East Sea tension ravages shares

May 9th at 13:15
09-05-2014 13:15:54+07:00

East Sea tension ravages shares

Panic struck investors in the Viet Nam stock market, when it was reported that Chinese ships intentionally collided with Vietnamese vessels near a Chinese rig on Viet Nam's continental shelf.

 

Although the State Securities Commission tried to calm investor fears after a morning of panic trading, pledging to closely watch unusual transactions and strictly tackle manipulations, shares closed yesterday with the biggest-ever loss.

The VN-Index on the HCM City Stock Exchange fell 32.88 points or as much as 5.87 per cent to end at 527.09 points, which was, however, 0.02 per cent higher than the morning closing point. On the northern bourse, the HNX-Index lost 4.9 points, or 6.4 per cent to close at 71.66 points.

The spiralling East Sea tension pushed investors into indulging in heavy sell-off until closing time.

The billboards were deep in the red. On both national stock exchanges, only 30 codes managed to advance yesterday while there were 512 losers, 333 of who declined to their floor prices.

An estimated VND63.3 trillion (US$3 billion) in market capitalisation was reported to have evaporated yesterday.

All of the southern bourse's 30 largest stocks by capitalisation and liquidity tumbled yesterday, of which, 23 codes fell to their floor prices. The VN-Index, tracking the performance of these large-cap stocks, was seen losing 34.2 points, or 5.61 per cent, to close at 575.31 points.

However, a volume of bottom-fishing capitals were adventurously injected into the market, as some investors considered the market decline a good time to buy, which helped to boost the market liquidity

On the HCM City Stock Exchange, nearly 146.5 million shares were traded, worth VND2.86 trillion (US$136.1 million), rising 180 per cent and 220 per cent, respectively, over the previous trading session.

The trading volume and value on the Ha Noi Exchange increased three times over Wednesday's trading to 106.9 million and VND1.01 trillion ($48.09 million). The HNX-Index, tracking the capital city's 30 top stocks, closed 7.71 per cent lower at 138.78 points.

Noticeably, when local investors boosted selling shares, foreign investors, seeing opportunities, were major buyers in the market yesterday with the highest net volume and value in over a month.

Their net buying volume reached more than 9.8 billion shares and the net buying value hit VND280.62 billion ($13.36 million), rising 386.85 per cent and 228.84 per cent, respectively, over the previous session.

vietnamnews



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Viet Nam loses, others gain

While Vietnamese market witnessed a huge loss on May 8, other markets ended up higher.

Number of firms delisting on the rise

The number of companies delisting from the stock market has increased rapidly since the beginning of this year, showing that economic woes continue to weigh on...

Shares rebound from 3-month low

The VN-Index on the HCM City Stock Exchange managed to rebound yesterday, after tumbling for two consecutive trading sessions to the lowest level in three months on...

Shares rebound in morning trading

Thanks to bottom-fishing activities, shares managed to recover this morning after posting losses during the two previous trading sessions.

Shares tumble on investor worry

Shares extended losses on both the national stock exchanges yesterday as investors sold stocks fearing further decline.

Maybank Kim Eng doubles its charter capital

Maybank Kim Eng Securities Limited Company announced yesterday that it had doubled its charter capital from VND300 billion (US$14.2 million) to VND615 billion...

Shares fall further in morning trading

Shares tumbled further on both the national stock exchanges this morning, as the sell-offs continued.

Benchmark indices lose on sell-offs

Shares closed lower in the first trading session of May on both the national stock exchanges.

Market close lower in morning trading

After a five-day-long holiday, shares closed lower this morning on both the national stocks exchanges.

Trading sluggish ahead of public holiday closure

Trading was sluggish as investors were cautious before the market closed for a five-day public holiday with the benchmark indices seen closing down on both bourse.

TRENDING


MOST READ


Back To Top