Jakarta CNBC Indonesia – Although the Composite Stock Price Index (JCI) has strengthened throughout this week, these five stocks have actually been hit by a massive correction, so that they fell on the list of the worst losers (top losers).
According to data from the Indonesia Stock Exchange (IDX), two of the five stocks that posted the biggest corrections this week were in the consumer goods sector (non-primary), namely PT Boston Furniture Industries Tbk (SOFA) and PT Arkadia Digital Media Tbk (DIGI).
The other two are in the financial sector, namely PT Asuransi Maximus Graha Persada Tbk (ASMI) and PT Bank JTrust Indonesia Tbk (BCIC). One share is engaged in raw materials, namely PT Inter Delta Tbk (INTD).
Two of the five stocks recently received an ultimatum from the IDX to hold a public expose (public expose) incidental in the near future, following the price movement which is volatile and rising like crazy.
The two stocks are SOFA furniture issuer and news channel holding company suara.com namely DIGI. Welcoming the plan, market participants rushed to realize profits this week so that the shares both fell and entered the ranks of top loser.
On the other hand, the IDX also included the shares of insurance issuer Maximus (ASMI) in the Unusual Market Activity (UMA) list or under IDX supervision. The Company has so far stated that there are no significant corporate actions that have not been informed to the public.
The shares of the raw material issuer Inter Delta (INTD) have also become a subscription for BEI supervision by entering UMA since 2019. In several information disclosures, the company also admitted that the movement of its share price is a pure market mechanism and does not have a material agenda that has not been announced to the public. .
Meanwhile, the shares of J-Trust bank (BCIC), formerly known as Bank Century, were depressed after the company announced plans to issue new shares (rights issue) to meet the capital requirements as required by the Financial Services Authority (OJK).
The bank which is now controlled by J-Trust Co. Ltd. The Japanese origin targets the acquisition of funds of up to Rp 1.5 trillion. The corporate action requires shareholders to spend extra funds if they do not want their ownership to be diluted, with a scour of almost a third (29.2%). Investors responded negatively to the plan by pressing the sell button.
CNBC INDONESIA RESEARCH TEAM
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