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Index beats all records, settles at 64 points below 12,000 level
![]() Click to view the larger image The notable feature of the week was a major shift in the portfolio buying from overvalued shares to low-priced, including the Pak PTA, the Pakistan Cement and the Fauji Cement. However, bank shares maintained the upward drive under the lead of the BoP, the MCB, the UBL, and some others. Although, rollover positions amounting to Rs9.6 billion were still outstanding which were expected to be settled by Wednesday while bulls were not inclined to take an extended breather and made extensive buying in most of the current favourites, putting the market back on rails. Among bank shares, the National Bank, the MCB and the Union Bank remained in strong demand on reports of higher interim earnings, while the Pakistan Oilfields and the Pakistan Petroleum led a rebound in their respective counter. The fact that the index managed to penetrate the widely speculated level beyond 11,700 points after several abortive attempts had raised many questions among general investors, analysts said adding all major base shares including the Pakistan Oilfields, the Pakistan Petroleum, the National Bank, and the PTCL were ruling on the higher side and should have tested the target of 12,000 points long ago. But it appeared to be a distinct weakness of the OGDC, one of the major weightage holders after a steep rise, which could have been the chief inhibiting factor. The sell-off of 75 per cent shares to a consortium of investors at Rs16.85 per share or Rs22 billion did not have any impact on the market as it was not listed but it did raise the hopes that some other leading state-owned units, notably the PSO, the NIT and others may follow soon adding to the depth of the market and to the privatization process. The National Bank may not have touched its saturation point as news that the share value of Bank Al-Jazira was rebounded from the recent lows as it rose further from the previous level. It has about six per cent stake in the Saudi-based Bank Al-Jazira holding 0.875 million shares. The perception that it may sell the stake to qualify for opening a branch in the kingdom could boost its price further up in coming sessions, some analysts predicted. The latest reports on new oil and gas finds in the NWFP were more than encouraging adding significantly to the existing production and in turn can boost some leading shares, predicted a leading analyst. He added that the fresh buying spree in the trio, the OGDC, Pakistan Oilfields and Pakistan Petroleum alone were capable of pushing the index towards the target. News from Balochistan and tribal areas were disturbing but the market seemed to go along with positive corporate fundamentals rather than with the developing situation on the political front, he added. After recent management change, the Wyeth Pakistan maintained its upward drive and rose by another Rs31 followed by the Arif Habib Securities, while losers were led by the Siemens Pakistan and the Wyeth Pakistan. FORWARD COUNTER: Speculative issues on forward counter also followed the lead of their counterparts in the ready section and mostly rose amid active trading. The National Bank, the MCB, the Pakistan Oilfields, the Pakistan Petroleum, the OGDC, the Lucky Cement and the D.G. Khan Cement were leading gainers among them.—Mohammad Aslam
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