.S. home sales slid by more than forecast as higher prices restrained demand. Separate figures showed that consumer confidence slipped for the first time this year, with inflation concern and elevated unemployment likely curbing improvement in sentiment. Meanwhile, Fed Vice Chair Richard Clarida said price pressures would “prove to be largely transitory.”
His remarks echoed those of Chicago Fed President Charles Evans, the central bank’s Vice Chair for Supervision Randal Quarles and three other Fed officials who this week played down the risk that higher inflation would persist. Still, investors have been concerned about how long the central bank can keep stimulative monetary policy in place if economic data continue to show price pressures.
“The data remains ‘volatility,’ and that should be expected as we deal with the pandemic exit and the uncertainties that surround that,” said Dennis DeBusschere, head of portfolio strategy at Evercore ISI.
Some corporate highlights:
– Amazon.com Inc. was sued by the attorney general for Washington, D.C., who accused it of engaging in anticompetitive practices that have raised prices for consumers.
– Moderna Inc. rallied as its coronavirus vaccine was found highly effective in 12 to 17 year-old adolescents in a large study, paving the way for regulatory submissions around the world by early June.
Here are some events this week:
– Reserve Bank of New Zealand policy decision Wednesday, Bank of Korea rate decision Thursday.
– CEOs of the largest U.S. banks, including JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs, will testify before lawmakers in the Senate Banking and House Financial Services committees Wednesday.
– U.S. initial jobless claims, GDP, durable goods, pending home sales on Thursday.
These are some of the main moves in markets:
– – –
– The S&P 500 fell 0.2% as of 4 p.m. New York time
– The Nasdaq 100 rose 0.1%
– The Dow Jones industrial average fell 0.2%
– The MSCI World index rose 0.2%
– – –
– The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index fell 0.1%
– The euro rose 0.2% to $1.2246
– The British pound was little changed at $1.4144
– The Japanese yen was unchanged at 108.75 per dollar
– – –
– The yield on 10-year Treasuries declined five basis points to 1.56%
– Germany’s 10-year yield declined three basis points to -0.17%
– Britain’s 10-year yield declined two basis points to 0.79%
– – –
– West Texas Intermediate crude fell 0.3% to $66 a barrel
– Gold futures rose 0.9% to $1,903 an ounce
Published : May 26, 2021
By : Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Rita Nazareth, Vildana Hajric
Gold touches four-month high on Fed policy view, home-sales drop
Gold rose to the highest in more than four months after Federal Reserve officials reassured investors on the outlook for monetary policy and a gauge of U.S. new-home sale fell more than expected.
Central bank officials reiterated that they expect transitory rather than lasting price pressures from the U.S. economic rebound, damping speculation around any push to tighten policy. Declines in Treasury yields also underpinned gains in precious metals.
Gold is close to wiping out losses for 2021 after posting three straight weekly increases, with a weakening dollar and lower bond rates helping boost demand for the non-interest-bearing metal. Bullion got an extra boost Tuesday as the drop in U.S. home sales shored up the appeal of the metal as a haven.
“You have that slight miss on the U.S. data, and bond yields are creeping lower,” said Bob Haberkorn, senior market strategist at RJO Futures. “That’s helping gold. Gold is just acting as a safe haven today.”
Spot gold rose 0.5% to $1,892.17 an ounce at 11:58 a.m. in New York after climbing as much as 0.8% to the highest since early January. Silver, palladium and platinum also advanced.
Published : May 26, 2021
By : Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Yvonne Yue Li
White House reviews gaps in cryptocurrency rules as bitcoin swings wildly
WASHINGTON – The Biden administration, lawmakers, and central bankers are wrestling with fresh challenges posed by cryptocurrency, conferring in numerous meetings amid recent volatility in these digital assets.
White House officials were briefed by career staff at the Treasury Department about the risks posed by cryptocurrencies earlier this month, two people familiar with the matter said. The issue has also been raised in conversations with federal regulators involving Treasury’s Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, although those discussions did not involve principal-level officials such as Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen.
Administration officials are studying potential “gaps” in oversight related to the crypto market, such as whether it can be used to finance illicit or terrorist activities, the people said. They have also discussed whether some protections are needed for average retail investors purchasing cryptocurrencies. The White House and Department of Treasury are also publicly backing a new plan to target cryptocurrencies as part of a broader effort to address tax avoidance.
For now, federal regulators do not currently see the wild swings in the crypto markets as likely to pose a threat to the broader stability of financial markets, though they believe the risks are worth monitoring, the people said. Administration officials are discussing whether there are guardrails on cryptocurrencies that can be imposed while still allowing investors to “dogecoin to their heart’s content,” as one person briefed on the matter said, referring to trades of a popular cryptocurrency based on a meme of a dog.
“They’re aware of the fact that there are all kinds of risks in the abstract and things to look out for, but they are still largely in a wait-and-see posture,” one person briefed on the matter said. The people spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the private government review.
Spokespeople for the White House, Department of Treasury, and CFPB declined to comment.
