ETFs to make no changes in investment lists: SSI Research

May 22nd at 07:57
22-05-2020 07:57:24+07:00

ETFs to make no changes in investment lists: SSI Research

There may be no changes in the lists of investees by exchange-traded fund (ETF) indices in the upcoming quarterly review, SSI Research has forecast.

The calculation of investees’ proportion in the FTSE Vietnam Index and MVIS Vietnam Index must be finished by May 29 so review announcements are made on June 5 and June 12, respectively.

The quarterly review will be complete on June 19.

SSI Research – the research division of brokerage firm SSI Securities – predicted there will be no changes in the two indices’ lists of investees.

As of May 15, the total value of investment made by FTSE Vietnam Swap UCITS ETF declined to 199 million euro (US$218.3 million) from February.

The list of investees by FTSE Vietnam ETF contains 18 stocks traded on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange (HoSE).

The fund is expected to increase investment in three stocks – Vingroup (VIC), Vinhomes (VHM) and Vietcombank (VCB).

Vingroup and Vinhomes shares will account for 15 per cent of the total portfolio, up 0.5-1.11 percentage points while Vietcombank shares will take an 8.65 per cent stake in the list, up 2.22 percentage points.

The fund is forecast to cut its investment in the remaining 15 stocks such as dairy producer Vinamilk (VNM; down 1.69 percentage points), Vincom Retail (VRE; down 0.28 percentage points), and steel maker Hoa Phat (HPG; down 0.32 percentage points).

FTSE Vietnam ETF is managed by the London-based asset firm FTSE Russell, focusing on Vietnamese equities.

The MVIS Vietnam Index, developed by the US investment management firm VanEck, is expected to raise investment in Vingroup, Vinhomes, Vietcombank and steel producer Hoa Phat.

On the other hand, shares of Vinamilk, Masan, PetroVietnam Power (POW), sugar firm Thanh Thanh Cong-Bien Hoa (SBT), and insurer Bao Viet Holdings (BVH) are among divestment targets.

Shares of Vinamilk, Vietcombank, Vingroup, Thanh Thanh Cong-Bien Hoa, Vinhomes gained between 0.3 per cent and 1.4 per cent on Thursday while Masan and Vincom Retail shares dropped 0.6 per cent and 0.8 per cent.

bizhub

 



RELATED STOCK CODE (7)

NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Shares rise for fourth consecutive day

Vietnamese shares extended their gains for the fourth day in a row on Thursday on the back of a surge in banking stocks during the at-the-closing (ATC) session.

'Vin' stocks and large-caps push market

Shares extended gains to four days in a row on the growth of stocks in the “Vin” family and on the strength of a handful of other large-caps.

Shares extend as money flows into large-caps

Vietnamese stocks extended their gains on Wednesday as buying demand focused on individual blue-chips.

P/B, P/E ratios at five-year low, banks should be good options

With average price-to-earnings (P/E) and price-to-book (P/B) ratios at a five-year low, bank stocks are among the good options available for investors right now...

Shares narrow gains due to selling forces

Vietnamese stocks struggled to extend their rally on Wednesday morning as some individual large-caps suffered strong selling pressure.

Shares advance on vaccine trial success

Vietnamese shares advanced on Tuesday in line with world stocks thanks to optimism for a global economic recovery after a successful experiment for a coronavirus...

UPCoM firms suspended for failing to release audited reports

The Ha Noi Stock Exchange (HNX) has suspended 21 companies on the Unlisted Public Company Market (UPCoM) for three days over failure to release audited 2019...

Shares jump following world market rise

Vietnamese shares followed Wall Street higher on Tuesday morning amid hopes that the global economy would soon recover thanks to a successful experiment of an...

Energy firms drive VN market

Strong gains of oil futures on Monday helped boost the Vietnamese stock market after a three-day decline.

Large-caps drive market up, Hoa Phat shares jump 6.4%

Shares increased slightly on Monday morning, driven by a few large-cap stocks.

TRENDING


MOST READ


Back To Top