Most Southeast Asian shares ended higher on Wednesday, with the Philippines rising over 2 percent, while investors awaited the US Federal Reserve's statement for cues on the pace of future rate hikes after its policy meeting concludes later in the day. However, resurfacing US-Sino trade tensions after United States President Donald Trump announced a 25 percent tariff on $200 billion of imported Chinese goods after initially setting them at 10 percent, weighed on sentiment.
"I think the FOMC will keep to their policy of tightening in 2018. The outlook for 2019 is more uncertain and we will only have more visibility in subsequent meetings when the FOMC updates their economic projections," said Liu Jinshu, director of research at NRA Capital in Singapore. Philippine shares were the top gainers among Southeast Asian shares, ending 2.2 percent higher, their biggest gain in over 2 months.
Industrials and financials accounted for majority of the gains, while all other sectors ended in the positive territory. SM Investments Corp gained 4.2 percent while BDO Unibank ended 3.6 percent higher. Indonesian shares ended 1.6 percent higher, bolstered by financials and industrial stocks, with the index posting its eighth gain in nine sessions.
Fitch Ratings on Tuesday upgraded the Viability Rating of Indonesia's state-owned bank PT Bank Rakyat Indonesia (Persero) Tbk and also reaffirmed the National Ratings on PT Bank Negara Indonesia (Persero) Tbk. Financials surged, with PT Bank Negara Indonesia (Persero) Tbk rising 5.7 percent and PT Bank Rakyat Indonesia (Persero) Tbk gaining 3.9 percent. Meanwhile, Indonesia's July inflation rate edged up to 3.18 percent against expectations of a 3.24 percent rise.
Thai shares gained 1.2 percent, their seventh rise in nine sessions. Data showed the country's headline consumer price index rose in July. Singapore shares gained 0.3 percent on the back of financials with DBS Group Holdings, Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp and United Overseas Bank all gaining. Vietnam shares ended lower by 0.4 percent, with financials and real estate stocks pulling the benchmark down.
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