가격협의 상품 및 유료상품의 구매를 원하실 경우 맞춤형 데이터 신청란에 글을 남겨주시면
신속히 답변드리도록 하겠습니다.
데이터셋명 | 말레이시아 상장사 재무정보 데이터 | 데이터 유형 | csv |
---|---|---|---|
데이터 분야 | 기업정보 | 구축 데이터량 | 2.38 MB |
구축기관 | 헤브론스타 | 데이터 갱신 일자 | 2023-12-20 |
데이터 개방 일자 | 2022-08-31 | 데이터 이용 기한 | 무기한 |
데이터 갱신 주기 | - | 버전 | - |
주요 키워드 | 해외기업빅데이터, 말레이시아상장사재무정보, 말레이시아기업재무정보, 말레이시아기업, 말레이시아상장사 | ||
벨류체인 키워드 | 기술개발, 인적자원, 제조, 마케팅, 물류유통, 서비스 | ||
소개 | ° 구축목적: 해외 기업 정보에 대한 시장의 수요를 충족하는 서비스를 제공해 가치사슬 전반의 해외 기업 데이터 부족 해소, 다양한 이해관계자의 의사결정 효율화를 도모. ° 데이터 구축 필요성: 벨류체인 확장 및 데이터 중요성을 인지하고 있으나, 데이터 양극화/전문기과 이용의 한계 등에 따라 적극적인 데이터 확보가 어려운 실정. 이러한 한계를 극복하기 위해 해외기업 빅데이터 센터 구축 필요성 대두 ° 활용 분야: 해외기업정보 데이터에 대한 수요는 Supply Chain, Sales 확장, M&A, 투자, 컨설팅 등 산업 전반에 걸쳐 존재 ° 데이터 소개: (국가)기업에 대한 기업 재무정보를 현지 언어와 영문으로 나타냄. - 기업 재무정보: 재무상태표, 포괄손익계산서, 현금흐름표 |
데이터 구조: 데이터셋에 따른 항목과 해당 값은 아래와 같습니다(테이블 내 항목 중 일부)
No. | 필드명(국문) | 필드명(영문) | 설명 | 유형 |
1 | 영문기업명 | ENGLS_ENTRP_NM | 기업의 영어 표기 이름 | VARCHAR(100) |
2 | 유동자산금액 | CUASS_AMT | 재무상태표>자산>유동자산 | NUMERIC |
3 | 비유동자산금액 | NNCRRNT_ASSTS_AMT | 재무상태표>자산>비유동자산 | NUMERIC |
4 | 자산총계금액 | ASSTS_SUMM | 재무상태표>자산>자산총계 | NUMERIC |
5 | 유동부채금액 | FLTNG_DEBT_AMT | 재무상태표>부채>유동부채 | NUMERIC |
6 | 비유동부채금액 | NNCRRNT_DEBT_AMT | 재무상태표>부채>비유동부채 | NUMERIC |
7 | 자본금액 | CAPTL | 재무상태표>자본>자본금 | NUMERIC |
8 | 자본총계액 | CAPTL_SUMM | 재무상태표>자본>자본총계 | NUMERIC |
9 | 부채자본총계액 | DEBT_CAPTL_SUMM_AMT | 재무상태표>자본>부채 및 자본 총계 | NUMERIC |
10 | 매출금액 | PRSLS | 손익계산서>매출액 | NUMERIC |
11 | 영업이익금액 | BSN_PRFT_AMT | 손익계산서>영업이익 | NUMERIC |
12 | 당기순이익금액 | THTRM_NTPF_AMT | 손익계산서>당기순이익>당기순이익(또는 당기순손실) | NUMERIC |
13 | 기초현금금액 | BSIS_CASH_AMT | 현금흐름표>기초의 현금 | NUMERIC |
14 | 기말현금금액 | ENTRM_CASH_AMT | 현금흐름표>기말의 현금 | NUMERIC |
키값 | 주식시장코드 | 현지언어주식시장명 | 영문주식시장명 | 헤브론스타국가코드 | 상장코드 | 현지언어기업명 | 영문기업명 | 해외기업법인등록번호 | 해외기업사업자등록번호 | 설립일자 | 상장일자 | 현지언어산업군명 | 영문산업군명 | 통화구분코드 | 회계연도 | 보고서종류코드 | 결산일자 | 유동자산금액 | 비유동자산금액 | 현금및예치금액 | 유가증권금액 | 대출채권금액 | 할부금융자산금액 | 리스자산금액 | 유형자산금액 | 기타자산금액 | 자산총계 | 유동부채금액 | 비유동부채금액 | 예수부채금액 | 차입부채금액 | 기타부채금액 | 부채총계 | 자본금 | 자본잉여금 | 자본조정금액 | 기타포괄손익누계액 | 이익잉여금 | 자본총계 | 부채자본총계액 | 매출액 | 매출원가금액 | 영업비용금액 | 영업이익금액 | 영업외비용금액 | 법인세비용차감전순손익금액 | 법인세비용차감전계속사업손익금액 | 법인세비용금액 | 계속사업손익법인세비용금액 | 계속사업이익금액 | 중단사업손익금액 | 당기순이익금액 | 영업활동현금흐름금액 | 투자활동현금유입금액 | 재무활동현금유입금액 | 현금증가금액 | 기초현금금액 | 기말현금금액 | 부채비율 | 영업이익율값 | 매출액증가율 | 영업이익증가율값 | 당기순이익증가율값 | 기업연평균성장률값 | 기업관련소식날짜 | 기업관련소식종류내용 | 기업관련소식제목 | 기업관련소식내용요약 | 기업관련소식상세내용 | 정보출처내용 | 기업관련소식URL | 사내관련정보 | 고객관련정보 | 공급관련정보 | 경쟁관련정보 | 대체재관련정보 |
13780 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | ZHCO | Zhulian Corporation Bhd | Zhulian Corporation Bhd | Textiles & Apparel | Textiles & Apparel | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220531 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1625 | MYS | TOMY | Tomypak Holdings Bhd | Tomypak Holdings Bhd | Containers & Packaging | Containers & Packaging | MYR | 2021 | Q | 20210630 | 102040000 | 175860000 | 169930000 | 277900000 | 81290000 | 87910000 | 73480000 | 189990000 | 277900000 | 43940000 | 42200000 | 1750000 | 1050000 | 790000 | -9880000 | -1350000 | 11430000 | 200000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13897 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | PCGB | Petronas Chemicals Group Bhd | Petronas Chemicals Group Bhd | Chemicals | Chemicals | MYR | 2022 | A | 20221231 | 27213000000.0 | -2216000000.0 | 55430000000.0 | 6634000000.0 | 6733000000.0 | -12951000000.0 | -7502000000.0 | 16390000000.0 | 8888000000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4618 | MYS | BTKW | Batu Kawan Bhd | Batu Kawan Bhd | Chemicals | Chemicals | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 12342710000 | 20333730000 | 13678330000 | 32676440000 | 6608370000 | 25560870000 | 5086330000 | 7115570000 | 32676440000 | 6654580000 | 5725000000 | 929580000 | 860780000 | 190940000 | 316540000 | 1209480000 | -3154890000 | 1483370000 | -455370000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4180 | MYS | ANCR | Aeon Credit Service Bhd | Aeon Credit Service Bhd | Consumer Finance | Consumer Finance | MYR | 2021 | Q | 20211130 | 3730660000 | 6475130000 | 186000000 | 10205790000 | 1165050000 | 8057250000 | 1444100000 | 2148550000 | 10205800000 | 376470000 | 131430000 | 245040000 | 164030000 | 60560000 | 103460000 | 1018530000 | -26930000 | -653800000 | 337810000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
14080 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | AASB | Astral Asia Bhd | Astral Asia Bhd | Food & Tobacco | Food & Tobacco | MYR | 2022 | A | 20221231 | 8910000.0 | 339860000.0 | 319990000.0 | 1050000.0 | 348770000.0 | 8410000.0 | 93680000.0 | 42390000.0 | 255080000.0 | 348760000.0 | -792000.0 | -1930000.0 | 1590000.0 | -3740000.0 | 4380000.0 | -1400000.0 | -1330000.0 | 7450000.0 | 6120000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
14081 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | AASB | Astral Asia Bhd | Astral Asia Bhd | Food & Tobacco | Food & Tobacco | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 8910000.0 | 339860000.0 | 319990000.0 | 1050000.0 | 348770000.0 | 93680000.0 | 255080000.0 | 348760000.0 | 5320000.0 | -1430000.0 | -2310000.0 | -318000.0 | -1890000.0 | 1120000.0 | -544000.0 | -1650000.0 | -1080000.0 | 7200000.0 | 6120000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
14082 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | AASB | Astral Asia Bhd | Astral Asia Bhd | Food & Tobacco | Food & Tobacco | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 11230000.0 | 340810000.0 | 320880000.0 | -753000.0 | 352040000.0 | 8500000.0 | 93910000.0 | 44280000.0 | 258120000.0 | 352030000.0 | 5900000.0 | -1080000.0 | -1150000.0 | 388000.0 | -1300000.0 | -532000.0 | 523000.0 | -601000.0 | -610000.0 | 6820000.0 | 6210000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
14083 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | AASB | Astral Asia Bhd | Astral Asia Bhd | Food & Tobacco | Food & Tobacco | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 23990000.0 | 341410000.0 | -11860000.0 | 365400000.0 | 105740000.0 | 45580000.0 | 259660000.0 | 365400000.0 | 5810000.0 | 216000.0 | 81000.0 | 661000.0 | -627000.0 | 1520000.0 | -666000.0 | -440000.0 | 411000.0 | 6400000.0 | 6820000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
14084 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | AASB | Astral Asia Bhd | Astral Asia Bhd | Food & Tobacco | Food & Tobacco | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 11060000.0 | 343840000.0 | 323920000.0 | 1930000.0 | 354900000.0 | 7420000.0 | 93610000.0 | 46200000.0 | 261290000.0 | 354900000.0 | 4300000.0 | 1540000.0 | 1450000.0 | 856000.0 | 72000.0 | 2270000.0 | -720000.0 | -1610000.0 | -54000.0 | 7580000.0 | 7530000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13575 | MYS | HUAY | Hua Yang Bhd | Hua Yang Bhd | Jan 18, | discursive | 'Say their names' - Families urge Blinken to use China trip to free U.S. detainees | Reuters. Flags of U.S. and China are seen in this illustration picture taken August 2, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration▦By Humeyra Pamuk and Michael Martina▦WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Katherine Swidan, whose son Mark has been imprisoned in China for over 10 years, has not seen even a photograph of him over the last decade. The last time she heard his voice was in 2018.▦She and the families of other Americans, who according to the U.S. government are wrongfully held in China, are hoping that the U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken can push the Chinese authorities for the release of their loved ones as he visits Beijing next month.▦My message for Blinken is: say their names, said Katherine Swidan in a phone interview from her home in Luling, Texas. They're American citizens. They've been wrongfully detained. Enough is enough.▦Mark Swidan, a Texas-based businessman, was convicted by a Chinese court on drug-related charges despite a lack of evidence and in 2019 given a death sen | Reuters. Flags of U.S. and China are seen in this illustration picture taken August 2, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration▦By Humeyra Pamuk and Michael Martina▦WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Katherine Swidan, whose son Mark has been imprisoned in China for over 10 years, has not seen even a photograph of him over the last decade. The last time she heard his voice was in 2018.▦She and the families of other Americans, who according to the U.S. government are wrongfully held in China, are hoping that the U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken can push the Chinese authorities for the release of their loved ones as he visits Beijing next month.▦My message for Blinken is: say their names, said Katherine Swidan in a phone interview from her home in Luling, Texas. They're American citizens. They've been wrongfully detained. Enough is enough.▦Mark Swidan, a Texas-based businessman, was convicted by a Chinese court on drug-related charges despite a lack of evidence and in 2019 given a death sentence with reprieve. A United Nations working group has concluded he was arbitrarily detained in violation of international law.▦The Biden administration's recent high-profile prisoner swaps, such as basketball star Brittney Griner's release from Russia in exchange for a convicted Russian arms dealer, have spurred calls for Washington to do more for U.S. citizens held in China, some of whom have languished for over a decade with little consular contact.▦But the detainee issue often gets lost within the wider complexity of the U.S.-China relationship, which in recent years has sunk to its lowest point in decades.▦And, unlike Griner, the U.S. citizens held in China are not well known to the American public.▦Families of detained Americans say the freedom of their relatives should not be bundled up with challenging policy issues and should instead be addressed in a separate track focused on humanitarian matters.▦This cannot be treated as a long-term policy exercise, said Harrison Li, the son of Chinese-American Kai Li who has been detained in China since 2016.▦My dad, he is not a complex policy issue. It's a very clear cut-and-dry issue of an innocent American citizen being used as a pawn by the Chinese government to extract something, Li said.▦A Chinese court handed his father a 10-year jail sentence in 2018 for espionage. Kai Li denies the charges.▦There have been talks in recent months, Li said, between Washington and Beijing over the Americans detained in China but they did not go anywhere. And that's why it's so important for Secretary Blinken to use his upcoming trip next month to keep this issue in the spotlight and keep the negotiations going.▦AN OPPORTUNITY?▦Senior Biden administration officials, including Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Kritenbrink during a December visit to China, have told Chinese counterparts that securing the release of U.S. citizens who are wrongfully detained or subject to exit bans in China is a personal priority for the U.S. president.▦While President Joe Biden raised the issue when he met Chinese President Xi Jinping in November, he did not mention the specific names of the detained Americans, according to sources familiar with their talks.▦One person familiar with plans for Blinken's trip to China said the top U.S. diplomat does intend to raise the names of high-profile detainees, including Mark Swidan, Kai Li and David Lin - an American pastor detained in China since 2006 - as well as others during talks.▦The State Department declined to offer details of ongoing diplomatic conversations when asked about efforts to secure prisoner releases, but a department spokesperson told Reuters that Blinken is personally focused on and prioritizes bringing home U.S. nationals wrongfully detained in China.▦The United States does not provide an official figure for how many citizens are detained abroad, but The Dui Hua Foundation, a nonprofit that advocates for the release of political prisoners in China, estimates | Reuters. Flags of U.S. and China are seen in this illustration picture taken August 2, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration▦By Humeyra Pamuk and Michael Martina▦WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Katherine Swidan, whose son Mark has been imprisoned in China for over 10 years, has not seen even a photograph of him over the last decade. The last time she heard his voice was in 2018.▦She and the families of other Americans, who according to the U.S. government are wrongfully held in China, are hoping that the U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken can push the Chinese authorities for the release of their loved ones as he visits Beijing next month.▦My message for Blinken is: say their names, said Katherine Swidan in a phone interview from her home in Luling, Texas. They're American citizens. They've been wrongfully detained. Enough is enough.▦Mark Swidan, a Texas-based businessman, was convicted by a Chinese court on drug-related charges despite a lack of evidence and in 2019 given a death sentence with reprieve. A United Nations working group has concluded he was arbitrarily detained in violation of international law.▦The Biden administration's recent high-profile prisoner swaps, such as basketball star Brittney Griner's release from Russia in exchange for a convicted Russian arms dealer, have spurred calls for Washington to do more for U.S. citizens held in China, some of whom have languished for over a decade with little consular contact.