Today’s Outlook:
• The Dow slipped 267.58 points, or 0.61%, during the regular session for a nine-day losing streak, its longest since 1978. The S&P 500 slipped 0.39%, while tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.32%. These losses come before the Federal Open Market Committee’s policy decision, which is due out on Wednesday afternoon. Fed funds futures trading currently shows a 95% chance that the central bank will cut interest rates by a quarter percentage point, according to the CME FedWatch tool.
• MARKET SENTIMENT: November UK CPI, November EU CPI, US Crude Oil Inventories, December Fed Interest Rate Decision, December BoJ Interest Rate Decision.
• ASIA MARKETS: Asia-Pacific markets were mixed Tuesday, tracking mixed gains on Wall Street as investors look toward the U.S. Federal Reserve’s decision stateside. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Topix fell 0.24% and 0.37% to close at 39,364.68 and 2,728.2 respectively. South Korea’s Kospi slipped 1.29% to close at 2,456.81, while the Kosdaq dropped 0.58% to end the trading day at 694.47. Chinese leaders have decided to increase the country’s budget deficit to 4% of GDP in 2025 in a bid to keep economic growth at around 5% next year, Reuters reported Tuesday. China’s CSI 300 traded 0.26% lower to close at 3,922.03, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index traded 0.16% lower. The increase in China’s headline budget deficit is a reflection that the government is willing to step up fiscal policies, but the market remains unconvinced of the exact magnitude, said Gary Ng, senior economist at Natixis.
• CURRENCY & FIXED INCOME: The U.S. dollar strengthened against major currencies on Tuesday following better-than-expected retail sales data that showed underlying economic momentum and as markets braced for interest rate moves from the Federal Reserve and other central banks. The U.S. dollar index – which tracks the currency against six others – rose 0.1% to 106.98, after trading as high as 107.08 on the session. Commerce Department data on Tuesday showed that U.S. retail sales surpassed expectations by jumping 0.7% in November, backed by an uptick in motor vehicle and online purchases. Markets are still anticipating that the Fed will deliver a 25-basis-point interest rate cut at the end of its two-day policy meeting on Wednesday, with futures implying a 95% chance of a cut, according to the CME’s FedWatch tool. U.S. Treasury yields were little changed on Tuesday as investors parsed economic data due ahead of the Federal Reserve’s next interest rate decision. The yield on the 10- year Treasury was down less than 1 basis points at 4.397%. The 2-year Treasury yield also slipped less than 1 basis point lower to 4.245%. Yields and prices move in opposite directions. One basis point equals 0.01%.
– The yen strengthened against the dollar, as markets have scaled back the chances of a rate hike by the Bank of Japan this week in favor of a move in January. It rose 0.38% against the greenback to 153.56 per dollar.
– European stocks closed lower on Tuesday, with market participants awaiting monetary policy decisions from major central banks this week. The pan-European Stoxx 600 index ended down 0.41%, with almost all sectors in negative territory, as well as most major European bourses. Europe’s banking index led the losses, down 1.4%, while tech stocks were a rare outlier, adding 0.61%.
– The euro, which is heading for a drop of nearly 5% against the dollar this year, was down 0.2% at IDR1.0488.
• COMMODITIES: Oil prices were down on Tuesday as China’s economic data renewed demand concerns, while investors remained cautious ahead of the U.S. Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision. Brent crude futures fell 72 cents, or 0.97%, to settle at IDR73.19 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude pulled back 63 cents, or 0.89%, to close at IDR70.08 a barrel. Prices were “weighed on by profit-taking after last week’s 6% rally and a batch of disappointing Chinese economic data yesterday,” IG market analyst Tony Sycamore said. On Monday, prices fell from multi-week highs on unexpected weakness in consumer spending data from China, despite strength in industrial output, and as investors moved into a holding pattern ahead of the Fed’s meeting.
– Gold slipped on Tuesday under pressure from a strengthening U.S. dollar and climbing Treasury yields as investors focused on the Federal Reserve’s final policy meeting of the year with growing expectations of a gradual pace of rate cuts in 2025. Spot gold was down 0.3% at IDR2,644.84 per ounce. U.S. gold futures shed 0.3% to IDR2,661.00.
• JCI continued its correction 82.09 bps (-1.39%) after reaching a peak last Thursday forming the inverted hammer candle. Foreign funds were still consistently selling net sales worth IDR 1.63 trillion yesterday, while their YTD position was also Net Selling IDR 24.69 trillion (RG MARKET).Investors/traders are advised to WAIT AND SEE for stocks that have been in a strong uptrend rally last week. RUPIAH exchange rate is entrenched at IDR 15,900-16,000/USD, there are hopes of “strengthening” Rupiah towards 15,600
– 15,500 at the end of this year based on the plan to cut FFR at the FOMC MEETING on 17-18 December.
Company News
• ADRO: Alamtri Disburses USD200 Million Interim Dividend
• PTRO: Petrosea EGM Approves 1:10 Stock Split Plan
• TOBA: TOBA Entity Draws USD15 Million Loan
Domestic & Global News
Biodiesel Utilisation Reaches 12.07 Million Kilolitres by December 2024
China Targets 5% Growth Next Year, Raises Budget Deficit
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