At the same time, both central bank officials and congressional lawmakers have talked increasingly about policies that stand to dramatically alter crypto markets. The House has passed and sent the Senate bipartisan legislation instructing federal regulators to study and clarify rules for cryptocurrencies. Lael Brainard, a member of the Federal Reserve’s board of governors, published an article on Monday highlighting the potential benefits of a digital currency created and managed by the central bank. A government-run digital currency could cut into cryptocurrency’s market share by offering a safer alternative to instantaneous digital transactions.
Particularly high levels of volatility in the cryptocurrency markets have rattled investors and highlighted to policymakers the potential dangers of the freewheeling sector. Bitcoin, the most popular cryptocurrency, crashed by more than 50% from its prior peaks amid a broader crypto sell-off. Dogecoin fell by more than 10% before paring back its losses. The crypto markets appear to have been rattled by Elon Musk saying Tesla would no longer accept bitcoin as a payment for vehicle, as well as Chinese officials suggesting new restrictions on financial firms tied to cryptocurrencies.
The recent market instability has compounded existing concerns about cryptocurrencies, including fears about the environmental impact created by things like bitcoin mining. Government officials also believe these cryptocurrencies make it easier for criminals to transfer money without detection. The market cap for cryptocurrencies topped $2 trillion for the first time this April, just a few months after it hit $1 trillion.
“Cryptos are becoming a larger segment of the financial system, and regulators should be concerned about how this market intersects with our financial regulatory framework as banks and other financial institutions become more entwined with it,” said Gregg Gelzinis, a banking expert at the Center for American Progress, a center-left think tank.
Digital currencies operating have posed a conundrum for policymakers for years. They are hard to regulate in part because they are not controlled by conventional trading institutions, such as banks or other typical financial firms.
Cryptocurrencies drew less scrutiny when they first emerged. Their prominence was accelerated during the pandemic, when hundreds of billions of federal dollars pumped directly to consumers spurred casual investors to explore novel financial instruments. Institutional players, including some Fortune 500 companies, also got involved, leading to their further proliferation.
The amount of energy required to “mine” various cryptocurrencies has alarmed environmentalists, with bitcoin mining alone consuming more electricity than entire countries, according to the Cambridge Center for Alternative Finance. “That is a staggeringly large number for something that is absolutely useless,” said Eswar Prasad, an economist at Cornell University. “It’s an environmental disaster.”
These fears have grown just as political realities make cryptocurrencies harder to stamp out. Industry groups say that as many as 20 million Americans currently own cryptocurrencies. As bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies grow in size and scope, they become more difficult to manage because more people have bought into the system who stand to be affected by a crackdown.
“I wish we had smothered this a decade ago before it grew into a $2 trillion monster,” said Jason Furman, a senior economist in the Obama administration. “Digital currencies are all cons and no pros – environment; crime; volatility; taking advantage of unaware investors. If they had any use at all we could debate it. But they don’t have any use at all.”
The extent of crypto’s rise has complicated a straightforward policy response, though several proposals have either emerged or are seen as likely. For instance, the Department of Treasury last week unveiled a plan to require cryptocurrency companies to provide the IRS with more financial information. The reporting requirements would hit firms receiving cryptocurrency with a fair market value of more than $10,000. That measure is tied up with the Biden administration’s broader tax and spending proposals, complicating its path toward passage.
“If you increase third party reporting for currency transactions, it will help significantly with tax compliance and that’s what Treasury is proposing,” said John Koskinen, who served as IRS commissioner under the last two administrations. “It would make a difference. The statistics are clear: the more third-party information the IRS has, the higher the rate of compliance.”
The Securities and Exchange Commission may also push for changes. In his first public hearing, SEC Chairman Gary Gensler said earlier this month that Congress should do more to clarify the rules over cryptocurrencies, while also acknowledging that the SEC was limited in what it could do. The increased risk of regulation in the past month has led some cryptocurrency investors to sell.
Constance Hunter, chief economist at KPMG, said: “Regulation is what allows lay people to trust a variety of things they’re not experts in – whether that be medicine or financial markets . . . But the fact that it crashed on the idea regulators are looking at it is a huge red flag in terms of its intrinsic value.”
Federal Reserve officials are also exploring the potential advantages of a government-managed “digital dollar.” Central banks across the globe have begun studying whether to issue their own digital currencies primarily in response to concerns that tech companies would ramp up their own private payment systems, such as Facebook’s diem, formerly known as Libra. But the development could have implications for cryptocurrencies as well. Bob Hockett, a former Fed official now at Cornell University, said he has discussed with Treasury officials and other banking regulators the possibility for the U.S. to launch a digital currency system that could ultimately undercut cryptos. Cryptocurrencies get their name in part because the payments are encrypted in a way that makes them avoid detection, a technique that could be mimicked by central banks.
Hockett added that creating a digital currency system accessible to every American would allow policymakers to deposit funds in taxpayer bank accounts while reducing the transaction fees currently collected by private companies. As many as one quarter of all Americans are unbanked or underbanked – which inhibited federal stimulus payments during the pandemic – whereas only 5% of Americans do not have access to a smartphone.