▦But the detainee issue often gets lost within the wider complexity of the U.S.-China relationship, which in recent years has sunk to its lowest point in decades.▦And, unlike Griner, the U.S. citizens held in China are not well known to the American public.▦Families of detained Americans say the freedom of their relatives should not be bundled up with challenging policy issues and should instead be addressed in a separate track focused on humanitarian matters.▦This cannot be treated as a long-term policy exercise, said Harrison Li, the son of Chinese-American Kai Li who has been detained in China since 2016.▦My dad, he is not a complex policy issue. It's a very clear cut-and-dry issue of an innocent American citizen being used as a pawn by the Chinese government to extract something, Li said.▦A Chinese court handed his father a 10-year jail sentence in 2018 for espionage. Kai Li denies the charges.▦There have been talks in recent months, Li said, between Washington and Beijing over the Americans detained in China but they did not go anywhere. And that's why it's so important for Secretary Blinken to use his upcoming trip next month to keep this issue in the spotlight and keep the negotiations going.▦AN OPPORTUNITY?▦Senior Biden administration officials, including Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Kritenbrink during a December visit to China, have told Chinese counterparts that securing the release of U.S. citizens who are wrongfully detained or subject to exit bans in China is a personal priority for the U.S. president.▦While President Joe Biden raised the issue when he met Chinese President Xi Jinping in November, he did not mention the specific names of the detained Americans, according to sources familiar with their talks.▦One person familiar with plans for Blinken's trip to China said the top U.S. diplomat does intend to raise the names of high-profile detainees, including Mark Swidan, Kai Li and David Lin - an American pastor detained in China since 2006 - as well as others during talks.▦The State Department declined to offer details of ongoing diplomatic conversations when asked about efforts to secure prisoner releases, but a department spokesperson told Reuters that Blinken is personally focused on and prioritizes bringing home U.S. nationals wrongfully detained in China.▦The United States does not provide an official figure for how many citizens are detained abroad, but The Dui Hua Foundation, a nonprofit that advocates for the release of political prisoners in China, estimates | https://www.investing.com/news/world-news/say-their-names--families-urge-blinken-to-use-china-trip-to-free-us-detainees-2982404 | Reuters. Flags of U.S. and China are seen in this illustration picture taken August 2, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration▦By Humeyra Pamuk and Michael Martina▦WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Katherine Swidan, whose son Mark has been imprisoned in China for over 10 years, has not seen even a photograph of him over the last decade. The last time she heard his voice was in 2018.▦She and the families of other Americans, who according to the U.S. government are wrongfully held in China, are hoping that the U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken can push the Chinese authorities for the release of their loved ones as he visits Beijing next month.▦My message for Blinken is: say their names, said Katherine Swidan in a phone interview from her home in Luling, Texas. They're American citizens. They've been wrongfully detained. Enough is enough.▦Mark Swidan, a Texas-based businessman, was convicted by a Chinese court on drug-related charges despite a lack of evidence and in 2019 given a death sentence with reprieve. A United Nations working group has concluded he was arbitrarily detained in violation of international law.▦The Biden administration's recent high-profile prisoner swaps, such as basketball star Brittney Griner's release from Russia in exchange for a convicted Russian arms dealer, have spurred calls for Washington to do more for U.S. citizens held in China, some of whom have languished for over a decade with little consular contact.▦But the detainee issue often gets lost within the wider complexity of the U.S.-China relationship, which in recent years has sunk to its lowest point in decades.▦And, unlike Griner, the U.S. citizens held in China are not well known to the American public.▦Families of detained Americans say the freedom of their relatives should not be bundled up with challenging policy issues and should instead be addressed in a separate track focused on humanitarian matters.▦This cannot be treated as a long-term policy exercise, said Harrison Li, the son of Chinese-American Kai Li who has been detained in China since 2016.▦My dad, he is not a complex policy issue. It's a very clear cut-and-dry issue of an innocent American citizen being used as a pawn by the Chinese government to extract something, Li said.▦A Chinese court handed his father a 10-year jail sentence in 2018 for espionage. Kai Li denies the charges.▦There have been talks in recent months, Li said, between Washington and Beijing over the Americans detained in China but they did not go anywhere. And that's why it's so important for Secretary Blinken to use his upcoming trip next month to keep this issue in the spotlight and keep the negotiations going.▦AN OPPORTUNITY?▦Senior Biden administration officials, including Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Kritenbrink during a December visit to China, have told Chinese counterparts that securing the release of U.S. citizens who are wrongfully detained or subject to exit bans in China is a personal priority for the U.S. president.▦While President Joe Biden raised the issue when he met Chinese President Xi Jinping in November, he did not mention the specific names of the detained Americans, according to sources familiar with their talks.▦One person familiar with plans for Blinken's trip to China said the top U.S. diplomat does intend to raise the names of high-profile detainees, including Mark Swidan, Kai Li and David Lin - an American pastor detained in China since 2006 - as well as others during talks.▦The State Department declined to offer details of ongoing diplomatic conversations when asked about efforts to secure prisoner releases, but a department spokesperson told Reuters that Blinken is personally focused on and prioritizes bringing home U.S. nationals wrongfully detained in China.▦The United States does not provide an official figure for how many citizens are detained abroad, but The Dui Hua Foundation, a nonprofit that advocates for the release of political prisoners in China, estimates | Reuters. Flags of U.S. and China are seen in this illustration picture taken August 2, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration▦By Humeyra Pamuk and Michael Martina▦WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Katherine Swidan, whose son Mark has been imprisoned in China for over 10 years, has not seen even a photograph of him over the last decade. The last time she heard his voice was in 2018.▦She and the families of other Americans, who according to the U.S. government are wrongfully held in China, are hoping that the U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken can push the Chinese authorities for the release of their loved ones as he visits Beijing next month.▦My message for Blinken is: say their names, said Katherine Swidan in a phone interview from her home in Luling, Texas. They're American citizens. They've been wrongfully detained. Enough is enough.▦Mark Swidan, a Texas-based businessman, was convicted by a Chinese court on drug-related charges despite a lack of evidence and in 2019 given a death sentence with reprieve. A United Nations working group has concluded he was arbitrarily detained in violation of international law.▦The Biden administration's recent high-profile prisoner swaps, such as basketball star Brittney Griner's release from Russia in exchange for a convicted Russian arms dealer, have spurred calls for Washington to do more for U.S. citizens held in China, some of whom have languished for over a decade with little consular contact.▦But the detainee issue often gets lost within the wider complexity of the U.S.-China relationship, which in recent years has sunk to its lowest point in decades.▦And, unlike Griner, the U.S. citizens held in China are not well known to the American public.▦Families of detained Americans say the freedom of their relatives should not be bundled up with challenging policy issues and should instead be addressed in a separate track focused on humanitarian matters.▦This cannot be treated as a long-term policy exercise, said Harrison Li, the son of Chinese-American Kai Li who has been detained in China since 2016.▦My dad, he is not a complex policy issue. It's a very clear cut-and-dry issue of an innocent American citizen being used as a pawn by the Chinese government to extract something, Li said.▦A Chinese court handed his father a 10-year jail sentence in 2018 for espionage. Kai Li denies the charges.▦There have been talks in recent months, Li said, between Washington and Beijing over the Americans detained in China but they did not go anywhere. And that's why it's so important for Secretary Blinken to use his upcoming trip next month to keep this issue in the spotlight and keep the negotiations going.▦AN OPPORTUNITY?▦Senior Biden administration officials, including Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Kritenbrink during a December visit to China, have told Chinese counterparts that securing the release of U.S. citizens who are wrongfully detained or subject to exit bans in China is a personal priority for the U.S. president.▦While President Joe Biden raised the issue when he met Chinese President Xi Jinping in November, he did not mention the specific names of the detained Americans, according to sources familiar with their talks.▦One person familiar with plans for Blinken's trip to China said the top U.S. diplomat does intend to raise the names of high-profile detainees, including Mark Swidan, Kai Li and David Lin - an American pastor detained in China since 2006 - as well as others during talks.▦The State Department declined to offer details of ongoing diplomatic conversations when asked about efforts to secure prisoner releases, but a department spokesperson told Reuters that Blinken is personally focused on and prioritizes bringing home U.S. nationals wrongfully detained in China.▦The United States does not provide an official figure for how many citizens are detained abroad, but The Dui Hua Foundation, a nonprofit that advocates for the release of political prisoners in China, estimates | Reuters. Flags of U.S. and China are seen in this illustration picture taken August 2, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration▦By Humeyra Pamuk and Michael Martina▦WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Katherine Swidan, whose son Mark has been imprisoned in China for over 10 years, has not seen even a photograph of him over the last decade. The last time she heard his voice was in 2018.▦She and the families of other Americans, who according to the U.S. government are wrongfully held in China, are hoping that the U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken can push the Chinese authorities for the release of their loved ones as he visits Beijing next month.▦My message for Blinken is: say their names, said Katherine Swidan in a phone interview from her home in Luling, Texas. They're American citizens. They've been wrongfully detained. Enough is enough.▦Mark Swidan, a Texas-based businessman, was convicted by a Chinese court on drug-related charges despite a lack of evidence and in 2019 given a death sentence with reprieve. A United Nations working group has concluded he was arbitrarily detained in violation of international law.▦The Biden administration's recent high-profile prisoner swaps, such as basketball star Brittney Griner's release from Russia in exchange for a convicted Russian arms dealer, have spurred calls for Washington to do more for U.S. citizens held in China, some of whom have languished for over a decade with little consular contact.▦But the detainee issue often gets lost within the wider complexity of the U.S.-China relationship, which in recent years has sunk to its lowest point in decades.▦And, unlike Griner, the U.S. citizens held in China are not well known to the American public.▦Families of detained Americans say the freedom of their relatives should not be bundled up with challenging policy issues and should instead be addressed in a separate track focused on humanitarian matters.▦This cannot be treated as a long-term policy exercise, said Harrison Li, the son of Chinese-American Kai Li who has been detained in China since 2016.▦My dad, he is not a complex policy issue. It's a very clear cut-and-dry issue of an innocent American citizen being used as a pawn by the Chinese government to extract something, Li said.▦A Chinese court handed his father a 10-year jail sentence in 2018 for espionage. Kai Li denies the charges.▦There have been talks in recent months, Li said, between Washington and Beijing over the Americans detained in China but they did not go anywhere. And that's why it's so important for Secretary Blinken to use his upcoming trip next month to keep this issue in the spotlight and keep the negotiations going.