Vietnam's stock market remains resilient in 2024

Aug 8th at 08:57
08-08-2024 08:57:32+07:00

Vietnam's stock market remains resilient in 2024

Vietnam's stock market continues to show resiliency in 2024 with the VN-Index up about 10 per cent year-to-date, driven by an expected 19 per cent increase in 2024 earnings, and strong buying by local retail investors.

 

According to a report released by VinaCapital on July 31, the rebound in earnings growth from a 5 per cent drop last year to 19 per cent growth this year is supported by an acceleration in Vietnam's GDP growth from 5.1 per cent in 2023 to an expected 6.5 per cent in 2024.

The enthusiasm of local investors to buy stocks stems from the fact that deposit rates in Vietnam are still below 5 per cent – even for 12-month deposits – and that the country's real estate market is still somewhat frozen, making the stock market and gold attractive to local investors.

Further to that point, retail investors dominate stock market trading in Vietnam, accounting for 90 per cent of daily trading value on average this year, absorbing an estimated $2.4 billion worth of Vietnamese stocks that foreign investors have sold year-to-date (following $1 billion last year).

Foreign investor selling has been prompted by profit taking, concerns about the circa 4 per cent year-to-date depreciation of the VND, and because some foreign investors are taking a "wait and see" approach in light of recent political developments in the country.

The report also pointed out that a quarter of foreign selling transpired via exchange-traded fund (ETF) redemptions, including the dissolution of Blackrock's iShares Frontier ETF, which was liquidated in June (monthly foreign net sales of Vietnamese stocks hit a record-high in June, driven in part by the liquidation of the ETF). In the aftermath of that foreign selling, the proportion of Vietnam's stock market owned by foreign investors fell to its lowest level in a decade.

However, selling linked to the liquidation of that ETF has now finished, and some sophisticated foreign investors have been taking advantage of foreign selling to increase their long-term strategic investments in Vietnam. For example, Capital Group, Fidelity, and other foreign institutional investors reportedly bought a large stake in ACB, Vietnam's leading retail lender, earlier this year.

Michael Kokalari, chief economist of VinaCapital, said, "We expect earnings growth to accelerate from an estimated 9 per cent on-year in the first half of 2024 to 33 per cent in the second half of 2024, driven in part by the nascent recovery of the country's real estate market. The initial thawing in Vietnam's real estate market started in December 2023, and the ongoing recovery has gained considerable momentum since then. We estimate that real estate transaction activity surged by about 40 per cent on-year in the first half of 2024, driven by pent-up demand and a series of laws to revive the market recently enacted by the government."

"Consequently, we expect the earnings of real estate developers (excluding Vinhomes) to surge 80 per cent this year. Furthermore, a healthier real estate market should support banks earnings' by boosting credit growth and reducing asset quality concerns /credit costs. The recovery of Vietnam's real estate sector is likely to further accelerate next year, which is one of the reasons that VN-Index earnings will grow by another 17 per cent in 2024," he added.

The wide variation in the performance of the sectors in Vietnam's stock market is typical and presents ample opportunities for active managers. For example, funds are overweight in the IT sector, which is being buoyed by global enthusiasm for AI-related stocks.

Consumer discretionary stock prices have also performed well this year because the earnings of those companies are expected to grow 55 per cent after having dropped by 42 per cent last year.

This rebound stems from the fact that domestic consumption (excluding foreign tourists) was very weak in 2023 (when the sluggish real estate market and layoffs at FDI factories weighed heavily on Vietnamese consumer spending) but has recovered this year. Similar idiosyncratic factors explain the performance dispersion among other sectors.

vir



RELATED STOCK CODE (2)

NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Indices tick up, foreign cap sees big outflow

Benchmark indices extended gains on Wednesday, supported by strong rallies of Vin-family stocks, while foreign investors net sold a significant value of over...

Việt Nam, Singapore promote cooperation in stock market

The Vietnam Stock Exchange (VNX) and the Singapore Exchange (SGX Group) on August 5 signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on boosting their communication...

Market in sharp decline as VN-Index falls below 1,200 points

The stock market started the new week with extreme volatility, as the VN-Index suffered its steepest decline since mid-April, while trading volume surged compared...

Vietnam, Singapore strengthen partnership in stock exchange operations

The two sides will focus on cooperation in digital transformation, cybersecurity, tax management, and market operations.

​Vietnamese stocks nosedive, $8bn vaporizes

The Ho Chi Minh City Stock Exchange (HoSE) lost nearly VND200 trillion (US$8 billion) in market capitalization amid a stock market crash on Monday.

The market requires a prolonged period to reach stability.

The stock market experienced strong fluctuations during the transitional trading week between July and August (from 29 July to 2 August).

Foreign investors end five-month net buying streak in July on HNX

The Hà Nội Stock Exchange (HNX) experienced declines in both liquidity and price in July, with the HNX-Index tumbling in the second half of the month.

Market ends the week with a recovery session

Shares rallied on Friday as the recovery of large-cap stocks helped the VN-Index regain 9.64 points after the previous session's sharp decline, while foreign...

VinaCapital upbeat about Việt Nam’s stock market

Leading investment fund VinaCapital remains confident in the Vietnamese stock market in the last months of this year, despite foreign investors’ heavy net selling.

Market suffers strong selling pressure while foreign investors return to net buying

The market opened August with a sharp decline, dealing a heavy blow to the previous session's recovery efforts.

TRENDING


MOST READ


Back To Top