Stocks recover 690 points on mutual fund buying

Published October 2, 2024 Updated October 2, 2024 08:11am

KARACHI: Pakistani shares snapped a three-day losing streak on Tuesday as value-hunting by mutual funds helped the benchmark index regain its lost ground despite aggressive selling by foreigners, banks and individuals.

Ahsan Mehanti of Arif Habib Corporation attributed the bull’s comeback to receding Consumer Price Index-based inflation in September to a 44-month low of 6.9 per cent, boosting the market expectations of another substantial reduction in the State Bank of Pakistan’s (SBP) policy rate in the next review.

Other factors that encou­raged an across-the-board buying spree were the fifth straight fortnightly cut in the petrol and diesel prices and surging SBP reserves after the inflow of the first tranche of $1.03bn from the International Monetary Fund under the new bailout programme contributing to the bullish close, he added.

Topline Securities said bulls dominated the session, with the KSE-100 index reaching an intraday high of 866 points at 81,980.37. However, it settled at 81,804.59 points after adding 690.39 points or 0.85pc day-on-day.

Key drivers of the market rally included heavyweights such as Hub Power, Mari Petroleum, Oil and Gas Development Comp­any, Bank Al-Habib, and Pakistan Petroleum, collectively contributing 533 points to the index. Conver­sely, Bank Alfalah, Habib Bank, Pakistan Oilfield, United Bank and Meezan Bank pulled shaved off 170 points.

The trading volume was up 20.49pc to 359.08 million shares while the traded value rose 21.67pc to Rs17.16bn day-on-day.

Stocks contributing significantly to the traded volume included Fauji Cem­ent (29.12m shares), Hub Power (19.62m shares), WorldCall Telecom (19.05m shares)), Kohinoor Spin­ning Mills Ltd (15.72m shares) and K-Electric (11.49m shares).

The shares registering the most significant increa­ses in their prices in absolute terms were Unilever Foods (Rs194.94), Hallm­ark Company (Rs78.42), Hoechst Pakistan (Rs58.17), Service Indus­tries (Rs52.87) and Sazgar Engineering Works Ltd (Rs26.25).

The companies that suffered major losses in their share prices in absolute terms were Pak Engine­ering (Rs55.00), Sitara Chemical (Rs14.92), Ismail Industries (Rs10.82), Siem­ens Pakistan (Rs8.75) and Pakistan Oilfield Ltd (Rs7.56).

Foreign investors remained net sellers as they offloaded shares worth $4.98m. However, mutual funds picked up shares worth $9.07m.

Published in Dawn, October 2nd, 2024

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