▦AN OPPORTUNITY?▦Senior Biden administration officials, including Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Kritenbrink during a December visit to China, have told Chinese counterparts that securing the release of U.S. citizens who are wrongfully detained or subject to exit bans in China is a personal priority for the U.S. president.▦While President Joe Biden raised the issue when he met Chinese President Xi Jinping in November, he did not mention the specific names of the detained Americans, according to sources familiar with their talks.▦One person familiar with plans for Blinken's trip to China said the top U.S. diplomat does intend to raise the names of high-profile detainees, including Mark Swidan, Kai Li and David Lin - an American pastor detained in China since 2006 - as well as others during talks.▦The State Department declined to offer details of ongoing diplomatic conversations when asked about efforts to secure prisoner releases, but a department spokesperson told Reuters that Blinken is personally focused on and prioritizes bringing home U.S. nationals wrongfully detained in China.▦The United States does not provide an official figure for how many citizens are detained abroad, but The Dui Hua Foundation, a nonprofit that advocates for the release of political prisoners in China, estimates | Reuters. Flags of U.S. and China are seen in this illustration picture taken August 2, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration▦By Humeyra Pamuk and Michael Martina▦WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Katherine Swidan, whose son Mark has been imprisoned in China for over 10 years, has not seen even a photograph of him over the last decade. The last time she heard his voice was in 2018.▦She and the families of other Americans, who according to the U.S. government are wrongfully held in China, are hoping that the U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken can push the Chinese authorities for the release of their loved ones as he visits Beijing next month.▦My message for Blinken is: say their names, said Katherine Swidan in a phone interview from her home in Luling, Texas. They're American citizens. They've been wrongfully detained. Enough is enough.▦Mark Swidan, a Texas-based businessman, was convicted by a Chinese court on drug-related charges despite a lack of evidence and in 2019 given a death sentence with reprieve. A United Nations working group has concluded he was arbitrarily detained in violation of international law.▦The Biden administration's recent high-profile prisoner swaps, such as basketball star Brittney Griner's release from Russia in exchange for a convicted Russian arms dealer, have spurred calls for Washington to do more for U.S. citizens held in China, some of whom have languished for over a decade with little consular contact.▦But the detainee issue often gets lost within the wider complexity of the U.S.-China relationship, which in recent years has sunk to its lowest point in decades.▦And, unlike Griner, the U.S. citizens held in China are not well known to the American public.▦Families of detained Americans say the freedom of their relatives should not be bundled up with challenging policy issues and should instead be addressed in a separate track focused on humanitarian matters.▦This cannot be treated as a long-term policy exercise, said Harrison Li, the son of Chinese-American Kai Li who has been detained in China since 2016.▦My dad, he is not a complex policy issue. It's a very clear cut-and-dry issue of an innocent American citizen being used as a pawn by the Chinese government to extract something, Li said.▦A Chinese court handed his father a 10-year jail sentence in 2018 for espionage. Kai Li denies the charges.▦There have been talks in recent months, Li said, between Washington and Beijing over the Americans detained in China but they did not go anywhere. And that's why it's so important for Secretary Blinken to use his upcoming trip next month to keep this issue in the spotlight and keep the negotiations going.▦AN OPPORTUNITY?▦Senior Biden administration officials, including Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Kritenbrink during a December visit to China, have told Chinese counterparts that securing the release of U.S. citizens who are wrongfully detained or subject to exit bans in China is a personal priority for the U.S. president.▦While President Joe Biden raised the issue when he met Chinese President Xi Jinping in November, he did not mention the specific names of the detained Americans, according to sources familiar with their talks.▦One person familiar with plans for Blinken's trip to China said the top U.S. diplomat does intend to raise the names of high-profile detainees, including Mark Swidan, Kai Li and David Lin - an American pastor detained in China since 2006 - as well as others during talks.▦The State Department declined to offer details of ongoing diplomatic conversations when asked about efforts to secure prisoner releases, but a department spokesperson told Reuters that Blinken is personally focused on and prioritizes bringing home U.S. nationals wrongfully detained in China.▦The United States does not provide an official figure for how many citizens are detained abroad, but The Dui Hua Foundation, a nonprofit that advocates for the release of political prisoners in China, estimates | Reuters. Flags of U.S. and China are seen in this illustration picture taken August 2, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration▦By Humeyra Pamuk and Michael Martina▦WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Katherine Swidan, whose son Mark has been imprisoned in China for over 10 years, has not seen even a photograph of him over the last decade. The last time she heard his voice was in 2018.▦She and the families of other Americans, who according to the U.S. government are wrongfully held in China, are hoping that the U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken can push the Chinese authorities for the release of their loved ones as he visits Beijing next month.▦My message for Blinken is: say their names, said Katherine Swidan in a phone interview from her home in Lulin | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
8143 | MYS | ARBB | Arb Bhd | Arb Bhd | IT Services | IT Services | MYR | 2021 | Q | 20211231 | 20200325 | Stock News | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/shareholder-activists-watch-that-credit-rating-2121216 | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
8144 | MYS | ARBB | Arb Bhd | Arb Bhd | IT Services | IT Services | MYR | 2021 | Q | 20210930 | 20200325 | Stock News | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/shareholder-activists-watch-that-credit-rating-2121216 | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13576 | MYS | HUAY | Hua Yang Bhd | Hua Yang Bhd | Jan 17, | discursive | In China, doctors say they are discouraged from citing COVID on death certificates | Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Medical workers attend to patients of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at an intensive care unit (ICU) converted from a conference room, at a hospital in Cangzhou, Hebei province, China January 11, 2023. China Daily via REUTERS▦By Martin Quin Pollard and Engen Tham▦BEIJING (Reuters) - During a busy shift at the height of Beijing's COVID wave, a physician at a private hospital saw a printed notice in the emergency department: doctors should “try not to” write COVID-induced respiratory failure on death certificates.▦Instead, if the deceased had an underlying disease, that should be named as the main cause of death, according to the notice, a copy of which was seen by Reuters.▦If doctors believe that the death was caused solely by COVID-19 pneumonia, they must report to their superiors, who will arrange for two levels of expert consultations before a COVID death is confirmed, it said.▦Six doctors at public hospitals across China told Reuters they had either rece | Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Medical workers attend to patients of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at an intensive care unit (ICU) converted from a conference room, at a hospital in Cangzhou, Hebei province, China January 11, 2023. China Daily via REUTERS▦By Martin Quin Pollard and Engen Tham▦BEIJING (Reuters) - During a busy shift at the height of Beijing's COVID wave, a physician at a private hospital saw a printed notice in the emergency department: doctors should “try not to” write COVID-induced respiratory failure on death certificates.▦Instead, if the deceased had an underlying disease, that should be named as the main cause of death, according to the notice, a copy of which was seen by Reuters.▦If doctors believe that the death was caused solely by COVID-19 pneumonia, they must report to their superiors, who will arrange for two levels of expert consultations before a COVID death is confirmed, it said.▦Six doctors at public hospitals across China told Reuters they had either received similar oral instructions discouraging them from attributing deaths to COVID or were aware that their hospitals had such policies.▦Some relatives of people who have died with COVID say the disease did not appear on their death certificates, and some patients have reported not being tested for coronavirus despite arriving with respiratory symptoms.▦We have stopped classifying COVID deaths since the reopening in December, said a doctor at a large public hospital in Shanghai. It is pointless to do that because almost everyone is positive.▦Such directives have led to criticism by global health experts and the World Health Organization that China has drastically underreported COVID deaths as the coronavirus runs rampant in the country, which abandoned its strict zero-COVID regime in December.▦On Saturday, officials said 60,000 people with COVID-19 had died in hospitals since China's policy U-turn, a roughly ten-fold increase from previously reported figures, but still short of expectations of international experts, who have said China could see more than a million COVID-related deaths this year.▦China's Center for Disease Control (CDC) and National Health Commission (NHC) did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for comment.▦The doctors in this article declined to be named because they are not permitted to speak to the media.▦Several said they were told such guidance came from the government, though none knew from which department, a common situation in China when politically sensitive instructions are disseminated.▦Three other doctors at public hospitals in different cities said they were unaware of any such guidance.▦One of them, a senior emergency room doctor in Shandong province, said doctors were issuing death certificates based on the actual cause of death, but how to categorise those deaths is up to the hospitals or local officials.▦'LOOKS LOW'▦Since the start of the pandemic, which first emerged three years ago in its central city of Wuhan, China has drawn heavy criticism for not being transparent over the virus - an accusation it has repeatedly rejected.▦Before Saturday, China was reporting five or fewer COVID deaths per day. Of the nearly 60,000 COVID-related fatalities since Dec. 8 it announced on Saturday since, fewer than 10% were caused by respiratory failure because of COVID. The rest resulted from a combination of COVID and other diseases, Jiao Yahui, head of the Bureau of Medical Administration under the National Health Commission (NHC), said on Saturday.▦Michael Baker, a public health scholar at the University of Otago in New Zealand, said the updated death toll still looks low compared with the high level of infection in China.▦Most countries are finding that most deaths from COVID are caused directly by the infection rather than by a combination of COVID and other diseases, he said. By contrast, reported deaths in China are mainly (90%) a combination of COVID and other infections, which also suggests tha | Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Medical workers attend to patients of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at an intensive care unit (ICU) converted from a conference room, at a hospital in Cangzhou, Hebei province, China January 11, 2023. China Daily via REUTERS▦By Martin Quin Pollard and Engen Tham▦BEIJING (Reuters) - During a busy shift at the height of Beijing's COVID wave, a physician at a private hospital saw a printed notice in the emergency department: doctors should “try not to” write COVID-induced respiratory failure on death certificates.▦Instead, if the deceased had an underlying disease, that should be named as the main cause of death, according to the notice, a copy of which was seen by Reuters.▦If doctors believe that the death was caused solely by COVID-19 pneumonia, they must report to their superiors, who will arrange for two levels of expert consultations before a COVID death is confirmed, it said.▦Six doctors at public hospitals across China told Reuters they had either received similar oral instructions discouraging them from attributing deaths to COVID or were aware that their hospitals had such policies.▦Some relatives of people who have died with COVID say the disease did not appear on their death certificates, and some patients have reported not being tested for coronavirus despite arriving with respiratory symptoms.