
War tensions trigger PSX slide
Shares of 340 companies were traded. At the end of the day, 93 stocks closed higher, 233 declined and 14 remained unchanged. PHOTO: FILE
Listen to article
The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) continued its downtrend and endured a turbulent start to Wednesday's session, with the KSE-100 Index nosediving over 6,500 points shortly after the open, dragged lower by heightened border tensions.
The market briefly touched a low of 107,007.68 before staging a partial rebound, ultimately climbing to an intra-day high of 112,457.38 and closing the day over 3,500 points down.
Selling was broad-based, with intense pressure seen in key economic sectors such as banking, energy exploration, oil marketing, power generation, and refining.
AKD Securities Director Research Muhammad Awais Ashraf told The Express Tribune recent Military escalation between Pakistan and India has shaken investor confidence, though some see a buying opportunity, citing low war risk due to nuclear deterrents and urgent external financing pressures.
JS Global Head of Equity Research Waqas Ghani said the index dropped 6,500 points before closing 3,559 lower, with the rebound showing investor confidence in fundamentals and hopes of de-escalation improving sentiment ahead.
Arif Habib Corp MD Ahsan Mehanti wrote in his brief note, "Stocks closed sharply lower amid escalating border tensions between Pakistan and India, and security unrest following Indian strikes."
Weak rupee and uncertain economic outlook amid the Pak-India conflict over trade ties played the role of catalyst in the bearish close, he remarked.
At the close of trading, the benchmark KSE-100 index posted a massive loss of 3,559.48 points, or -3.13%, and settled at 110,009.03.
Topline Securities wrote in its review that the benchmark index saw significant volatility, dropping by 6,561 points in early trade amid broad-based panic selling following an overnight military clash between Pakistan and India.
The downward trajectory of the index was largely driven by negative contributions from key stocks such as cement, energy, bank, and technology, which collectively dragged the index down by 967 points, Topline noted.
Arif Habib Limited (AHL) wrote in its report said that the KSE-100 index saw a sharp decline of 3.13% day-on-day, precisely hitting the 110k downside target.
Only 5 shares advanced while 95 declined. Lucky Cement (-5.69%), Hub Power (-4.64%), and United Bank (-2.6%), were the majors laggards on index's fall.
On the other hand, Pakgen Power (2.48%), Nestle Pakistan (1.63%), and Murree Brewery (2.22%), resisted the broader negative trend, it said.
Geopolitical tensions escalated following reports of Indian strikes inside Pakistan that discouraged investor sentiment.
Wednesday's session also opened with another "New Day Opening Gap" — the third visible gap since the index peaked at 120k - reinforcing clear bearish order flow, AHL added.
Insight Securities Head of Sales Ali Najib wrote that border tensions rattled investor confidence, triggering panic selling even before the market officially opened. Though the index plunged over 5.7% within minutes of opening, value hunters swiftly stepped in to help market stage a partial recovery.
Overall trading volumes increased to 550.2 million shares compared with Tuesday's tally of 420.6 million.
Shares of 447 companies were traded. Of these, 49 stocks closed higher, 356 fell and 42 remained unchanged.
WorldCall Telecom was the volume leader with trading in 53.7 million shares, falling Rs0.11 to close at Rs1.22.It was followed by The Bank of Punjab with 35.8 million shares, losing Rs0.61 to close at Rs9.18 and Sui South Gas Company with 26.8 million shares, dipping by Rs3.61 to close at Rs32.47.
During the day, foreign investors bought shares worth Rs194.7 billion, the NCCPL reported.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Express Tribune
6 hours ago
- Express Tribune
PSX makes history on macro boost
Listen to article The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) sustained its bullish streak in the outgoing week, with the benchmark KSE-100 index surging to an all-time high of 121,798 points on June 4, before settling at 121,641, marking a weekly gain of 1,950 points (+1.63%). The rally was fueled by renewed investor confidence following successful budget talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the Asian Development Bank's (ADB) approval of a $800 million financing package and the government's finalisation of a Rs1.275 trillion circular debt resolution deal with banks – a significant development for the energy sector. Macroeconomic indicators further supported sentiment as petroleum sales jumped 10% year-on-year (YoY) in May 2025, the Consumer Price Index (CPI)-based inflation eased to 3.5% and the trade deficit narrowed 23% month-on-month (MoM). However, the State Bank's reserves dipped slightly by $7 million, settling at $11.5 billion. On a day-on-day basis, the PSX attempted once again on Monday to decisively breach the key psychological barrier of 120,000 at close but fell short, ending the session at 118,878, reflecting a decline of 813 points. It came due to profit-taking pressure at record levels. On Tuesday, the market soared to an all-time high above 120,000 points as investor optimism grew following the approval of a $800 million loan by the ADB for Pakistan's public finance programme and the government's approval of a Rs880 billion Public Sector Development Programme (PSDP). The benchmark KSE-100 index recorded an increase of 1,573 points and settled at 120,451. The bourse continued its record-breaking