“People use crypto for many reasons, but some of the things those people are looking for could be provided by the central bank, such as the ease and speed of transaction that are secure and consistent,” Hockett said. “There’s no reason we couldn’t, from the point of the individual user, allow transactions without fees. And it could make for a much smoother and easier functioning monetary policy.”
John Fagan, who was director of the U.S. Treasury’s Markets Room and now principal of Markets Policy Partners, said the Biden administration is likely to look at cryptocurrency issues with an eye toward problems caused by money laundering, tax evasion, and investor protection. Treasury would likely to focus on the first two while the third would fall the Securities and Exchange Commission.
“What we’ve been telling our clients for months is the cryptocurrency complex is not fully pricing in the kind of regulatory attention likely bought to bear on bitcoin and the other operators,” Fagan said. “This ‘constructive ambiguity’ kind of regulatory structure will be replaced by a lot more bright lines.”
Still, Adam Ozimek, chief economist at Upwork, said he thought cryptocurrencies may not be a safe investment but do not appear to represent a broader threat to the economy. Many experts and crypto industry groups warn of the dangers of government overreach.
“I don’t think this is something regulators should be concerned about, even if people putting their savings into it certainly should be,” Ozimek said. “It’s a really risky, speculative investment . . . But should regulators be concerned about the price of art? That goes up and down rapidly, too.”
China stocks jump most since July amid record foreign purchases
Chinas equity benchmark rallied by the most since July as investors piled into stocks amid attempts by policymakers to contain commodity prices. The yuan also advanced to its strongest since 2018.
The CSI 300 Index closed 3.2% higher at its strongest since early March, driven by gains in consumer staples equities. The surge came as overseas investors net purchased 21.7 billion yuan ($3.4 billion) worth of A shares via links with Hong Kong on Tuesday, the most ever.
Beijing’s efforts to talk down commodity prices and impose more control over financial markets have sent investors into more defensive assets such as consumer stocks with steady cash flows. Liquor giant Kweichow Moutai Co. rose 6% after Chinese media outlets reported its parent company aimed to double revenue by 2025.
“Beijing’s crackdown on commodity prices has forced more funds to seek shelter,” said Zhang Gang, a Central China Securities strategist. “Stocks such as Moutai are attractive given its stable earnings outlook and relatively reasonable valuation following this year’s correction.”
Meanwhile, the offshore yuan climbed 0.2% against the dollar, breaching the 6.4 level. The gains spurred attempts by state-owned banks to slow its appreciation. At least three institutions were seen bidding for the dollar in onshore markets below the 6.4050 level, traders said. This followed earlier attempts in the day to slow the advance, traders said.
The Chinese currency has rallied more than 2.5% in offshore markets this quarter, making it the best performer in Asia. Foreign funds have piled into the yuan as the economy strengthened and as they sought higher yields. Recent comments by a central bank official in a state-backed magazine — which was later retracted — have also stoked expectations that it could let the currency strengthen to offset higher commodity import costs.
“The strong buying of foreign investors in A-shares via the trading links has a lot to do with the stronger yuan,” said Jackson Wong, Amber Hill Capital Ltd.’s asset management director. “There has been expectations that China may allow the yuan to strengthen a bit to counter the import inflation.”
Financial stocks were also among the best performers on Tuesday, with a Bloomberg gauge of brokerage shares rising as much as 4.2%. The gains came as Shanghai announced plans to establish itself as an asset management hub. CSC Financial Co. rose by the daily 10% limit.
“Sentiment has stabilized and some heavyweight stocks have corrected from their intra-year highs,” said Linus Yip, chief strategist with First Shanghai Securities. “It’s not surprising that some long-term institutional investors will buy them at current levels.”
Published : May 26, 2021
By : Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Jeanny Yu
The Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET) Index closed at 1,568.58 on Tuesday, up 16.73 points or 1.08 per cent. Total transactions amounted to THB88.95 billion with an index high of 1,572.03 and a low of 1,560.13.
In the morning session, Krungsri Securities expected the day’s index to fluctuate between 1,545 and 1,560 points amid hopes of economic recovery as countries launch mass vaccination.
It added that energy and petrochemical shares had gained positive sentiment from the rising oil price.
However, the outflow of foreign funds and uncertainty over the MSCI’s move to reduce investment in Thai shares by 0.1 per cent on May 27 would pressure the index, Krungsri Securities said.
The 10 stocks with the highest trade value today were KBANK, PTTGC, DELTA, KTC, SCGP, SAWAD, SCB, KCE, PTT and BBL.
Other Asian indices were on the rise:
Japan’s Nikkei Index closed at 28,553.98, up 189.37 points or 0.67 per cent.
China’s Shanghai SE Composite Index closed at 3,581.34, up 84.06 points or 2.40 per cent, while the Shenzhen SE Component Index closed at 14,846.45, up 339.85 points or 2.34 per cent.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index closed at 28,910.86, up 498.60 points or 1.75 per cent.
South Korea’s KOSPI closed at 3,171.32, up 27.02 points or 0.86 per cent.
Taiwan’s TAIEX Index closed at 16,595.67, up 257.38 points or 1.58 per cent.