Thursday, September 22, 2011

Singapore stocks fall on Fed's warning of grim outlook

Singapore shares fell on Thursday after the Federal Reserve’s warning that the United States faced a grim economic outlook hurt sentiment and drove down U.S. stocks by more than 2%.

At 1 p.m., the Straits Times Index (STI) <.FTSTI> was down 1.7%, or 48.25 points, at 2,743.54. Around 576 million shares worth $592 million were traded, compared with 508 million shares worth $478 million that changed hands by the same time on Wednesday.

The STI was around 63 points away from its 2011 low of 2,680.83 points hit on Aug 22.

The Fed warned of significant risks to the already weak US economy and launched a new plan to lower long-term borrowing costs and bolster the battered housing market, but many economists and analysts doubted it would do much to revive the sputtering economy.

“The Fed seems to have run out of ideas,” said Terence Wong, co-head of research at DMG & Partners Securities in Singapore. “The outlook is still volatile with a downward bias.”

Shares of Singapore property stocks tumbled on fears that developers may soon start cutting prices in the face of slowing sales. CapitaLand (CATL.SI) was down 2.7% and City Developments (CTDM.SI) was 2.6% lower.

“The sales volumes have not really gone up as fast as before, and if you look at recent launches at least in the last couple of months, prices have also stagnated,” said Donald Chua, an analyst at CIMB Research.

“All these are possibly signs that the sector looks to be slowing down,” he added.

Fears of a global slowdown also pushed down the shares of Singapore-listed Chinese shipbuilder Cosco Corp (COSC.SI). The stock fell 2.5% to $0.99 with 10.7 million shares changing hands.

Commodity-related stocks were hit as well. Palm oil producer Golden Agri-Resources (GAGR.SI) fell 2.9%, while commodity traders Olam International (OLAM.SI) and Noble Group (NOBG.SI) lost 3.5% and 2.6%, respectively.

However, Singapore brokerage Kim Eng Securities said in a report that “the pipeline of construction contracts has never been stronger” in the city-state.

Kim Eng added that the construction industry’s current valuation, at a low price-earnings ratio of 4.9 times, might not have factored in potential growth in orders and earnings.

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