▦We have stopped classifying COVID deaths since the reopening in December, said a doctor at a large public hospital in Shanghai. It is pointless to do that because almost everyone is positive.▦Such directives have led to criticism by global health experts and the World Health Organization that China has drastically underreported COVID deaths as the coronavirus runs rampant in the country, which abandoned its strict zero-COVID regime in December.▦On Saturday, officials said 60,000 people with COVID-19 had died in hospitals since China's policy U-turn, a roughly ten-fold increase from previously reported figures, but still short of expectations of international experts, who have said China could see more than a million COVID-related deaths this year.▦China's Center for Disease Control (CDC) and National Health Commission (NHC) did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for comment.▦The doctors in this article declined to be named because they are not permitted to speak to the media.▦Several said they were told such guidance came from the government, though none knew from which department, a common situation in China when politically sensitive instructions are disseminated.▦Three other doctors at public hospitals in different cities said they were unaware of any such guidance.▦One of them, a senior emergency room doctor in Shandong province, said doctors were issuing death certificates based on the actual cause of death, but how to categorise those deaths is up to the hospitals or local officials.▦'LOOKS LOW'▦Since the start of the pandemic, which first emerged three years ago in its central city of Wuhan, China has drawn heavy criticism for not being transparent over the virus - an accusation it has repeatedly rejected.▦Before Saturday, China was reporting five or fewer COVID deaths per day. Of the nearly 60,000 COVID-related fatalities since Dec. 8 it announced on Saturday since, fewer than 10% were caused by respiratory failure because of COVID. The rest resulted from a combination of COVID and other diseases, Jiao Yahui, head of the Bureau of Medical Administration under the National Health Commission (NHC), said on Saturday.▦Michael Baker, a public health scholar at the University of Otago in New Zealand, said the updated death toll still looks low compared with the high level of infection in China.▦Most countries are finding that most deaths from COVID are caused directly by the infection rather than by a combination of COVID and other diseases, he said. By contrast, reported deaths in China are mainly (90%) a combination of COVID and other infections, which also suggests tha | https://www.investing.com/news/coronavirus/in-china-doctors-say-they-are-discouraged-from-citing-covid-on-death-certificates-2981395 | Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Medical workers attend to patients of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at an intensive care unit (ICU) converted from a conference room, at a hospital in Cangzhou, Hebei province, China January 11, 2023. China Daily via REUTERS▦By Martin Quin Pollard and Engen Tham▦BEIJING (Reuters) - During a busy shift at the height of Beijing's COVID wave, a physician at a private hospital saw a printed notice in the emergency department: doctors should “try not to” write COVID-induced respiratory failure on death certificates.▦Instead, if the deceased had an underlying disease, that should be named as the main cause of death, according to the notice, a copy of which was seen by Reuters.▦If doctors believe that the death was caused solely by COVID-19 pneumonia, they must report to their superiors, who will arrange for two levels of expert consultations before a COVID death is confirmed, it said.▦Six doctors at public hospitals across China told Reuters they had either received similar oral instructions discouraging them from attributing deaths to COVID or were aware that their hospitals had such policies.▦Some relatives of people who have died with COVID say the disease did not appear on their death certificates, and some patients have reported not being tested for coronavirus despite arriving with respiratory symptoms.▦We have stopped classifying COVID deaths since the reopening in December, said a doctor at a large public hospital in Shanghai. It is pointless to do that because almost everyone is positive.▦Such directives have led to criticism by global health experts and the World Health Organization that China has drastically underreported COVID deaths as the coronavirus runs rampant in the country, which abandoned its strict zero-COVID regime in December.▦On Saturday, officials said 60,000 people with COVID-19 had died in hospitals since China's policy U-turn, a roughly ten-fold increase from previously reported figures, but still short of expectations of international experts, who have said China could see more than a million COVID-related deaths this year.▦China's Center for Disease Control (CDC) and National Health Commission (NHC) did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for comment.▦The doctors in this article declined to be named because they are not permitted to speak to the media.▦Several said they were told such guidance came from the government, though none knew from which department, a common situation in China when politically sensitive instructions are disseminated.▦Three other doctors at public hospitals in different cities said they were unaware of any such guidance.▦One of them, a senior emergency room doctor in Shandong province, said doctors were issuing death certificates based on the actual cause of death, but how to categorise those deaths is up to the hospitals or local officials.▦'LOOKS LOW'▦Since the start of the pandemic, which first emerged three years ago in its central city of Wuhan, China has drawn heavy criticism for not being transparent over the virus - an accusation it has repeatedly rejected.▦Before Saturday, China was reporting five or fewer COVID deaths per day. Of the nearly 60,000 COVID-related fatalities since Dec. 8 it announced on Saturday since, fewer than 10% were caused by respiratory failure because of COVID. The rest resulted from a combination of COVID and other diseases, Jiao Yahui, head of the Bureau of Medical Administration under the National Health Commission (NHC), said on Saturday.▦Michael Baker, a public health scholar at the University of Otago in New Zealand, said the updated death toll still looks low compared with the high level of infection in China.▦Most countries are finding that most deaths from COVID are caused directly by the infection rather than by a combination of COVID and other diseases, he said. By contrast, reported deaths in China are mainly (90%) a combination of COVID and other infections, which also suggests tha | Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Medical workers attend to patients of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at an intensive care unit (ICU) converted from a conference room, at a hospital in Cangzhou, Hebei province, China January 11, 2023. China Daily via REUTERS▦By Martin Quin Pollard and Engen Tham▦BEIJING (Reuters) - During a busy shift at the height of Beijing's COVID wave, a physician at a private hospital saw a printed notice in the emergency department: doctors should “try not to” write COVID-induced respiratory failure on death certificates.▦Instead, if the deceased had an underlying disease, that should be named as the main cause of death, according to the notice, a copy of which was seen by Reuters.▦If doctors believe that the death was caused solely by COVID-19 pneumonia, they must report to their superiors, who will arrange for two levels of expert consultations before a COVID death is confirmed, it said.▦Six doctors at public hospitals across China told Reuters they had either received similar oral instructions discouraging them from attributing deaths to COVID or were aware that their hospitals had such policies.▦Some relatives of people who have died with COVID say the disease did not appear on their death certificates, and some patients have reported not being tested for coronavirus despite arriving with respiratory symptoms.▦We have stopped classifying COVID deaths since the reopening in December, said a doctor at a large public hospital in Shanghai. It is pointless to do that because almost everyone is positive.▦Such directives have led to criticism by global health experts and the World Health Organization that China has drastically underreported COVID deaths as the coronavirus runs rampant in the country, which abandoned its strict zero-COVID regime in December.▦On Saturday, officials said 60,000 people with COVID-19 had died in hospitals since China's policy U-turn, a roughly ten-fold increase from previously reported figures, but still short of expectations of international experts, who have said China could see more than a million COVID-related deaths this year.▦China's Center for Disease Control (CDC) and National Health Commission (NHC) did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for comment.▦The doctors in this article declined to be named because they are not permitted to speak to the media.▦Several said they were told such guidance came from the government, though none knew from which department, a common situation in China when politically sensitive instructions are disseminated.▦Three other doctors at public hospitals in different cities said they were unaware of any such guidance.▦One of them, a senior emergency room doctor in Shandong province, said doctors were issuing death certificates based on the actual cause of death, but how to categorise those deaths is up to the hospitals or local officials.▦'LOOKS LOW'▦Since the start of the pandemic, which first emerged three years ago in its central city of Wuhan, China has drawn heavy criticism for not being transparent over the virus - an accusation it has repeatedly rejected.▦Before Saturday, China was reporting five or fewer COVID deaths per day. Of the nearly 60,000 COVID-related fatalities since Dec. 8 it announced on Saturday since, fewer than 10% were caused by respiratory failure because of COVID. The rest resulted from a combination of COVID and other diseases, Jiao Yahui, head of the Bureau of Medical Administration under the National Health Commission (NHC), said on Saturday.▦Michael Baker, a public health scholar at the University of Otago in New Zealand, said the updated death toll still looks low compared with the high level of infection in China.▦Most countries are finding that most deaths from COVID are caused directly by the infection rather than by a combination of COVID and other diseases, he said. By contrast, reported deaths in China are mainly (90%) a combination of COVID and other infections, which also suggests tha | Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Medical workers attend to patients of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at an intensive care unit (ICU) converted from a conference room, at a hospital in Cangzhou, Hebei province, China January 11, 2023. China Daily via REUTERS▦By Martin Quin Pollard and Engen Tham▦BEIJING (Reuters) - During a busy shift at the height of Beijing's COVID wave, a physician at a private hospital saw a printed notice in the emergency department: doctors should “try not to” write COVID-induced respiratory failure on death certificates.▦Instead, if the deceased had an underlying disease, that should be named as the main cause of death, according to the notice, a copy of which was seen by Reuters.▦If doctors believe that the death was caused solely by COVID-19 pneumonia, they must report to their superiors, who will arrange for two levels of expert consultations before a COVID death is confirmed, it said.▦Six doctors at public hospitals across China told Reuters they had either received similar oral instructions discouraging them from attributing deaths to COVID or were aware that their hospitals had such policies.▦Some relatives of people who have died with COVID say the disease did not appear on their death certificates, and some patients have reported not being tested for coronavirus despite arriving with respiratory symptoms.▦We have stopped classifying COVID deaths since the reopening in December, said a doctor at a large public hospital in Shanghai. It is pointless to do that because almost everyone is positive.▦Such directives have led to criticism by global health experts and the World Health Organization that China has drastically underreported COVID deaths as the coronavirus runs rampant in the country, which abandoned its strict zero-COVID regime in December.▦On Saturday, officials said 60,000 people with COVID-19 had died in hospitals since China's policy U-turn, a roughly ten-fold increase from previously reported figures, but still short of expectations of international experts, who have said China could see more than a million COVID-related deaths this year.▦China's Center for Disease Control (CDC) and National Health Commission (NHC) did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for comment.▦The doctors in this article declined to be named because they are not permitted to speak to the media.▦Several said they were told such guidance came from the government, though none knew from which department, a common situation in China when politically sensitive instructions are disseminated.