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KLCI Holds Steady as Year-End Risk Appetite Remains Selective

KUALA LUMPUR, 18 December 2025 – Bursa Malaysia is expected to open today with a steady yet cautious tone as the FBM KLCI continues to consolidate in the mid-1,600 range, reflecting restrained risk appetite ahead of the final stretch of the year. With only a handful of trading sessions left in 2025, investors are increasingly focused on capital preservation, dividend yield and early positioning for 2026 themes rather than chasing short-term momentum.

Across Asian markets, sentiment remains mixed. Wall Street’s overnight performance offered little directional clarity, while regional investors remain watchful of global credit conditions, uneven technology demand and year-end liquidity dynamics. Against this backdrop, Malaysia continues to be viewed as a comparatively defensive ASEAN market, underpinned by resilient domestic demand, stable banking-sector fundamentals and steady institutional participation.

For Asian investors, Malaysia at this stage of the year represents a low-volatility allocation with selective upside, rather than a market for aggressive risk-taking.

Market Setup & Technical Levels to Watch

  • Immediate Support: 1,615 – 1,625
  • Stronger Support: 1,590 – 1,600
  • Upside Resistance: 1,650 – 1,665

The KLCI is likely to remain range-bound today unless there is a noticeable improvement in foreign fund flows or a regional sentiment shift. A sustained break above 1,650 would suggest stronger window-dressing activity, while a slip below 1,600 could invite short-term profit-taking.

Active Counters & Where Investors Are Focusing

1. Banking & Financials – Core Defensive Holdings

Large-cap banks continue to anchor Bursa Malaysia’s stability into year-end.

  • Maybank, CIMB Group, Public Bank, Hong Leong Bank

These counters remain attractive for their dividend visibility, strong capital buffers and domestic earnings resilience. Institutional investors are expected to maintain exposure as part of year-end portfolio balancing.

2. Plantations & Commodity-Linked Stocks – Yield with Optional Upside

Plantation counters remain relevant as defensive yield plays amid global uncertainty.

  • Sime Darby Plantation, IOI Corporation, KLK

While near-term palm oil prices remain volatile, longer-term demand linked to renewable fuels and downstream margins continues to support sector fundamentals.

3. Domestic Demand, Utilities & Consumption Plays

Stocks tied to utilities, essential services and domestic consumption continue to offer earnings stability and lower volatility. These counters are likely to outperform if global markets remain choppy and risk appetite stays muted.

4. Technology & Export-Oriented Counters – Tactical Only

Semiconductor and EMS names such as Inari Amertron, MPI and Unisem remain sensitive to global demand signals. While short-term rebounds are possible, these counters remain higher-risk and are better suited for tactical trades rather than core holdings at this stage.

5. Mid-Cap Momentum & 2026 Theme Positioning

Selective mid-caps linked to infrastructure, energy transition and domestic projects may see interest as investors gradually position for next year’s growth themes. Liquidity, however, remains uneven, requiring disciplined entry and exit strategies.

Strategy & Outlook for Asian Investors

Stay Defensive, Position Selectively

  • Prioritise large-cap, dividend-yielding stocks as portfolio anchors.
  • Use plantation and domestic-demand counters to balance defensiveness with medium-term upside.
  • Keep exposure to export-heavy and high-beta tech names limited.

Foreign Fund Flows Remain Key

Foreign participation continues to dictate short-term direction.

  • Improving flows: Potential test of 1,660
  • Muted flows: Continued consolidation remains the base case

Think Beyond Year-End

With 2025 drawing to a close, investors are increasingly shifting focus toward 2026 narratives, financial sector resilience, domestic consumption, infrastructure rollout and energy transition, rather than late-year rallies.

Author

  • I am Abigail, a journalist at The Ledger Asia, covering business and finance with a focus on the Malaysian Stock Market and key economic developments across Asia. Known for clear, accessible reporting, I deliver insights that help readers understand market trends, corporate movements, and regional news shaping the Asian economy.

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