IDEX Falls into the Red Zone Following 410 Weakening Stocks (Tuesday, September 26, 2023)
Sorry, an error has occurred
For now, this data cannot be displayed. We are trying to fix it.
Back to Home- A Small Font
- A Medium Font
- A Bigger Font
The Jakarta Composite Index (JCI or IHSG) weakened into the red zone, falling 74.58 points or 1.07% to 6,923.800 at the close of trading on Tuesday (26/9/2023).
Today's index weakening was due to a majority of stocks declining, with 410 stocks falling, followed by 212 stagnant stocks, and 136 stocks strengthening.
Based on the IDX-IC Sectoral Index, nine sectors were corrected. The basic materials sector fell the most, at minus 2.83%, followed by the energy and infrastructure sectors, which fell by minus 2.79% and minus 1.32%, respectively.
Only two sectors increased, led by the non-primary consumer goods sector at 0.60%, followed by the technology sector, which rose by 0.32%.
According to RTI Business data, the frequency of stock trading on the domestic exchange today was 1.42 million transactions.
A total of 25.78 billion shares changed hands, with a transaction value of Rp12.81 trillion.
The issuer with the code SULI was the top loser today after weakening by 19.6%, followed by TGUK and META, which contracted by 15.86% and 12.86%, respectively.
On the other hand, the top gainer today was DOOH, which strengthened by 34.25%, followed by issuers DNAR and PTMP, which strengthened by 19.35% and 17.65%, respectively.
Meanwhile, the majority of regional Asian stock exchanges this afternoon included the Nikkei index, which weakened by 363.50 points or 1.11% to 32,315.100; the Hang Seng index, which weakened by 262.389 points or 1.48% to 17,466.900; the Shanghai index, which weakened by 13.34 points or 0.43% to 3,102.270; and the Straits Times index, which weakened by 0.33 points or 0.01% to 3,215.070.
"Disclosure: This is an AI-generated translation of the original article. We strive for accuracy, but please note that automated translations may contain errors or slight inconsistencies."