Previous close | 7.52 |
Open | 7.34 |
Bid | 7.38 x 0 |
Ask | 7.39 x 0 |
Day's range | 7.32 - 7.43 |
52-week range | 6.01 - 7.91 |
Volume | 2,293,200 |
Avg. volume | 977,431 |
Market cap | 6.234B |
Beta (5Y monthly) | 1.00 |
PE ratio (TTM) | 48.30 |
EPS (TTM) | 0.15 |
Earnings date | 13 Aug 2020 |
Forward dividend & yield | 0.17 (2.37%) |
Ex-dividend date | 17 Jun 2020 |
1y target est | 8.38 |
* Graphic: World FX rates https://tmsnrt.rs/2RBWI5E * Indonesia to post first annual GDP contraction since 1998- poll * Thai consumer confidence hits a 9-month low * Taiwan dollar extends rally By Shruti Sonal Feb 4 (Reuters) - Indonesian shares pared earlier gains on Thursday ahead of GDP data, while most other Asian stock markets were mixed as investors exercised caution triggered by worries about policy tightening in China and mixed cues from Wall Street. Indonesia, which has suffered the worst COVID-19 outbreak in Southeast Asia, is expected to post its first annual contraction in gross domestic product (GDP) since 1998 on Friday, a Reuters poll showed. Although analysts expect the fourth-quarter GDP growth to contract less severely than the previous quarter, they have flagged recovery risks.
* Malaysia set for first weekly drop in seven * Thai baht rises to a seven-year peak * Singapore dollar eases from 2-year highs By Shriya Ramakrishnan Dec 18 (Reuters) - The won closed at a two-week low on Friday as more COVID-19 cases in South Korea sapped risk appetite, while profit-taking ahead of the holiday season put Malaysian shares on course for their first weekly loss in seven weeks. Asian currencies were largely subdued in the afternoon trade as the dollar took a breather after plunging close to a 2-1/2-year lows this week. The won weakened 0.6% against the dollar and was the sole regional currency set to register a weekly fall, as South Korea reported its second-highest daily tally for new coroanvirus cases.
* Thailand markets closed for a holiday * Fitch downgrades Malaysia's credit rating; ringgit weaker * China Nov. exports rise sharply * China stocks drop on Sino-U.S. tensions By Anushka Trivedi Dec 7 (Reuters) - Indonesian shares soared 2% to a near 10-month high on Monday as reports of the arrival of the first shipment of China's coronavirus vaccine and central bank promises of low interest rates countered regional concerns over U.S.-China tensions. The Jakarta index climbed after local media reported https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2020/12/05/indonesia-greenlights-adoption-of-major-covid-19-vaccines.html?src=mostviewed&pg= over the weekend that the government would allow coronavirus vaccine usage, and President Joko Widodo said the country had received its first shipment of the vaccine.