run on Wednesday, with the index closing at an all-time high of 121,799, up 1,348 points. Investor sentiment remained upbeat ahead of the federal budget, buoyed by expectations of fiscal relief measures and encouraging macroeconomic indicators. However, the PSX witnessed a volatile session on Thursday, with the benchmark index retreating after hitting record highs a day earlier. Investor sentiment turned cautious due to concerns about stringent conditions linked to a new IMF programme, including the proposed enforcement of agriculture income tax and the IMF's opposition to provincial energy subsidies. The PSX ended the day on a negative note at 121,641, down 158 points. "Building on last week's bullish trend, the market picked up pace, with the KSE-100 reaching an all-time high of 121,798 points on June 4, driven by buying interest across different sectors," Arif Habib Limited (AHL) wrote in its weekly report. Positive sentiment followed Pakistan's successful budget talks with the IMF, alongside the ADB's approval of a $800 million financing package. The government also finalised a Rs1.275 trillion circular debt resolution deal with banks, a significant move for the power sector, AHL said. Meanwhile, during May 2025, petroleum sales rose 10% YoY, inflation came in at 3.5% and the trade deficit narrowed 23% MoM. The State Bank's reserves declined $7 million to $11.5 billion. The market closed at 121,641, depicting a surge of 1,950 points, or 1.63% week-on-week (WoW). Sector-wise, the positive contribution came from commercial banks (1,044 points), power generation and distribution (369 points), fertiliser (206 points), food and personal care products (95 points) and chemicals (60 points). Meanwhile, the sectors that contributed negatively were technology and communication (82 points), automobile assemblers (29 points), miscellaneous (24 points), cable and electrical goods (10 points) and Real Estate Investment Trusts (five points). Scrip-wise, the positive contributors were Pakgen Power (327 points), Bank AL Habib (208 points), NBP (165 points), HBL (160 points) and Fauji Fertiliser Company (158 points). Foreigners' selling was witnessed during the week, which came in at $14.7 million compared to net selling of $5.56 million last week. Average volumes arrived at 660 million shares (-0.2% WoW) while average traded value settled at $98.6 million (up 24.9%), AHL added. Syed Danyal Hussain of JS Global wrote that the KSE-100 index hit an all-time high during the outgoing week, closing at a record level of 121,641 points, up 1.6% WoW. The rally was largely driven by optimism surrounding a potential agreement with the IMF, as indicated by the prime minister, which spurred pre-budget sentiment, he said. The government, following the IMF's endorsement, finalised a Rs1.275 trillion financing agreement with 18 commercial banks to address the power sector's circular debt. On the sectoral front, local cement dispatches rose 9% YoY in May 2025, bringing 11MFY25 volumes to nearly flat levels. Meanwhile, a 26% rise in exports during 11MFY25 lifted total cement sales to a growth of 2%, he added.


Business Recorder
16 hours ago
- Business Recorder
India, central Asian countries express interest in joint rare earths exploration
NEW DELHI: India and five central Asian countries have expressed interest in joint exploration of rare earths and critical minerals, they said in a joint statement on Friday after the fourth meeting of the India-Central Asia Dialogue, held in New Delhi. India plans rare earth magnet incentives as supply threat mounts They also called upon relevant authorities for an early meeting of the India-Central Asia Rare Earth Forum.


Business Recorder
18 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Indian rupee ends higher as rate-cut boost for equities blunts dollar strength
MUMBAI: The Indian rupee strengthened modestly on Friday as the Reserve Bank of India's steepest rate cut in five years boosted local equities, helping the South Asian currency eke out a gain even as the dollar firmed against major peers. The rupee closed at 85.6250 against the U.S. dollar, up from its close at 85.79 in the previous session. The rupee declined 0.2% on the week. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) cut its key repo rate by 50 basis points on Friday and slashed the cash reserve ratio (CRR) for banks as low inflation gave policymakers room to focus on supporting growth. India's benchmark equity indexes, the BSE Sensex and Nifty 50, about 1% each on Friday, posting their best one-day gain in two weeks as the rate cut fuelled domestic growth expectations. India's benchmark 10-year bond whipsawed between gains and losses as traders digested the central bank's policy moves, including a shift in stance from 'accommodative' to 'neutral.' Indian rupee falters as bullish exits, dollar strength collide The yield on the benchmark paper was last quoted a tad higher at 6.2237%. Meanwhile, dollar-rupee forward premiums fell in reaction to the rate cut with the 1-year implied yield dropping 10 basis points to 1.81%. The Indian central bank's 'larger-than-expected 50 bps rate cut and 100 bps cut in the cash reserve ratio should support INR,' DBS said in a Friday note. 'We will consider lowering USD/INR's forecast if the US Federal Reserve pivots towards a rate cut later this year and sets the stage for more USD weakness,' the noted added. On the day, the dollar index was up 0.3% at 98.9 in the run-up to release of closely watched U.S. non-farm payrolls data which will offer cues on how the world's largest economy is faring in the face of trade policy spurred uncertainty.