SE Asia Stocks-Indonesia gains on rate cut; Fed event in focus

By Urvashi Goenka

Aug 23 (Reuters) - Indonesian shares ended higher on

Wednesday after the central bank unexpectedly cut the interest

rate to boost sluggish lending and growth while most other

Southeast Asian stock markets were cautious ahead of a gathering

of central bank chiefs hosted by the U.S. Federal Reserve.

Indonesia became the second major Asian economy after India

to cut its benchmark policy rate this year, with Bank Indonesia

(BI) bringing the 7-day reverse repurchase rate

down by 25 basis points to 4.50 percent.

Indonesian stocks ended 0.6 percent higher, helped

by energy and consumer staples stocks.

Further easing from BI seems likely before the year-end, ING

Research said in a note.

Meanwhile, other Southeast Asian stock markets moved

sideways, in line with broader Asian shares,

which initially inched up to a two-week high, before giving up

the gains to trade flat.

Investors turned their focus to the U.S. central bank's

annual conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming this week where Fed

Chair Janet Yellen and European Central Bank President Mario

Draghi are slated to speak.

"For this week, I think Asian markets will just take their

cue from Jackson Hole central bank event in which the spotlight

may likely focus on Yellen. In other words the Asian markets

will just track the U.S. markets," said said Edgar Lay, junior

equity analyst with AB Capital Securities.

In Philippines, shares fell 0.2 percent, as

industrials and financials lost ground. Ayala Land fell

0.9 percent, while BDO Unibank lost 0.5 percent.

"I think this is not a surprise, the ghost season has

already commenced and historically the stock markets were

sluggish during this period showing less-than-normal trading

volume," Lay said.

Analysts say China's "ghost season" stalls momentum in the

markets as some Chinese investors reduce trading during this

period.

"Investors are waiting for a catalyst that will further push

the markets up or down," Lay said.

Singapore shares fell 0.1 percent, weighed down by

financials.

The city-state's headline consumer price index in July rose

0.6 percent from a year earlier, helped by higher retail and

water prices, data showed on Wednesday.

Malaysian shares edged down marginally as losses in

financials more than offset the gains in telecom and

industrials. AMMB Holdings fell 2.3 percent, while

Hong Leong Financial Group fell 0.8 percent.

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SOUTHEAST ASIAN STOCK MARKETS

Change on day

Market Current previous Pct Move

close

Singapore 3260.05 3263.79 -0.11

Bangkok 1573.38 1573.19 0.01

Manila 7998.75 8015.93 -0.21

Jakarta 5914.024 5880.297 0.57