A day after a historic selloff at the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX), a positive momentum was witnessed on Friday with the benchmark KSE-100 Index gaining over 750 points during intra-day trading.
At 11:45am, the benchmark index was hovering at 107,025.72, an increase of 750.75 points or 0.71%.
Buying interest was seen in key sectors including cement, commercial banks and chemical, while selling pressure was witnessed in oil and gas exploration companies, OMCs, refinery and power generation.
Index-heavy stocks including MCB, MEBL, NBP, UBL and
HUBCO traded in the green, while MARI, OGDC, PPL, SSGC and SNGP traded in the red.
“The recent market pullback has opened up valuations, creating attractive entry points for investors looking to capitalize on the dip in equities,” said Intermarket Securities in a note on Friday.
On Thursday, massive selling was observed at the PSX, as equities entered a correction phase, with the benchmark KSE-100 Index closing around 106,200 after a historic single-day loss of 4,795 points.
Investors attributed the steep decline to news of the government considering a tax amendment bill that proposes increased restrictions on non-filers in areas such as real estate, equity, and auto purchases.
Globally, Asian shares were pinned near three-month lows on Friday as investors awaited key US inflation data that could either ease or worsen concerns about price pressures, while the dollar towered at two-year peaks.
In Asia, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan, fell 0.4% on Friday and was headed for a weekly drop of 2.6%. It is, however, up over 8% for the year.
The closely watched inflation gauge – the US Core Personal Consumption Expenditures – is due later in the day.
Forecasts are centred on a monthly rise of 0.2% for November, and any upward surprises there could lead markets to further scale back bets for US policy easing next year.
Futures imply just 37 basis points of rate cuts from the Federal Reserve in 2025, less than two cuts, after the US central bank turned hawkish at its last meeting of the year.
A rate cut is not fully priced in until June.
This is an intra-day update
Source: Brecorder