STI sinks to lowest level in over 4 years

STI sinks to lowest level in over 4 years

Local shares fell back into the red yesterday as worries over the global economic outlook continue to show little sign of letting up.

The benchmark Straits Times Index (STI) tumbled 78.70 points, or 2.98 per cent, to 2,559.77 - its lowest in more than four years.

The index is now down more than 11 per cent for the year.

In other regional markets, Tokyo plunged 3.7 per cent, Hong Kong dived 3.8 per cent, Shanghai slid 1 per cent, Seoul was off 2.3 per cent and Sydney retreated 1.3 per cent.

Wall Street was little changed on Tuesday, inching up just 0.2 per cent as trading resumed following a holiday.

Financial markets worldwide have been gripped by fears over the collapse in oil prices and the economic slowdown in China since the start of the year.

"We'll continue to see a tug of war between nervous sentiment and technical indicators showing that falls have gone too far," said Chihiro Ohta, general manager of investment information at SMBC Nikko Securities in Tokyo.

"At the root of the selling we've seen this year has been the imbalance of oil supply and demand, so until the oil price moves calm down, the stock market will struggle."

At home, the local banks and oil- and gas-related plays stood out among the laggards.

DBS Group Holdings lost 39 cents or 2.7 per cent to $14.09. OCBC Bank dropped 26 cents or 3.3 per cent to $7.66 while United Overseas Bank fell 49 cents or 2.8 per cent to $17.03.

A recent RHB report noted there are growing fears that the three lenders "would soon be hit with rising defaults in their oil and gas exposures", especially as oil prices are likely to stay under pressure.

Sembcorp Marine and its parent Sembcorp Industries were in active trade on market talk of a possible privatisation of the rig builder.

A Reuters report yesterday cited sources as saying that Sembcorp Industries may inject funds into SembMarine or buy full control of the firm to replenish its strained finances.

Sembcorp Industries slumped 24 cents or 9.4 per cent to $2.30.

SembMarine eked out a marginal increase of half a cent or 0.3 per cent to $1.485.

Keppel Corporation dived 35 cents or 6.8 per cent to $4.83, a level that had not been seen since 2009.

Outside of the blue chips, offshore marine firm Ezra Holdings was hit hard as it tanked 1.2 cents or 17.1 per cent to 5.8 cents, on news of a proposed share consolidation.

It was also the most heavily traded stock, with 98.7 units changing hands.

Trading across the bourse came up to 1.09 billion shares worth $1.22 billion.

tsjwoo@sph.com.sg


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