▦Three other doctors at public hospitals in different cities said they were unaware of any such guidance.▦One of them, a senior emergency room doctor in Shandong province, said doctors were issuing death certificates based on the actual cause of death, but how to categorise those deaths is up to the hospitals or local officials.▦'LOOKS LOW'▦Since the start of the pandemic, which first emerged three years ago in its central city of Wuhan, China has drawn heavy criticism for not being transparent over the virus - an accusation it has repeatedly rejected.▦Before Saturday, China was reporting five or fewer COVID deaths per day. Of the nearly 60,000 COVID-related fatalities since Dec. 8 it announced on Saturday since, fewer than 10% were caused by respiratory failure because of COVID. The rest resulted from a combination of COVID and other diseases, Jiao Yahui, head of the Bureau of Medical Administration under the National Health Commission (NHC), said on Saturday.▦Michael Baker, a public health scholar at the University of Otago in New Zealand, said the updated death toll still looks low compared with the high level of infection in China.▦Most countries are finding that most deaths from COVID are caused directly by the infection rather than by a combination of COVID and other diseases, he said. By contrast, reported deaths in China are mainly (90%) a combination of COVID and other infections, which also suggests tha | Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Medical workers attend to patients of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at an intensive care unit (ICU) converted from a conference room, at a hospital in Cangzhou, Hebei province, China January 11, 2023. China Daily via REUTERS▦By Martin Quin Pollard and Engen Tham▦BEIJING (Reuters) - During a busy shift at the height of Beijing's COVID wave, a physician at a private hospital saw a printed notice in the emergency department: doctors should “try not to” write COVID-induced respiratory failure on death certificates.▦Instead, if the deceased had an underlying disease, that should be named as the main cause of death, according to the notice, a copy of which was seen by Reuters.▦If doctors believe that the death was caused solely by COVID-19 pneumonia, they must report to their superiors, who will arrange for two levels of expert consultations before a COVID death is confirmed, it said.▦Six doctors at public hospitals across China told Reuters they had either received similar oral instructions discouraging them from attributing deaths to COVID or were aware that their hospitals had such policies.▦Some relatives of people who have died with COVID say the disease did not appear on their death certificates, and some patients have reported not being tested for coronavirus despite arriving with respiratory symptoms.▦We have stopped classifying COVID deaths since the reopening in December, said a doctor at a large public hospital in Shanghai. It is pointless to do that because almost everyone is positive.▦Such directives have led to criticism by global health experts and the World Health Organization that China has drastically underreported COVID deaths as the coronavirus runs rampant in the country, which abandoned its strict zero-COVID regime in December.▦On Saturday, officials said 60,000 people with COVID-19 had died in hospitals since China's policy U-turn, a roughly ten-fold increase from previously reported figures, but still short of expectations of international experts, who have said China could see more than a million COVID-related deaths this year.▦China's Center for Disease Control (CDC) and National Health Commission (NHC) did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for comment.▦The doctors in this article declined to be named because they are not permitted to speak to the media.▦Several said they were told such guidance came from the government, though none knew from which department, a common situation in China when politically sensitive instructions are disseminated.▦Three other doctors at public hospitals in different cities said they were unaware of any such guidance.▦One of them, a senior emergency room doctor in Shandong province, said doctors were issuing death certificates based on the actual cause of death, but how to categorise those deaths is up to the hospitals or local officials.▦'LOOKS LOW'▦Since the start of the pandemic, which first emerged three years ago in its central city of Wuhan, China has drawn heavy criticism for not being transparent over the virus - an accusation it has repeatedly rejected.▦Before Saturday, China was reporting five or fewer COVID deaths per day. Of the nearly 60,000 COVID-related fatalities since Dec. 8 it announced on Saturday since, fewer than 10% were caused by respiratory failure because of COVID. The rest resulted from a combination of COVID and other diseases, Jiao Yahui, head of the Bureau of Medical Administration under the National Health Commission (NHC), said on Saturday.▦Michael Baker, a public health scholar at the University of Otago in New Zealand, said the updated death toll still looks low compared with the high level of infection in China.▦Most countries are finding that most deaths from COVID are caused directly by the infection rather than by a combination of COVID and other diseases, he said. By contrast, reported deaths in China are mainly (90%) a combination of COVID and other infections, which also suggests tha | Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Medical workers attend to patients of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at an intensive care unit (ICU) converted from a conference room, at a hospital in Cangzhou, Hebei province, China January 11, 2023. China Daily via REUTERS▦By Martin Quin Pollard and Engen Tham▦BEIJING (Reuters) - During a busy shift at the height of Beijing's COVID wave, a physician at a private hospital saw a printed notice in the emergency department: doctors should “try not to” write COVID-induced respiratory failure on death certificates.▦Instead, if the deceased had an underlying disease, that should be named as the main cause of death, according to the notice, a copy of which was seen by Reuters.▦If doctors believe that the death was caused | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13588 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MDCH | Media Chinese International Ltd | Media Chinese International Ltd | Media & Publishing | Media & Publishing | MYR | 2022 | A | 20220331 | 127370000.0 | 58810000.0 | 28240000.0 | 57330000.0 | 203680000.0 | 121380000.0 | 1000000.0 | 2000000.0 | 2160000.0 | 400000.0 | 13040000.0 | -4410000.0 | -4230000.0 | 69180000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13589 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MDCH | Media Chinese International Ltd | Media Chinese International Ltd | Media & Publishing | Media & Publishing | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 130990000.0 | 84779999.99999999 | 52940000.0 | 20230000.0 | 215770000.0 | 55460000.0 | 60370000.0 | 203030000.0 | 155400000.0 | 215770000.0 | 32960000.0 | 711000.0 | 835000.0 | -43000.0 | 3180000.0 | 65760000.00000001 | 68940000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13590 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MDCH | Media Chinese International Ltd | Media Chinese International Ltd | Media & Publishing | Media & Publishing | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 125130000.0 | 82430000.0 | 51870000.0 | 18860000.0 | 207560000.0 | 55280000.0 | 60180000.0 | 202190000.0 | 147380000.0 | 207560000.0 | 34220000.0 | 2190000.0 | 2030000.0 | 850000.0 | 1350000.0 | 939000.0 | -802000.0 | -3060000.0 | -6000000.0 | 71760000.0 | 65760000.00000001 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13591 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MDCH | Media Chinese International Ltd | Media Chinese International Ltd | Media & Publishing | Media & Publishing | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 127790000.0 | 87920000.0 | 55310000.0 | 18100000.0 | 215710000.0 | 56870000.0 | 62360000.0 | 200840000.0 | 153350000.0 | 215710000.0 | 30020000.0 | 231000.0 | 127000.0 | 502000.0 | -303000.0 | 5030000.0 | 4680000.0 | 344000.0 | 6810000.0 | 64950000.0 | 71760000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13592 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MDCH | Media Chinese International Ltd | Media Chinese International Ltd | Media & Publishing | Media & Publishing | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 127370000.0 | 58810000.0 | 28240000.0 | 57330000.0 | 203680000.0 | 31360000.0 | -1520000.0 | -199000.0 | 890000.0 | -772000.0 | 2750000.0 | 149000.0 | -1200000.0 | 876000.0 | 64080000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13593 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | AMMB | AMMB Holdings Bhd | AMMB Holdings Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | A | 20220331 | 14899070000.0 | 370340000.0 | 2885320000.0 | 174858900000.0 | 132487430000.0 | 158099110000.0 | 9994590000.0 | 16759790000.0 | 174858900000.0 | 1804740000.0 | 209810000.0 | 1502680000.0 | -533630000.0 | -4595260000.0 | 740560000.0 | -4388890000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13594 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | AMMB | AMMB Holdings Bhd | AMMB Holdings Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 8087460000.0 | 406070000.0 | 17222130000.0 | 151672480000.0 | 134493060000.0 | 167603600000.0 | 17601470000.0 | 185205070000.0 | 1698620000.0 | 1569060000.0 | 6518400000.0 | 8087460000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13595 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | AMMB | AMMB Holdings Bhd | AMMB Holdings Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 25785800000.0 | 154446380000.0 | 6519740000.0 | 352200000.0 | 15696500000.0 | 180232180000.0 | 145095170000.0 | 132723460000.0 | 162964530000.0 | 10458290000.0 | 17267650000.0 | 180232180000.0 | 610540000.0 | 141440000.0 | 435400000.0 | 6519740000.0 | 6519740000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13596 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | AMMB | AMMB Holdings Bhd | AMMB Holdings Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 33997780000.0 | 144555320000.0 | 12856610000.0 | 386780000.0 | 17275620000.0 | 178553100000.0 | 141292170000.0 | 133377920000.0 | 160321770000.0 | 9787520000.0 | 18231330000.0 | 178553100000.0 | 517890000.0 | 113950000.0 | 419200000.0 | -26320000.0 | -2148640000.0 | 517990000.0 | -1657090000.0 | 14513700000.0 | 12856610000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13597 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | AMMB | AMMB Holdings Bhd | AMMB Holdings Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 14899070000.0 | 370340000.0 | 2885320000.0 | 174858900000.0 | 132487430000.0 | 158099110000.0 | 9994590000.0 | 16759790000.0 | 174858900000.0 | 514400000.0 | 96470000.0 | 391750000.0 | -533630000.0 | -4595260000.0 | 740560000.0 | -4388890000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1511 | MYS | REVE | Revenue Group Bhd | Revenue Group Bhd | IT Services | IT Services | MYR | 2021 | Q | 20211231 | 134940000 | 73610000 | 33130000 | 208550000 | 32840000 | 42630000 | 35700000 | 165920000 | 208550000 | 27440000 | 20030000 | 7420000 | 7160000 | 1750000 | 4560000 | 9990000 | -20530000 | 8220000 | -2310000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13598 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | CIMB | CIMB Group Holdings Bhd | CIMB Group Holdings Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | A | 20221231 | 135620170000.0 | 531101050000.0 | 43751540000.0 | 2656280000.0 | 76450150000.0 | 666721220000.0 | 551826210000.0 | 481552810000.0 | 602937370000.0 | 35855760000.0 | 63783850000.0 | 666721220000.0 | 8371010000.0 | 2778080000.0 | 5439860000.0 | -9181120000.0 | -6135910000.0 | 12625030000.0 | -3067640000.0 | 46819180000.0 | 43751540000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13599 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | CIMB | CIMB Group Holdings Bhd | CIMB Group Holdings Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 135620170000.0 | 531101050000.0 | 43751540000.0 | 2656280000.0 | 76450150000.0 | 666721220000.0 | 551826210000.0 | 481552810000.0 | 602937370000.0 | 35855760000.0 | 63783850000.0 | 666721220000.0 | 2016630000.0 | 661460000.0 | 1324950000.0 | -16479970000.0 | -93410000.0 | 15676750000.0 | -2617760000.0 | 46369300000.0 | 43751540000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13600 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | CIMB | CIMB Group Holdings Bhd | CIMB Group Holdings Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 146529320000.0 | 525835630000.0 | 44746150000.0 | 2689590000.0 | 81967610000.0 | 672364950000.0 | 562404270000.0 | 474199280000.0 | 609198340000.0 | 35892860000.0 | 63166600000.0 | 672364940000.0 | 2201880000.0 | 755340000.0 | 1407230000.0 | -208800000.0 | -945520000.0 | -614500000.0 | -887620000.0 | 45633760000.0 | 44746150000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13601 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | CIMB | CIMB Group Holdings Bhd | CIMB Group Holdings Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 140104660000.0 | 512928400000.0 | 45567360000.0 | 2697030000.0 | 71723980000.0 | 653033060000.0 | 541834420000.0001 | 469601290000.0 | 591450350000.0 | 