Funds suffer losses on poor market performance

Jan 9th at 10:37
09-01-2019 10:37:21+07:00

Funds suffer losses on poor market performance

Over the past year, most investment funds in Viet Nam’s equity market have seen negative growth in net asset value per share (NAVPS) due to the poor performance of the market indices.

NAVPS is an expression for net asset value that represents the value per share of a mutual fund, exchange-traded fund (ETF) or a closed-end fund. It is calculated by dividing the total net asset value of the fund or company by the number of shares outstanding.

NAVPS is also referred to as the book value per share.

This year, the stock market witnessed the choppiest year since the 2008 global financial crisis. The VN-Index declined for the first time after five consecutive years of rallying in parallel with the growth momentum of the economy. It achieved a record high gain of 47 per cent in 2017.

The VN-Index, Viet Nam’s benchmark stock index, set an all-time peak of 1,211 points on April 10, but then suffered a sharp decline of 27 per cent, to end 2018 at 892.54 points, down 9.3 per cent from the previous year, despite the fact that Viet Nam’s GDP has posted its strongest growth rate in a decade.

The unexpected fall strongly affected investor sentiment, which is very vulnerable and mostly dependent on market movements and can be broken easily if any negative news is heard.

Pyn Elite Fund, the Finland fund which focuses on Vietnamese shares, saw NAVPS declining 10.15 per cent. The figures for Dragon Capital’s Vietnam Enterprise Investment Limited (VEIL) were down 11.3 per cent, JPMorgan VOF dropped 12 per cent, ETF funds such as FTSE Vietnam ETF, slumped 11 per cent, while VFMVN30 ETF lost 11.4 per cent and VNM ETF plummeted 13 per cent.

Passion Investment (PIF) and Hestia also had a disappointing year with NAVPS growth down 16 per cent and 24 per cent, respectively.

Funds with better performance included Tundra Vietnam Fund, VOF VinaCapital, SSIAM VNX50 ETF, LionGlobal Vietnam Fund and Thien Viet Securities Joint Stock Company’s two funds of Thien Viet Growth Fund (TVGF) and TVGF2.

TVGF and TVGF2 were two of the funds with the best performance in the market last year, with NAVPS dropping just 3.7 per cent and 6.5 per cent, respectively, lower than the decline of the VN-Index at 9.3 per cent in 2018.

By the end of 2018, the total investment portfolio value of TVGF reached VND196.5 billion (US$8.4 million) while the figure for TVGF2 was VND157.4 billion.

SSIAM VNX50 ETF performed quite well compared to the overall market, with NAVPS down 6 per cent. Total fund assets as of the end of 2018 reached nearly VND120 billion.

Winning bond funds

Contrary to the tragic situation of stock investment funds, bond investment funds had a successful year in 2018.

The best performance belonged to VFMVFB, managed by VietFund Management (VFM), with NAVPS growth of more than 11 per cent.

Bao Viet Fund Management Co Ltd’s BVFB fund also had a successful year, with NAVPS climbing by 10.1 per cent in 2018, and was the fund with the second best growth in the market.

NAVPS of two bond funds, VTBF managed by VietinBank Capital and TCBF managed by TCBS, also grew well with an increase of 9 per cent and 8.2 per cent, respectively.

VinaWealth bond investment fund (VFF) of fund management company VinaWealth, a VinaCapital-backed unit, saw NAVPS growth of 7.1 per cent in 2018. Meanwhile, the figure for SSIBF managed by Saigon Securities Incorporation was 6.6 per cent.

In 2018, the stock market witnessed strong fluctuations and cash flow tended to shift to bond funds. Viet Dragon Securities Co (VDSC)’s statistics show that the largest bond investment fund, Techcom Bond Fund (TCBF), had expanded its assets scale by 185 per cent compared to the beginning of the year. From September to November 2018, TCBF attracted about VND700 billion of new investments each month.

bizhub



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

VN stocks step down from rally

Vietnamese shares declined on Tuesday as investors locked in profits following the market’s two-day rally.

Weak demand pushes shares down

Vietnamese markets reversed into a downtrend on Tuesday morning as weak buying demand caused many large-cap stocks drop.

VN stocks up for second day

Vietnamese shares extended growth for a second day on higher investor confidence but modest trading liquidity is hindering the chance of further improvement.

Large-cap firms drive gains in morning trading

Vietnamese shares gained further on Monday morning, driven by large-cap companies.

HoSE listing remains a gamble

The Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange (HoSE) has recently accepted or looks set to accept the listing of three more large-cap companies, but questions remain following a...

A single rally session doesn’t mean immediate recovery

Last week’s share ‘fire sale’ may have ended trading on a positive note, but analysts have warned the single gaining session does not mean the market’s downtrend...

Mitigating global stock uncertainty in Vietnam

In 2019, Vietnamese stocks may receive some knock-on effects from the highly volatile global stock market. However, the country’s fundamentals remain attractive to...

Shares gain on bargain hunt

Shares ended the first week of 2019 rallying after the previous three-day collapse had sent shares’ price down to attractive levels which triggered investors to...

New circular on securities-related service prices

The Ministry of Finance has issued new securities-related service regulations for trading organisations and commercial banks doing business in Viet Nam’s securities...

Dragon Capital becomes major shareholder in VN’s top three brokerages

HCM City-based fund management company, Dragon Capital, has become a major shareholder in Viet Nam’s three biggest securities firms.

TRENDING


MOST READ


Back To Top