Stocks edge down on last working day of year 2019
Last updated on: 31 December,2019 12:03 pm
Yesterday, stocks gained 39.10 points (0.10 %).
KARACHI (Dunya News) – The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) on Tuesday noted bearish trend as the KSE-100 share Index dropped 150.27 points or 0.37 percent, and hit 40,737.35 points at 11.59pm.
Yesterday, stocks gained 39.10 points (0.10 %), and the Index closed at 40,887.63 points. A total of 165,834,760 shares were traded, while the value of shares traded during the day stood at Rs6.636 billion.
In the previous week, the stock market witnessed massive fluctuations as it began on a negative note on Monday when the KSE-100 share Index plunged by 824.70 points for profit-taking sessions before Christmas holiday amid absence of positive triggers but later on Thursday gained 799.47 points amid positive sentiments among traders.
On Friday, the stock market went into profit-booking and the KSE-100 index closed in the red by 279.26 points at 40,848.53. Mainly oil and gas marketing companies, exploration and production, power and cement sectors remained under pressure.
Analysts had previously termed the previous week as a rollover week when investors would offload stocks bought earlier at attractive valuations. In addition to this, absence of positive triggers to guide market’s direction also weighed on investor sentiment and spread pessimism for the rest of the day.
Analysts had stated that one of the important factors which added more turbulence towards the red index was Indian and Pakistani troops exchanging fire in some areas along the restive Line of Control (LoC) in the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir.
"Negative sentiments were witnessed across the board," a report of Topline Securities had stated for Monday’s sharp decline of 824 points in the stock market to close at 40,008, down 2 percent, adding the benchmark index had barely managed to maintain the 40,000-points level as the rollover week had started.
Analysts had stated that the bearish trend continued with full force on the back of multiple factors, including profit taking by both local and foreign investors.
They had observed slim chances of recovery in the market in the coming days and of the index crossing the 42,000-point barrier before the end of the year, as was earlier expected.
Before these uncertainties, the index was last seen trading above 41,000 points in February 2019. So far, the market has regained over 11,000 points after hitting a five-year low at 28,671 points in August 2019.
After amassing a run up of 10 per cent in the last month, the KSE100 index traded around the psychological level of 41,000 index points.
Major developments earlier were, firstly, inflow of $1.3 billion from Asian Development Bank (ADB) for budgetary support and to address power sector reforms, secondly, worker remittances during November which stood at $1.8 billion (up 9.4 percent as compared to the same month last year), thirdly, forex reserves reaching $16 billion, up by 0.4 percent on a weekly basis, excluding tranche received from ADB, and fourthly, the latest PIB auction that saw 10-yr PIB cut off below 11 per cent that was last seen in Oct.18.
Improvement on the external front together with stability in the Pakistani Rupee was expected to reassure foreign investors.
Meanwhile, inflationary readings are set to touch peak in January 2020 with an imminent interest rate cut to follow, domestic investors remain jubilant as well, he said.
Previously, Adviser to the Prime Minister on Finance Dr Abdul Hafeez Shaikh had said the recent strong performance of Pakistan’s stock market was proof of “increasing investor confidence on stabilisation measures” employed by the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI)-led government.
In a tweet, the premier’s aide had stated that the 14.9 per cent gain of the KSE-100 Index in November was the highest one-month return over the past six years.
“The KSE-100 index is up by 14.9% in November 2019, highest one month return after May 2013. Since 16 August 2019, the index increased by 36.6% (10,500 points),” Mr Shaikh had said.