PETALING JAYA (Sept 5, 2012): The
government is expected to introduce the goods and services tax (GST), resume
its subsidy rationalisation programme and raise electricity tariff after the
13th general election (GE) as it moves to tighten its belt, said Alliance
Research Sdn Bhd, adding that such moves will adversely affect consumer
disposable income in the near term and dampen consumer sentiment.
Its head Bernard Ching said based
on a recent survey conducted by Alliance, investors expect the GE to be held in
the fourth quarter of this year, with Barisan Nasional (BN) expected to win by
a simple majority but with reduced popular votes.
According to results of the
survey conducted among 72 respondents comprising fund managers and buyside
analysts from domestic institutional funds, half expect the GE to be held after
Budget 2013 on Sept 28, but before year-end, another 19.4% expect the polls to
be called between January and March next year and only 4.2% believe it will
take place before the budget.
"The survey results also
indicated that investors are generally pessimistic that BN would recapture more
parliamentary seats in GE13, with only 12.5% expecting an increase. Majority of
the respondents (52.8%) expect the results to remain status quo, that is,
similar to the 12th GE with a 5% variance," said Ching in a report today.
"On the downside, 34.7%
expect BN to lose more seats. This implies that majority of the respondent
expects the ruling BN to form the next federal government," he added.
Investors also expect Malaysia's
stock market to correct once election is called.
"A total of 68.1% of the
respondents expect the FBM KLCI to contract once the GE is called. In addition,
40.3% of them will avoid sectors perceived to be affected by elections,"
said Ching.
"Our analysis also showed
that investors have been risk-averse, resulting in defensive sectors such as
consumer, telecommunication and REIT outperforming the FBM KLCI during the
first eight months of the year.
"On the other hand, cyclical
sectors such as construction, property and technology have significantly
underperformed the FBM KLCI over the same period," he added.
Nevertheless, the research firm
believes that market performance over the long term is dictated by fundamentals
and macro outlook, and while political "shocks" do impact market
performance, they are expected to be short-lived.
"Our analysis of the last
general election showed that a market selldown due to political 'shock' is
temporary and will normalise in three months. As such, investors with
longer-term investment horizon should capitalise on cyclical stocks within the
construction, utilities and gaming sectors, which are likely to be re-rated
post-GE," said Ching.
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