BANGKOK (Reuters) – Thailand’s stock market will not reach its goal to expand by nearly 50% from current levels by 2023, its president said on Thursday, as the country’s economic slowdown is hurting share prices.
The Thai exchange took the top spot for new listings in Southeast Asia in 2019, with companies raising $4 billion according to Refinitiv data.
A number of big issues are also in the pipeline for this year, including Central Retail Corp’s offering next month, which could raise up to $2.4 billion in the bourse’s biggest ever IPO. But economic growth has slowed sharply and the benchmark stock index .SETI> has fallen 1.7% in the past 12 months.
“We consider this (the large number of listings) an unexpected plus …. but our long-term plans are based on the economy and industry growth rates,” Pakorn Peetathawatchai, president of SET, told Reuters in an interview.
The Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET), Southeast Asia’s biggest bourse after Singapore, set a target in 2018 to achieve a combined market capitalization of all companies listed of 23 trillion baht ($757 billion) by 2023. That would be up from a market value of 16.6 trillion baht as of Wednesday’s close.
However, the target was based on forecasts that Thailand’s economy would grow by more than 4% annually over those years. The central bank now forecasts 2019 economic growth at 2.5%, a five-year low, and 2.8% for this year as exports have slowed.
“The underlying assumption at the time was 4.5% growth,” Pakorn said.
“Reaching that market capitalization on a slowdown in the global economy is difficult,” he said.
Corporate earnings have been hit by the slowdown, with top lender Siam Commercial Bank Pcl reporting a 22% drop in fourth quarter profits from a year earlier as lending shrunk 1.3%.
SET, which hosts 623 listed firms on its main index and another 200 on an alternative investment index, was assessing an adjustment of its goal, Pakorn said. For now it would still aim to add 550 billion baht to market capitalization each year with 250 billion from initial public offers, he said.
The biggest listing last year was hotelier Asset World Corporation , owned by billionaire Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi, which raised $1.6 billion
Other upcoming listings include the packaging unit of the country’s largest industrial conglomerate Siam Cement Group Pcl , worth $1 billion, and PTT Oil and Retail, a unit of the state-owned energy firm PTT Pcl
“If other big families or conglomerates come in, we can reach our goal,” Pakorn said.
New technologies are reforming businesses and companies are listing or spinning off smaller units to raise funds to adapt, SET Senior Executive Vice President, Manpong Senanarong, said.
“Companies need funds to invest because of the new economy, which is putting operators in a more competitive environment,” he said.
(Reporting by Chayut Setboonsarng; Editing by Susan Fenton)
OTTAWA – Statistics Canada says the country’s merchandise trade deficit narrowed to $1.3 billion in September as imports fell more than exports.
The result compared with a revised deficit of $1.5 billion for August. The initial estimate for August released last month had shown a deficit of $1.1 billion.
Statistics Canada says the results for September came as total exports edged down 0.1 per cent to $63.9 billion.
Exports of metal and non-metallic mineral products fell 5.4 per cent as exports of unwrought gold, silver, and platinum group metals, and their alloys, decreased 15.4 per cent. Exports of energy products dropped 2.6 per cent as lower prices weighed on crude oil exports.
Meanwhile, imports for September fell 0.4 per cent to $65.1 billion as imports of metal and non-metallic mineral products dropped 12.7 per cent.
In volume terms, total exports rose 1.4 per cent in September while total imports were essentially unchanged in September.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 5, 2024.