Firm Open Tipped For Indonesia Stocks
(RTTNews) - The Indonesian stock market alternated between positive and negative finishes every day last week, since the end of the four-day losing streak in which it had declined more than 120 points or 5 percent en route to a two-month closing low. The Jakarta Composite Index ended just below the 2,400-point plateau, and now analysts are forecasting that the market could creep above that level when it opens for business on Monday.
The lead from Wall Street is mixed with a touch of upside as stocks saw only slim moves to close out the week on Friday, with subdued reaction to monthly employment figures keeping the major averages near the unchanged mark. The major averages were able to recover from a pullback at the opening bell and managed to close modestly higher.
The JCI finished sharply higher on Friday, thanks to gains among the financial stocks and the automobile producers.
For the day, the index added 27.89 points or 1.18 percent to finish at 2,395.10 after trading between 2,367.62 and 2,403.27. Volume was 9.6 billion shares worth 10.9 trillion rupiah. There were 119 gainers and 62 decliners.
Among the gainers, Bank Rakyat Indonesia added 1.9 percent, while Bank Negara Indonesia gained 3.9 percent, Bank Danamon jumped 2.8 percent, Bank Central Asia was up 2.7 percent, Gudang Garam surged 7.1 percent and car distributor Astra International climbed 1.9 percent.
The lead from Wall Street is mixed with a touch of upside as stocks saw only slim moves to close out the week on Friday, with subdued reaction to monthly employment figures keeping the major averages near the unchanged mark. The major averages were able to recover from a pullback at the opening bell and managed to close modestly higher.
The initial weakness came on the heels of the release of a report from the Labor Department showing that employment fell by more than expected in the month of October, with the continued decline in jobs pushing the unemployment rate up to a new twenty-six year high above 10 percent.
Non-farm payroll employment fell by 190,000 jobs in October following a revised decrease of 219,000 jobs in September. Economists had expected a decrease of about 175,000 jobs compared to the loss of 263,000 jobs originally reported for the previous month. With the continued drop in jobs, the unemployment rate jumped to 10.2 percent in October from 9.8 percent in September. The unemployment rate had been expected to show a more modest increase to 9.9 percent.
In related news, President Barack Obama signed a bill extending unemployment coverage for 14 weeks across the country and adding an additional six weeks for areas with the highest unemployment. The bill also extends and expands the first-time homebuyer tax credit. Also, the House on Saturday passed the healthcare reform bill and now it heads to the senate.
Separately, the Commerce Department released its report on wholesale inventories in the month of September, showing that inventories fell by a little less than economists had been anticipating. The report also showed a continued increase in wholesale sales.
Also on the economic front, the Federal Reserve said that total consumer credit fell by $14.8 billion or 7.2 percent in September to $2.456 trillion, indicating tightening for the eighth straight month. Economists had been expecting a decrease of about $10 billion.
The major averages moved to the upside going into the close, ending the day modestly above the unchanged line. The Dow closed up 17.46 points or 0.2 percent at 10,023.42, the NASDAQ advanced 7.12 points or 0.3 percent to 2,112.44 and the S&P 500 rose 2.67 points or 0.3 percent to 1,069.30. Despite some shaky sessions this week, the major averages all finished considerably higher, with the Dow and the S&P 500 advancing by 3.2 percent and the NASDAQ climbing by 3.3 percent.
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Posted in Categories: Releases, Stocks, USA.

