71. INDONESIAN stocks rose, led by PT Telkom, after the government indicated it would abolish government monopolies on key commodities to make the economy more efficient. 72. Indonesian stocks rose, meanwhile, led by companies such as PT Indosat that benefit from a weaker currency. 73. INDONESIAN stocks rose, paring earlier losses, as concerns about economic growth eased and investors judged some stocks cheap compared with prospective earnings. 74. Indonesian stocks rose, though, pulled higher by exporters who stand to benefit from the weak rupiah. 75. INDONESIAN stocks rose, with a gain in PT Telkom offsetting a decline in banking stocks, which fell on concern that limits on credit growth may crimp earnings. 76. Indonesian stocks were little changed as investors considered the outlook for corporate profit growth after the government cut a benchmark interest rate. 77. Investors sold the Indonesian stock and bought the ADRs. 78. Philippine stocks fell to levels not seen since March and Indonesian stocks tumbled to their lowest since late May. 79. Philippine stocks fell to seven-month lows and Indonesian stocks plunged to their lowest since late May. 80. Thai and Indonesian stocks fell for much of the day as investors continued to fret that weakening exchange rates will slow economic growth and raise borrowing costs. |