VN-Index plunges 6.3 per cent on worst day in 19 years

Mar 10th at 08:26
10-03-2020 08:26:22+07:00

VN-Index plunges 6.3 per cent on worst day in 19 years

Viet Nam’s benchmark VN-Index plummeted 6.28 per cent on Monday, its worst daily loss in the last 19 years, to 835.49 points as investors were alarmed with widespread slumps on the global markets.

 

The slump was so bad that some compared it to a car heading downhill at a rapid rate.

Only 34 shares on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange gained value while 368 declined, of which 173 nose-dived by the daily maximum of 7 per cent. The other 42 closed flat.

Among the top 30 shares by market value and liquidity (VN30), 23 dropped to the floor-price.

A few saw less severe declines such as Eximbank (EIB) and Novaland Investment (NVL) with losses of below 2 per cent but others like Masan Group (MSN), brewer Sabeco (SAB), Vietjet (VJC), sugar maker Thanh Thanh Cong-Bien Hoa (SBT) and Refrigeration Electrical Engineering (REE) slumped by more than 3 per cent.

On the Ha Noi Stock Exchange, the HNX-Index gave up 6.43 per cent to close Monday at 106.34 points.

Both the VN-Index and HNX-Index gained last week.

According to Phan Dung Khanh, head of the investment consultancy at Maybank Kim Eng Securities Co, Monday’s crash was one of three worst trading sessions in the entire history of Viet Nam’s securities market.

However, the magnitude of this crash was far more severe than in the past when the stock market had fewer than 10 shares trading, Khanh said.

Describing the session “frightful”, he said the 31 people infected with the novel coronavirus in Viet Nam together with some areas being put under quarantine have rattled the nerves of investors.

Across the globe, financial markets were on the rocks while the oil prices slashed one third after the collapse of OPEC’s supply cut agreement with Russia.

Shares of local energy companies such as PV Gas (GAS), PetroVietnam Drilling & Wells Service (PVD), PetroVietnam Technical Services (PVS) and Petrolimex (PLX) hit the floor price.

“Panic spread across the globe, not only in Viet Nam,” Khanh said, pointing out the Vietnamese stock market has been on the downtrend since 2018 and the epidemic was just another blow to the market.

He mentioned the risk of mass selling on the market could continue to run wild, especially on the shares being hard hit by margin calls. Total of margin lending by the end of last year reached VND55 trillion (US$2.4 billion), the highest in history, he said.

Liquidity remained at a high level on Monday with 377.6 million shares worth VND7.8 trillion ($336 million) being traded in the two markets, up 24 per cent in volume and 64 per cent in value compared to last week’s daily average.

bizhub



RELATED STOCK CODE (11)

NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Vietnam’s stock market predicted profits to stay flat in 2020

It is expected the Vietnamese stock market will be less volatile in March compared to the previous months.

Vietnamese shares plunge on mounting investor fears

Vietnamese shares plunged on Monday morning, in line with the global downturn, as the spread of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) worsened around the world outside...

Warning for VN stocks after new infection reports

The Vietnamese stock market would struggle to hold on to its threshold as analysts are afraid the market sentiment could worsen after new coronavirus-infected cases...

Low-cost buying helps offset global pressure on local stocks

Strong purchases of cheap shares helped offset the negative impact of global markets on Vietnamese stocks on Friday.

Listed firms’ profits up 12 pct

The after-tax profits of listed companies in Vietnam rose 12.6 percent year-on-year to VND303 trillion ($13 billion) in 2019.

Global fears drag on Vietnamese stocks

Vietnamese shares dipped on Friday morning as overall sentiment worsened following the decline in global markets.

Market regulator agrees on financial leveraging for UPCoM stocks

Margin lending may be allowed on the Unlisted Pubic Company Market (UPCoM), the State Securities Commission (SSC) vice chairman Pham Hong Son said on Wednesday.

Dropping oil prices slam stocks

Plummeting global oil prices over the past month are hurting the stock prices of Vietnamese oil and gas companies, tinnhanhchungkhoan.vn reported on Wednesday.

Shares gain narowly as banks' growth tempts investors to sell

Vietnamese shares gained narrowly as investors took use of intra-day growth to stave off risks and foreign investors remained net sellers.

Vietnam’s exchange-listed firms earn US$13 billion in profits in 2019

Banking and real estate continue to be the top two sectors in the stock market in terms of profit and growth rate.

TRENDING


MOST READ


Back To Top