VN-Index rises 7 per cent this year but new listing on HOSE declines sharply

Dec 18th at 10:21
18-12-2019 10:21:00+07:00

VN-Index rises 7 per cent this year but new listing on HOSE declines sharply

Viet Nam’s stock market has grown modestly this year but shrinking inflows has made new listings less buoyant than expected.

The VN-Index on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange (HOSE) has increased 7 per cent so far this year, but the HNX-Index on the Ha Noi Stock Exchange has fallen more than 1 per cent.

These numbers are an improvement to 2018 when the VN-Index lost 9.3 per cent and the HNX-Index plummeted 10.8 per cent.

The growth of the VN-Index has been driven largely by large-cap stocks, while the general movement was a downward trend.

Cash flow into the market has declined with the daily trading value averaging just VND4 trillion (US$172.4 million) this year, down 30 per cent compared to 2018.

This year, the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange has only welcomed 13 new companies, down 63 per cent against 2018 and the lowest number since 2015, half of which were transfers from the Ha Noi Stock Exchange or the Unlisted Public Company Market (UPCoM).

The total volume of shares from new companies reached 4.8 million, a sharp decline compared to 7.12 billion in 2018.

Unlike last year, no banks have listed in 2019.

The two biggest listed companies were Vietnam Airlines (HVN) and PV Power (POW) with 1.4 billion and 2.3 billion shares, equivalent to market value of VND49 trillion and VND29 trillion, respectively.

Value of newly listed companies also fell. For example, shares in Vietnam Airlines are being traded below VND34,000, down 16 per cent compared to its debut price of VND40,600.

Shares in other companies such as PV Power, Power Engineering Consulting (TV2) and ICD Tan Cang-Long Binh (ILB) also declined.

Companies pending approval

Currently, there are 15 listing documents with 6.8 billion shares pending for approval on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange, including big companies such as Investment and Industrial Development Corporation (Becamex), Maritime Joint Stock Commercial Bank (MSB) and the Vietnam Rubber Group (GVR).

Becamex plans to list more than one billion shares in January next year. It is already trading on the UPCoM under the code BCM at VND29,000 per share.

Meanwhile, MSB will list 1.17 billion shares and GVR will move its four billion shares from the UPCoM to the HOSE. MSB is also the only bank that has sent a listing document to the HOSE this year.

bizhub



RELATED STOCK CODE (7)

NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Prolonged caution pulls VN stocks for a third straight day

Vietnamese shares contracted Tuesday as investors waited for a clearer market outlook amid the upcoming year-end holiday.

Shares narrow downtrend thanks to small and mid cap stocks

Vietnamese stocks narrowed their decline on Tuesday morning as mid-caps and small-caps attracted cash flow, supporting the market.

VN stocks slide, Bao Viet shares soar on buy-in offer

Despite global gains, Vietnamese shares ended Monday in negative territory as investors awaited the year-end.

VN shares fall despite good trade news

Vietnamese shares declined on Monday morning despite good news from international markets.

Shares to experience choppy trading next week

The Vietnamese stock market was entering an accumulation phase and may experience ups and downs with low or moderate liquidity, analysts said.

Shares end the week on negative note

The VN-Index failed to maintain its rally on Friday as selling pressure hit many large-caps during the last trading session of the week.

Rubber firms plan 30-50 per cent dividend in cash

Three companies in the natural rubber industry plan to make 30-50 per cent advance dividend payouts in cash for 2019.

Oil prices up, VN stocks keep progressing

Vietnamese shares advanced on Friday morning as positive moves of global crude helped boost the local petroleum sector.

Fed’s signal of no rate hike boosts shares

Markets rallied for the second consecutive session on Thursday, partly thanks to the Fed’s Wednesday announcement that it would keep interest rates unchanged and...

Securities stocks lose shine for investors

Shares in securities companies seem to have lost their shine for investors in the face of fierce competition from foreign-invested firms.

TRENDING


MOST READ


Back To Top