34487640000.0 | 61582710000.0 | 653033060000.0 | 2104840000.0 | 781020000.0 | 1280700000.0 | 8574799999.999999 | -2242440000.0 | -2105550000.0 | 4504080000.0 | 41063280000.0 | 45567360000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13602 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | CIMB | CIMB Group Holdings Bhd | CIMB Group Holdings Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 129864160000.0 | 502737600000.0 | 41586600000.0 | 2644480000.0 | 69396040000.0 | 632601760000.0 | 453780100000.0 | 571538970000.0 | 33450860000.0 | 61062780000.0 | 632601750000.0 | 2047670000.0 | 580260000.0 | 1426980000.0 | -1067140000.0 | -2854540000.0 | -331670000.0 | -4742060000.0 | 45652940000.0 | 41586600000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13603 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | RHBC | RHB Bank Bhd | RHB Bank Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | A | 20221231 | 30183950000.0 | 280604230000.0 | 19040570000.0 | 1212880000.0 | 9407870000.0 | 310788180000.0 | 265933860000.0 | 252712300000.0 | 282041940000.0 | 20405060000.0 | 28746240000.0 | 310788180000.0 | 4170780000.0 | 1458760000.0 | 2707690000.0 | -3421690000.0 | -6352620000.0 | 9002530000.0 | -696490000.0 | 19737060000.0 | 19040570000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13604 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | RHBC | RHB Bank Bhd | RHB Bank Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 30183950000.0 | 280604230000.0 | 19040570000.0 | 1212880000.0 | 9407870000.0 | 310788180000.0 | 265933860000.0 | 252712300000.0 | 282041940000.0 | 20405060000.0 | 28746240000.0 | 310788180000.0 | 1222140000.0 | 448200000.0 | 772120000.0 | 1481690000.0 | 2367980000.0 | 387870000.0 | 4154990000.0 | 14885580000.0 | 19040570000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13605 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | RHBC | RHB Bank Bhd | RHB Bank Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 26521900000.0 | 279902430000.0 | 14979840000.0 | 1221960000.0 | 10346270000.0 | 306424330000.0 | 259677010000.0 | 253476120000.0 | 278350570000.0 | 20268930000.0 | 28073750000.0 | 306424320000.0 | 1039290000.0 | 338040000.0 | 700480000.0 | 1060590000.0 | 17913190000.0 | 14979840000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13606 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | RHBC | RHB Bank Bhd | RHB Bank Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 30800430000.0 | 268852410000.0 | 1191090000.0 | 11447670000.0 | 299652840000.0 | 256802630000.0 | 251847140000.0 | 272196420000.0 | 19562710000.0 | 27456420000.0 | 299652840000.0 | 383220000.0 | 634830000.0 | 38700000.0 | -43930000.0 | 17957120000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13607 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | RHBC | RHB Bank Bhd | RHB Bank Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 33248700000.0 | 264349920000.0 | 17957120000.0 | 1189420000.0 | 12992870000.0 | 297598620000.0 | 250677730000.0 | 269530560000.0 | 19981860000.0 | 28068060000.0 | 297598620000.0 | 890550000.0 | 289300000.0 | 600270000.0 | -278250000.0 | -1621300000.0 | 7515370000.0 | -1874200000.0 | 19831320000.0 | 17957120000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13608 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | HLCB | Hong Leong Financial Group Bhd | Hong Leong Financial Group Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | A | 20220630 | 54777380000.0 | 232143440000.0 | 9830120000.0 | 1488740000.0 | 41786840000.0 | 286920820000.0 | 218271050000.0 | 204032800000.0 | 250931090000.0 | 21604320000.0 | 35989720000.0 | 286920810000.0 | 4839980000.0 | 1157120000.0 | 2452210000.0 | -11208150000.0 | -66069999.99999999 | 11634740000.0 | 651680000.0 | 9178440000.0 | 9830120000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13609 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | HLCB | Hong Leong Financial Group Bhd | Hong Leong Financial Group Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 59238470000.0 | 10336090000.0 | 1489020000.0 | 46514750000.0 | 224039270000.0 | 207094620000.0 | 37397410000.0 | 274800000.0 | 770840000.0 | -4574430000.0 | -220040000.0 | -4525560000.0 | 14861650000.0 | 10336090000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13610 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | HLCB | Hong Leong Financial Group Bhd | Hong Leong Financial Group Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 63016680000.0 | 232206580000.0 | 15100480000.0 | 1511590000.0 | 45472730000.0 | 295223260000.0 | 223578450000.0 | 206717720000.0 | 258858310000.0 | 21935120000.0 | 36364950000.0 | 295223260000.0 | 1262220000.0 | 223120000.0 | 681740000.0 | 3039770000.0 | 2488180000.0 | -408490000.0 | 5255750000.0 | 9844720000.0 | 15100480000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13611 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | HLCB | Hong Leong Financial Group Bhd | Hong Leong Financial Group Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 54777380000.0 | 232143440000.0 | 9830120000.0 | 1488740000.0 | 41786840000.0 | 286920820000.0 | 218271050000.0 | 204032800000.0 | 250931090000.0 | 21604320000.0 | 35989720000.0 | 286920810000.0 | 326560000.0 | 674680000.0 | -11656520000.0 | -1151460000.0 | 12452050000.0 | -8520000.0 | 9838640000.0 | 9830120000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13612 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | HLCB | Hong Leong Financial Group Bhd | Hong Leong Financial Group Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 58963990000.0 | 225693760000.0 | 9882820000.0 | 1469260000.0 | 44404560000.0 | 284657750000.0 | 200219730000.0 | 260851100000.0 | 21221640000.0 | 23806650000.0 | 284657750000.0 | 1129750000.0 | 257980000.0 | 577480000.0 | -521010000.0 | 1503300000.0 | -817310000.0 | 716350000.0 | 9166480000.0 | 9882820000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13613 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MBBM | Malayan Banking Bhd | Malayan Banking Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | A | 20221231 | 169723990000.0 | 778088850000.0 | 37573870000.0 | 3318840000.0 | 111329110000.0 | 947812840000.0 | 737176630000.0 | 684893180000.0 | 858895700000.0 | 32599820000.0 | 88917140000.0 | 947812840000.0 | 12153270000.0 | 3780260000.0 | 8234950000.000001 | -31040160000.0 | -463390000.0 | 29923340000.0 | -1051660000.0 | 38625530000.0 | 37573870000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13614 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MBBM | Malayan Banking Bhd | Malayan Banking Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 169723990000.0 | 778088850000.0 | 37573870000.0 | 3318840000.0 | 111329110000.0 | 947812840000.0 | 737176630000.0 | 684893180000.0 | 858895700000.0 | 32599820000.0 | 88917140000.0 | 947812840000.0 | 3307120000.0 | 1099190000.0 | 2167310000.0 | 5544340000.0 | -224000000.0 | -4095220000.0 | 738700000.0 | 36835170000.0 | 37573870000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13615 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MBBM | Malayan Banking Bhd | Malayan Banking Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 169681430000.0 | 782466390000.0 | 38308630000.0 | 3398320000.0 | 105858820000.0 | 952147820000.0 | 741740860000.0 | 689427330000.0 | 865179260000.0 | 31030410000.0 | 86968550000.0 | 952147810000.0 | 3207900000.0 | 1038780000.0 | 2165500000.0 | -16043220000.0 | -145190000.0 | 12940520000.0 | -2746450000.0 | 41055080000.0 | 38308630000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13616 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MBBM | Malayan Banking Bhd | Malayan Banking Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 157934970000.0 | 765444920000.0 | 41970190000.0 | 3297130000.0 | 95005790000.0 | 923379890000.0 | 711136360000.0 | 671450320000.0 | 835994660000.0 | 31608560000.0 | 87385230000.0 | 923379890000.0 | 2665920000.0 | 756560000.0 | 1857250000.0 | -1745990000.0 | -38980000.0 | 1354600000.0 | -7630000.0 | 41977820000.0 | 41970190000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13617 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MBBM | Malayan Banking Bhd | Malayan Banking Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 158596780000.0 | 754511770000.0 | 41902460000.0 | 3210150000.0 | 96388240000.0 | 913108550000.0 | 702386650000.0 | 665153270000.0 | 826534420000.0 | 30414210000.0 | 86574140000.0 | 913108560000.0 | 2972320000.0 | 885740000.0 | 2044890000.0 | -18795290000.0 | -55230000.0 | 19723460000.0 | 963720000.0 | 40938730000.0 | 41902460000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4918 | MYS | UTPS | United Plantations Bhd | United Plantations Bhd | Food Products | Food Products | MYR | 2021 | A | 20211231 | 1142780000 | 2010360000 | 1605360000 | 3153140000 | 294190000 | 478340000 | 2429180000 | 2674800000 | 3153140000 | 2055600000 | 1357170000 | 676310000 | 683420000 | 161180000 | 518340000 | 530490000 | 53120000 | -412480000 | 171130000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13618 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MBSS | Malaysia Building Society Bhd | Malaysia Building Society Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | A | 20221231 | 4205600000.0 | 50742700000.0 | 1290580000.0 | 54948300000.0 | 37079900000.0 | 36468470000.0 | 8959190000.0 | 691340000.0 | 983530000.0 | 1551110000.0 | 654840000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13619 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MBSS | Malaysia Building Society Bhd | Malaysia Building Society Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 4205600000.0 | 1290580000.0 | 37079900000.0 | 36468470000.0 | 45989110000.0 | -783480000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13620 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MBSS | Malaysia Building Society Bhd | Malaysia Building Society Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 3356930000.0 | 48557370000.0 | 1048020000.0 | 361360000.0 | 1644340000.0 | 51914300000.0 | 35529040000.0 | 34218350000.0 | 43332020000.0 | 1901760000.0 | 8582270000.0 | 51914290000.0 | 97400000.0 | 38440000.0 | 58960000.0 | 197190000.0 | 408420000.0 | -162380000.0 | 443230000.0 | 604790000.0 | 1048020000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13621 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MBSS | Malaysia Building Society Bhd | Malaysia Building Society Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 1686850000.0 | 34292340000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13622 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MBSS | Malaysia Building Society Bhd | Malaysia Building Society Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 927190000.0 | 384100000.0 | 623670000.0 | 51621780000.0 | 33996140000.0 | 43031670000.0 | 1700510000.0 | 8590120000.0 | 51621790000.0 | 79210000.0 | 21000000.0 | 58200000.0 | 12270000.0 | -837150000.0 | 919250000.0 | 94370000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13623 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | PUBM | Public Bank Bhd | Public Bank Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | A | 20221231 | 43305280000.0 | 449957480000.0 | 18795170000.0 | 2483920000.0 | 20248730000.0 | 493262760000.0 | 421982800000.0 | 408493600000.0 | 441736960000.0 | 39573140000.0 | 51525810000.0 | 493262770000.0 | 8831050000.0 | 2661420000.0 | 6119500000.0 | -10812270000.0 | -1874020000.0 | -2951040000.0 | 4746970000.0 | 14048200000.0 | 18795170000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13624 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | PUBM | Public Bank Bhd | Public Bank Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 43305280000.0 | 18795170000.0 | 2483920000.0 | 20248730000.0 | 421982800000.0 | 408493600000.0 | 441736960000.0 | 39573140000.0 | 51525810000.0 | 493262770000.0 | 2520940000.0 | 799930000.0 | 1713680000.0 | -16402260000.0 | 1993570000.0 | 20157160000.0 | 5327300000.0 | 13467870000.0 | 18795170000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13625 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | PUBM | Public Bank Bhd | Public Bank Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 26606080000.0 | 455307020000.0 | 13467870000.0 | 2546400000.0 | 2530080000.0 | 481913100000.0 | 412766330000.0 | 407186670000.0 | 431286150000.0 | 38482170000.0 | 50626950000.0 | 481913100000.0 | 2287200000.0 | 682960000.0 | 1590310000.0 | -803640000.0 | -421830000.0 | -1579260000.0 | -2406490000.0 | 15874360000.0 | 13467870000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13626 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | PUBM | Public Bank Bhd | Public Bank Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 29222530000.0 | 449590010000.0 | 15874360000.0 | 2565280000.0 | 2675750000.0 | 478812540000.0 | 411394660000.0 | 404582430000.0 | 428373400000.0 | 38453550000.0 | 50439140000.0 | 478812540000.0 | 2022630000.0 | 591080000.0 | 1416960000.0 | 2771990000.0 | -5409990000.0 | -29730000.0 | -2296440000.0 | 18170800000.0 | 15874360000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13627 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | PUBM | Public Bank Bhd | Public Bank Bhd | Banking Services | Banking Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 31031840000.0 | 439547160000.0 | 18170800000.0 | 2537210000.0 | 1940360000.0 | 470579000000.0 | 405380880000.0 | 399003000000.0 | 421304300000.0 | 37044610000.0 | 49274700000.0 | 470579000000.0 | 2000270000.0 | 587460000.0 | 1398560000.0 | 3621640000.0 | 1964230000.0 | -1523590000.0 | 4122600000.0 | 14048200000.0 | 18170800000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13628 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | SPOR | Berjaya Sports Toto Bhd | Berjaya Sports Toto Bhd | Hotels & Entertainment Services | Hotels & Entertainment Services | MYR | 2022 | A | 20220630 | 1523970000.0 | 1736840000.0 | 695440000.0 | -343010000.0 | 3260810000.0 | 1061330000.0 | 2303920000.0 | 507580000.0 | 956890000.0 | 3260810000.0 | 4932460000.0 | 296860000.0 | 273260000.0 | 103050000.0 | 160880000.0 | 280140000.0 | -102510000.0 | 29360000.0 | 193320000.0 | -3000000.0 | 190310000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13629 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | SPOR | Berjaya Sports Toto Bhd | Berjaya Sports Toto Bhd | Hotels & Entertainment Services | Hotels & Entertainment Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 1682780000.0 | 1800020000.0 | 729460000.0 | 400650000.0 | 3482800000.0 | 1233170000.0 | 2452600000.0 | 553830000.0 | 1030200000.0 | 3482800000.0 | 30630000.0 | 64860000.0 | -2170000.0 | -52050000.0 | -47070000.0 | 202940000.0 | 155860000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13630 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | SPOR | Berjaya Sports Toto Bhd | Berjaya Sports Toto Bhd | Hotels & Entertainment Services | Hotels & Entertainment Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 1627160000.0 | 1750310000.0 | 686980000.0 | 538340000.0 | 3377470000.0 | 1192110000.0 | 2410820000.0 | 516330000.0000001 | 966650000.0 | 3377470000.0 | 1309780000.0 | 109320000.0 | 106200000.0 | 33220000.0 | 71500000.0 | 143980000.0 | -56860000.0 | -52660000.0 | 26800000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13631 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | SPOR | Berjaya Sports Toto Bhd | Berjaya Sports Toto Bhd | Hotels & Entertainment Services | Hotels & Entertainment Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 1523970000.0 | 1736840000.0 | 695440000.0 | -343010000.0 | 3260810000.0 | 1061330000.0 | 2303920000.0 | 507580000.0 | 956890000.0 | 3260810000.0 | 190310000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13632 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | SPOR | Berjaya Sports Toto Bhd | Berjaya Sports Toto Bhd | Hotels & Entertainment Services | Hotels & Entertainment Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 1613440000.0 | 1694520000.0 | 660360000.0 | 179310000.0 | 3307960000.0 | 1460510000.0 | 2371720000.0 | 482480000.0 | 936240000.0 | 3307960000.0 | 1596280000.0 | 132150000.0 | 122390000.0 | 39400000.0 | 79560000.0 | 243660000.0 | -11220000.0 | 8210000.000000001 | 236350000.0 | 47330000.0 | 283670000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13633 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | DRBM | DRB | DRB | Automobiles & Auto Parts | Automobiles & Auto Parts | MYR | 2022 | A | 20221231 | 15781490000.0 | 35707700000.0 | 5304860000.0 | 16762580000.0 | 51489190000.0 | 32137700000.0 | 41800790000.0 | 4201020000.0 | 14943880000.0 | 568140000.0 | 409990000.0 | 582250000.0 | 247500000.0 | -855180000.0 | 294800000.0 | -315200000.0 | 3323730000.0 | 3008540000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13634 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | DRBM | DRB | DRB | Automobiles & Auto Parts | Automobiles & Auto Parts | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 15781490000.0 | 35707700000.0 | 5304860000.0 | 16762580000.0 | 51489190000.0 | 32137700000.0 | 41800790000.0 | 4201020000.0 | 9688400000.0 | 51489190000.0 | 4340900000.0 | 6730000.0 | -73120000.0 | 6380000.0 | -94110000.0 | 689520000.0 | -104690000.0 | -136060000.0 | 3144600000.0 | 3008540000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13635 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | DRBM | DRB | DRB | Automobiles & Auto Parts | Automobiles & Auto Parts | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 15298060000.0 | 34655620000.0 | 5484620000.0 | 15522470000.0 | 49953680000.0 | 30640770000.0 | 40231170000.0 | 4344670000.0 | 9722510000.0 | 49953680000.0 | 4278740000.0 | 262040000.0 | 249960000.0 | 28130000.0 | 146280000.0 | 545440000.0 | -147100000.0 | -440960000.0 | -42240000.0 | 3186350000.0 | 3144120000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13636 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | DRBM | DRB | DRB | Automobiles & Auto Parts | Automobiles & Auto Parts | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 15391870000.0 | 33417870000.0 | 5532280000.0 | 14532830000.0 | 48809740000.0 | 30271520000.0 | 39641670000.0 | 4213230000.0 | 9168080000.0 | 48809750000.0 | 3426370000.0 | 127680000.0 | 229160000.0 | 36560000.0 | 169560000.0 | -477890000.0 | 53470000.0 | 1062060000.0 | 634720000.0 | 2551190000.0 | 3185900000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
49 | MYS | BKCB | Bintai Kinden Corporation Bhd | Bintai Kinden Corporation Bhd | Construction& Engineering | Construction& Engineering | MYR | 2022 | A | 20220331 | 143850000 | 306680000 | 64740000 | 450530000 | 91880000 | 245370000 | 7090000 | 205160000 | 450530000 | 96280000 | 81150000 | 15120000 | 3540000 | 10000 | 4600000 | -28950000 | -62790000 | 93050000 | 1310000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
50 | MYS | BKCB | Bintai Kinden Corporation Bhd | Bintai Kinden Corporation Bhd | Construction& Engineering | Construction& Engineering | MYR | 2021 | A | 20210331 | 99030000 | 244750000 | 64680000 | 343780000 | 77440000 | 229360000 | 4450000 | 114420000 | 343780000 | 58260000 | 54630000 | 3630000 | -6920000 | 3390000 | -9300000 | -20600000 | -3650000 | 25310000 | 1060000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
8191 | MYS | YTLS | YTL Corporation Bhd | YTL Corporation Bhd | Multi-Utilities | Multi-Utilities | MYR | 2021 | Q | 20211231 | 20200325 | Stock News | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/shareholder-activists-watch-that-credit-rating-2121216 | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit impact of the activism was largely unfavorable albeit only moderately so with most related downgrades being of one notch the rating agency wrote.▦Assuming the trend in 2015-2019 continues a company subject to shareholder activism has a one-in-nine chance of seeing a rating action with that action twice as likely to be negative as positive it found.▦One other interesting finding is how shareholder activism has surged in Europe since 2015.▦See below:▦(Graphic: sdvf https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3937/3893/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦GONE IS THE REBOUND! EUROPE FALLS BACK IN THE RED (1115 GMT)▦European stocks were on a rising trend for about 90 minutes and then gradually fell from their peak.▦Shortly before 1100 GMT most indexes and trading centers were in the red - a very different situation from the upbeat mood this morning.▦But by 1108 GMT most benchmarks are back in the black as volatility plays with investors' nerves.▦It's currently hard to pinpoint a news headline or a precise trigger for the initial quite gradual reversal. There's grim news from Spain on the coronavirus front with a surge in deaths and new infections.▦Mikael Jacoby head of continental European equity sales trading at Oddo just told us he believes the rebound was too early and not justified by fundamentals.▦Technical levels were also crossed he noted such as 4450 points on the CAC 40.▦Most rebounds encourage clients to sell he added.▦Have a look at today's session so far:▦(Graphic: wxc https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3926/3882/Pasted%20Image.jpg)▦(Julien Ponthus)▦*****▦ONLY 2.5% OF STOXX IN PLUS OVER LAST MONTH (1020 GMT)▦A quick staggering stat grabbing our eyeballs this morning: Only 15 stocks out of the 600 are in the black in the month to today. And these stocks are a mix of online grocers Internet companies and healthcare-related names.▦Ocado (L:OCDO) HelloFresh (DE:HFGG) and Colruyt (BR:COLR) are among the winners. The top fallers are mostly energy stocks and airlines.▦(Thyagaraju Adinarayan)▦*****▦OPENING SNAPSHOT: $2TN PACKAGE CHEERS INVESTORS (0840 GMT)▦European stocks jump again with the main bourses on track for a second straight day of gains after U.S. officials agreed on a whopping $2 trillion coronavirus package.▦The pan-European STOXX 600 index (STOXX) is rising nearly 4% fueled by a spike in travel and leisure (SXTP) stocks.▦Top gainers this morning are Dufry (S:DUFN) which did quite well yesterday too and Thyssenkrupp (DE:TKAG) up 18% after it said it is planning job cuts.▦Rentokil (L:RTO) shares slumped as much as 19% earlier today on track for worst day since 2008 after the company suspended dividend and scrapped its outlook.▦No big surprises on the UK inflation front which slowed in February in line with forecast as fuel prices dropped▦The U.S. Senate is expected to vote on the stimulus package later in the day and the House of Representatives soon after.▦(Joice Alves)▦*****▦ON OUR RADAR: FUTURES RISE ON STIMULUS; COMPANIES CUT DIVIDENDS (0753 GMT)▦Futures are rising 3% to 4% suggesting European bourses will open in positive territory again as investors at this point are getting some comfort from the massive stimulus package from the U.S.▦That | Reuters. The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt▦ UK100▦-0.29%▦FCHI▦-0.19%▦DE40▦-0.20%▦COLR▦-1.11%▦TKAG▦-1.80%▦LAGA▦+0.91%▦Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters. You can share your thoughts with Thyagaraju Adinarayan (thyagaraju.adinarayan@thomsonreuters.com) Joice Alves (joice.alves@thomsonreuters.com) and Julien Ponthus (julien.ponthus@thomsonreuters.com) in London.▦SHAREHOLDER ACTIVISTS WATCH THAT CREDIT RATING! (1449 GMT)▦Shareholder campaigns against the strategy or the management of a company can often lead to a credit rating downgrade an S&P global research note found.▦We found that the credit | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13637 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | DRBM | DRB | DRB | Automobiles & Auto Parts | Automobiles & Auto Parts | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 14147620000.0 | 33266380000.0 | 5592460000.0 | 13712180000.0 | 47414000000.0 | 29810500000.0 | 38365830000.0 | 4099030000.0 | 9048170000.0 | 47414000000.0 | 3017380000.0 | 52180000.0 | 4000000.0 | 47800000.0 | -25740000.0 | -509560000.0 | -39500000.0 | -221620000.0 | -771610000.0 | 3323200000.0 | 2551580000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13638 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MYRS | Malaysian Resources Corporation | Malaysian Resources Corporation | Construction& Engineering | Construction& Engineering | MYR | 2022 | A | 20221231 | 3547330000.0 | 5681310000.0 | 778880000.0 | -767700000.0 | 9228640000.0 | 2697290000.0 | 4691930000.0 | 182960000.0 | 4536710000.0 | 9228640000.0 | 3012680000.0 | 192380000.0 | 154340000.0 | 100790000.0 | 64849999.99999999 | 5700000.0 | -11700000.0 | -7460000.0 | -14260000.0 | 304230000.0 | 289970000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13639 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MYRS | Malaysian Resources Corporation | Malaysian Resources Corporation | Construction& Engineering | Construction& Engineering | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 3547330000.0 | 5681310000.0 | 778880000.0 | -767700000.0 | 9228640000.0 | 2697290000.0 | 4691930000.0 | 182960000.0 | 4536710000.0 | 9228640000.0 | 826350000.0 | 7590000.0 | 37750000.0 | 24640000.0 | 13020000.0 | 322590000.0 | -14420000.0 | -156670000.0 | 150790000.0 | 139180000.0 | 289970000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13640 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MYRS | Malaysian Resources Corporation | Malaysian Resources Corporation | Construction& Engineering | Construction& Engineering | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 3721300000.0 | 5607490000.0 | 718300000.0 | -1122090000.0 | 9328790000.0 | 2764110000.0 | 4804810000.0 | 169950000.0 | 4523980000.0 | 9328790000.0 | 781210000.0 | 78800000.0 | 56720000.0 | 41220000.0 | 23700000.0 | -300490000.0 | -5550000.0 | 96100000.0 | -210450000.0 | 525250000.0 | 314810000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13641 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MYRS | Malaysian Resources Corporation | Malaysian Resources Corporation | Construction& Engineering | Construction& Engineering | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 3612870000.0 | 5626370000.0 | 724750000.0 | -654020000.0 | 9239240000.0 | 2492610000.0 | 4726120000.0 | 146250000.0 | 4513120000.0 | 9239240000.0 | 646740000.0 | 53650000.0 | 28100000.0 | 17140000.0 | 14100000.0 | 37250000.0 | -45610000.0 | 87920000.0 | 75200000.0 | 450050000.0 | 525250000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13642 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | MYRS | Malaysian Resources Corporation | Malaysian Resources Corporation | Construction& Engineering | Construction& Engineering | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 3703760000.0 | 5544530000.0 | 733110000.0 | 9248290000.0 | 2466850000.0 | 4721850000.0 | 170340000.0 | 4526440000.0 | 9248290000.0 | 758380000.0 | 52330000.0 | 31770000.0 | 17800000.0 | 14030000.0 | -53650000.0 | 53880000.0 | -34810000.0 | -29810000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13643 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | BMYS | Bursa Malaysia Bhd | Bursa Malaysia Bhd | Investment Banking & Investment Services | Investment Banking & Investment Services | MYR | 2022 | A | 20221231 | 3883910000.0 | 360569999.9999995 | 212300000.0 | 3165890000.0 | 4244480000.0 | 3435540000.0 | 3457730000.0 | 318470000.0 | 786760000.0 | 4244490000.0 | 295060000.0 | 308170000.0 | 310000000.0 | 83430000.0 | 226570000.0 | 252740000.0 | 83100000.0 | -256780000.0 | 79140000.0 | 526440000.0000001 | 605580000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13644 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | BMYS | Bursa Malaysia Bhd | Bursa Malaysia Bhd | Investment Banking & Investment Services | Investment Banking & Investment Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 3883910000.0 | 360569999.9999995 | 212300000.0 | 3165890000.0 | 4244480000.0 | 3435540000.0 | 3457730000.0 | 318470000.0 | 786760000.0 | 4244490000.0 | 76380000.0 | 68870000.0 | 67610000.0 | 18600000.0 | 49000000.0 | 65220000.0 | 24440000.0 | 1500000.0 | 90820000.0 | 514760000.0 | 605580000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13645 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | BMYS | Bursa Malaysia Bhd | Bursa Malaysia Bhd | Investment Banking & Investment Services | Investment Banking & Investment Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 3528560000.0 | 334730000.0 | 195470000.0 | 2835200000.0 | 3863290000.0 | 3104880000.0 | 3128130000.0 | 269330000.0 | 735160000.0 | 3863290000.0 | 72520000.0 | 67280000.0 | 68700000.0 | 18570000.0 | 50130000.0 | 58040000.0 | 39650000.0 | -121400000.0 | -23500000.0 | 588830000.0 | 565330000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13646 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | BMYS | Bursa Malaysia Bhd | Bursa Malaysia Bhd | Investment Banking & Investment Services | Investment Banking & Investment Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 5198830000.0 | 328290000.0 | 189500000.0 | 4424790000.0 | 5527120000.0 | 4697520000.0 | 4720850000.0 | 340600000.0 | 806270000.0 | 5527120000.0 | 72260000.0 | 79570000.0 | 81060000.0 | 21590000.0 | 59470000.0 | 68280000.0 | 16580000.0 | 85030000.0 | 555590000.0 | 640620000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13647 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | BMYS | Bursa Malaysia Bhd | Bursa Malaysia Bhd | Investment Banking & Investment Services | Investment Banking & Investment Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 5755280000.0 | 321280000.0 | 183460000.0 | 4999410000.0 | 6076560000.0 | 5306380000.0 | 5329360000.0 | 281120000.0 | 747210000.0 | 6076570000.0 | 72120000.0 | 92450000.0 | 92630000.0 | 24670000.0 | 67970000.0 | 61210000.0 | 2430000.0 | -136880000.0 | -73210000.0 | 646590000.0 | 573380000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13648 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | IOIB | IOI Corporation Bhd | IOI Corporation Bhd | Food & Tobacco | Food & Tobacco | MYR | 2022 | A | 20220630 | 6679400000.0 | 12488400000.0 | 8709200000.0 | 1296500000.0 | 19167800000.0 | 3751600000.0 | 7883300000.0 | 10315200000.0 | 11284500000.0 | 19167800000.0 | 13342700000.0 | 2236000000.0 | 2352600000.0 | 583700000.0 | 1725300000.0 | 1799900000.0 | -222800000.0 | -1059200000.0 | 528000000.0 | 922300000.0 | 1450300000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13649 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | IOIB | IOI Corporation Bhd | IOI Corporation Bhd | Food & Tobacco | Food & Tobacco | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 1852400000.0 | 1811100000.0 | 728300000.0 | 712100000.0 | -109800000.0 | 166000000.0 | 814100000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13650 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | IOIB | IOI Corporation Bhd | IOI Corporation Bhd | Food & Tobacco | Food & Tobacco | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 5762300000.0 | 12192000000.0 | 8761800000.0 | 1210000000.0 | 17954300000.0 | 2680300000.0 | 6936600000.0 | 9985700000.0 | 11017700000.0 | 17954300000.0 | 3251800000.0 | 395100000.0 | 315100000.0 | 142100000.0 | 167500000.0 | 486700000.0 | 490200000.0 | -1295400000.0 | -307700000.0 | 1474100000.0 | 1166400000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13651 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | IOIB | IOI Corporation Bhd | IOI Corporation Bhd | Food & Tobacco | Food & Tobacco | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 6679400000.0 | 12488400000.0 | 8709200000.0 | 1296500000.0 | 19167800000.0 | 3751600000.0 | 7883300000.0 | 10315200000.0 | 11284500000.0 | 19167800000.0 | 658400000.0 | -277300000.0 | 1450300000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13652 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | IOIB | IOI Corporation Bhd | IOI Corporation Bhd | Food & Tobacco | Food & Tobacco | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 6471300000.0 | 12338400000.0 | 8662700000.0 | 1741800000.0 | 18809700000.0 | 4227800000.0 | 8414799999.999999 | 9766200000.0 | 10394900000.0 | 18809700000.0 | 3613600000.0 | 484300000.0 | 580900000.0 | 159500000.0 | 411200000.0 | 1229900000.0 | -92100000.0 | -781900000.0 | 356200000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
253 | MYS | SAEN | Sapura Energy Bhd | Sapura Energy Bhd | Energy Equipment & Services | Energy Equipment & Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220430 | 6574450000 | -1546600000 | 16636960000 | 16360880000 | 16484250000 | 886080000 | -42360000 | 717750000 | 539140000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13653 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | TDMS | TDM Bhd | TDM Bhd | Healthcare Providers & Services | Healthcare Providers & Services | MYR | 2022 | A | 20221231 | 331480000.0 | 1329650000.0 | 1294270000.0 | 71150000.0 | 1661130000.0 | 284000000.0 | 1002050000.0 | 596880000.0 | 17290000.0 | 25750000.0 | -23660000.0 | -84450000.0 | -77860000.0 | 185050000.0 | 107180000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13654 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | TDMS | TDM Bhd | TDM Bhd | Healthcare Providers & Services | Healthcare Providers & Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 331480000.0 | 1329650000.0 | 1294270000.0 | 71150000.0 | 1661130000.0 | 284000000.0 | 1002050000.0 | 332370000.0 | 659080000.0 | 1661130000.0 | 159250000.0 | -1400000.0 | 16500000.0 | 14650000.0 | 32100000.0 | 2420000.0 | 98250000.0 | 107180000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13655 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | TDMS | TDM Bhd | TDM Bhd | Healthcare Providers & Services | Healthcare Providers & Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 334690000.0 | 1339860000.0 | 1293420000.0 | 70360000.0 | 1674550000.0 | 266890000.0 | 974750000.0 | 355150000.0 | 699800000.0 | 1674550000.0 | 161220000.0 | -7930000.0 | -12370000.0 | -2870000.0 | -14170000.0 | 765000.0 | -15950000.0 | -35910000.0 | -51080000.0 | 149120000.0 | 98040000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13656 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | TDMS | TDM Bhd | TDM Bhd | Healthcare Providers & Services | Healthcare Providers & Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 386680000.0 | 1336840000.0 | 1290240000.0 | 77780000.0 | 1723520000.0 | 319350000.0 | 1011060000.0 | 369310000.0 | 712460000.0 | 1723520000.0 | 153540000.0 | 5820000.0 | 4650000.0 | 3520000.0 | 571000.0 | 35390000.0 | -27690000.0 | -45750000.0 | -38050000.0 | 186740000.0 | 148690000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13657 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | TDMS | TDM Bhd | TDM Bhd | Healthcare Providers & Services | Healthcare Providers & Services | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 406610000.0 | 1328090000.0 | 1281280000.0 | 82310000.0 | 1734700000.0 | 300570000.0 | 1016550000.0 | 374770000.0 | 718150000.0 | 1734700000.0 | 120120000.0 | 23550000.0 | 16970000.0 | 6530000.0 | 9710000.0 | 11090000.0 | -3540000.0 | -5200000.0 | 2340000.0 | 183840000.0 | 186170000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13658 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | GENP | Genting Plantations Bhd | Genting Plantations Bhd | Food & Tobacco | Food & Tobacco | MYR | 2022 | A | 20221231 | 2463090000.0 | 6328720000.0 | 5349900000.0 | -149900000.0 | 8791810000.0 | 1144470000.0 | 3482640000.0 | 3929040000.0 | 5309170000.0 | 8791810000.0 | 2480270000.0 | 709510000.0 | 688870000.0 | 205540000.0 | 471420000.0 | 958270000.0 | -397400000.0 | -615800000.0 | -54560000.0 | 1630330000.0 | 1575770000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13659 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | GENP | Genting Plantations Bhd | Genting Plantations Bhd | Food & Tobacco | Food & Tobacco | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 2463090000.0 | 6328720000.0 | 5349900000.0 | -149900000.0 | 8791810000.0 | 1144470000.0 | 3482640000.0 | 3929040000.0 | 5309170000.0 | 8791810000.0 | 751700000.0 | 39490000.0 | 67050000.0 | 33930000.0 | 55860000.0 | 121500000.0 | -112590000.0 | -87460000.0 | -93400000.0 | 1669170000.0 | 1575770000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13660 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | GENP | Genting Plantations Bhd | Genting Plantations Bhd | Food & Tobacco | Food & Tobacco | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 2638300000.0 | 6518110000.0 | 5493010000.0 | -152450000.0 | 9156410000.0 | 1004460000.0 | 3660400000.0 | 3872200000.0 | 5496020000.0 | 9156420000.0 | 694060000.0 | 128310000.0 | 106110000.0 | 31750000.0 | 75480000.0 | 315920000.0 | -143410000.0 | -237100000.0 | -59330000.0 | 1728500000.0 | 1669170000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13661 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | GENP | Genting Plantations Bhd | Genting Plantations Bhd | Food & Tobacco | Food & Tobacco | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 2706870000.0 | -212400000.0 | 954910000.0 | 3584810000.0 | 698750000.0 | 237520000.0 | 79210000.0 | 1649280000.0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13662 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | GENP | Genting Plantations Bhd | Genting Plantations Bhd | Food & Tobacco | Food & Tobacco | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 2484240000.0 | 6285010000.0 | 5323740000.0 | -53200000.0 | 8769250000.0 | 887490000.0 | 3661600000.0 | 3743750000.0 | 5107650000.0 | 8769250000.0 | 335770000.0 | 194660000.0 | 181600000.0 | 50100000.0 | 116640000.0 | 283330000.0 | -65120000.00000001 | -200970000.0 | 18950000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13663 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | KLKK | Kuala Lumpur Kepong Bhd | Kuala Lumpur Kepong Bhd | Chemicals | Chemicals | MYR | 2022 | A | 20220930 | 10504810000.0 | 19733710000.0 | 13461850000.0 | 2940620000.0 | 30238520000.0 | 5148090000.0 | 14186700000.0 | 10114120000.0 | 16051820000.0 | 30238520000.0 | 23713780000.0 | 3435700000.0 | 3219480000.0 | 781120000.0 | 2166290000.0 | 2672740000.0 | -2461840000.0 | -738420000.0 | -467830000.0 | 3253030000.0 | 2785200000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13664 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | KLKK | Kuala Lumpur Kepong Bhd | Kuala Lumpur Kepong Bhd | Chemicals | Chemicals | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20221231 | 10555190000.0 | 19488610000.0 | 13259680000.0 | 1078820000.0 | 30043800000.0 | 9684290000.0 | 595380000.0 | 402530000.0 | 412670000.0 | 2809790000.0 | 3222460000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13665 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | KLKK | Kuala Lumpur Kepong Bhd | Kuala Lumpur Kepong Bhd | Chemicals | Chemicals | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220930 | 10504810000.0 | 19733710000.0 | 13461850000.0 | 2940620000.0 | 30238520000.0 | 5148090000.0 | 14186700000.0 | 10114120000.0 | 16051820000.0 | 30238520000.0 | 6249900000.0 | 726810000.0 | 727390000.0 | 189290000.0 | 462130000.0 | 1350690000.0 | -404540000.0 | -1458240000.0 | -475320000.0 | 3260510000.0 | 2785200000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13666 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | KLKK | Kuala Lumpur Kepong Bhd | Kuala Lumpur Kepong Bhd | Chemicals | Chemicals | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220630 | 11760400000.0 | 19062850000.0 | 13221210000.0 | 1731280000.0 | 30823250000.0 | 6515510000.0 | 15558300000.0 | 9566140000.0 | 15264960000.0 | 30823260000.0 | 6111550000.0 | 849800000.0 | 753660000.0 | 143240000.0 | 558270000.0 | 238380000.0 | 680060000.0 | -469000000.0 | 469640000.0 | 2810410000.0 | 3280050000.0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
13667 | KLSE | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange | mal | KLKK | Kuala Lumpur Kepong Bhd | Kuala Lumpur Kepong Bhd | Chemicals | Chemicals | MYR | 2022 | Q | 20220331 | 11357910000.0 | 19156650000.0 | 13124430000.0 | 2531960000.0 | 30514560000.0 | 6420490000.0 | 15531420000.0 | 9229320000.0 | 14983140000.0 | 30514560000.0 | 5537390000.0 | 845160000.0 | 783320000.0 | 171040000.0 | 546570000.0 | 187340000.0 | -1207730000.0 | 756070000.0 | -256500000.0 | 3074860000.0 | 2818360000.0 |
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