
Stocks slump in panic selling
Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) faced a sharp sell-off on Monday as escalating geopolitical tensions rattled investor confidence and triggered panic selling. Mounting fears of retaliation following the US attack on Iran spurred concerns of supply disruptions, inflationary pressure and a downbeat export outlook.
The benchmark KSE-100 index plunged to the intra-day low of 4,135 points, touching 115,887 before trimming some of the losses and settling at 116,167, a plunge of 3,856 points, or 3.21%. It marked one of the steepest single-day declines in recent months.
Analysts warned of continued volatility over unfolding developments in the Middle East, however, they added that global markets were yet to react, despite the fact that they were facing worst-case scenarios with oil, gold and the US dollar index only rising around 1%, 0.25% and 0.6%, respectively.
According to Ahsan Mehanti of Arif Habib Corp, stocks slumped amid a sell-off in global equities due to escalation in Middle East tensions. Supply disruptions driven by expected retaliation to the US attack on Iran contributed to a weak export outlook and high inflation worries, which played a major role in selling activity at the PSX, he said.
At the end of trading, the benchmark KSE-100 index recorded a sharp decrease of 3,855.77 points, or 3.21%, and settled at 116,167.47.
In its review, Topline Securities commented that the PSX experienced a subdued trading session in line with the cautious mood seen across global markets. The KSE-100 index dropped sharply, falling as much as 4,135 points during intra-day trading, before wiping off some of the losses to settle at 116,167, down 3,856 points.
Investor sentiment was dampened by rising geopolitical tensions, especially the intensifying conflict between Israel and Iran, which led to heightened uncertainty and widespread risk aversion. The nervousness triggered broad-based panic selling, it observed. Topline added that major index-heavy stocks, including Engro Holdings, Pakistan Petroleum, Lucky Cement, OGDC and Mari Petroleum, were among the top laggards, dragging the index down by 1,054 points.
In its commentary, Arif Habib Limited (AHL) stated that the week started with strong selling following escalation in the Middle East over the weekend. Only five shares rose while 93 fell, with Engro Holdings (-5.02%), Pakistan Petroleum (-6.3%) and Lucky Cement (-4.02%) being the biggest drags.
Oil prices were being closely watched where a $5-per-barrel increase was estimated to raise Pakistan's annual import bill by $996 million and add nearly 22 basis points to the headline inflation, AHL noted.
The brokerage house observed that the KSE-100 "is now trading back below 120,000, which will serve as resistance". Equities would react to news flow from the Middle East, however, it should be noted that global markets had not yet reacted to an extreme situation. Oil prices were up less than 1%, gold was only marginally higher by 0.25% while the dollar index was up 0.6%, AHL pointed out. "Any diplomatic resolution this week can see risk assets rally sharply."
JS Global analyst Mubashir Anis Naviwala remarked that the PSX suffered heavy losses amid a sharp sell-off, opening with a steep 2,000-point gap down amid panic selling. The index failed to recover throughout the session, touching the low of 115,887 and eventually closing with a massive loss of 3,856 points at 116,167.
Total traded volume stood at 595 million shares, with top activity in WorldCall Telecom, Sui Southern Gas Company, Pervez Ahmed Consultancy, K-Electric and Kohinoor Spinning Mills, he noted.
The sharp decline reflected heightened fears driven by uncertainty and external pressures. "We advise investors to remain cautious, focusing on risk management and selective accumulation," the analyst added.
Overall trading volumes increased to 595 million shares compared with Friday's tally of 421.6 million. The value of shares traded was Rs23.5 billion. Shares of 468 companies were traded. Of these, 56 stocks closed higher, 386 fell and 26 remained unchanged.
WorldCall Telecom was the volume leader with trading in 53.3 million shares, falling Rs0.10 to close at Rs1.35. It was followed by Sui Southern Gas Company with 36 million shares, losing Rs4.2 to close at Rs38.8 and Pervez Ahmed Consultancy with 24 million shares, dropping Rs0.12 to close at Rs2.72. Foreign investors bought shares worth Rs162 million, the National Clearing Company reported.

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Business Recorder
27 minutes ago
- Business Recorder
PSX plunges amid broad sell-off on ME tensions
KARACH: The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) witnessed a sharp and broad-based sell-off across nearly all the sectors on Monday, as panic gripped investors due to the escalated Middle East crisis. The benchmark KSE-100 Index plunged by 3,856 points or 3.21 percent to settle at 116,167.47 points on Monday, a sharp drop from the previous close of 120,023.24 points on Friday. During the trading the index remained in negative territory with an intraday low level of 115,887.49 points. BRIndex100 also plunged by 1,159 points or 8.96 percent, closing at 11,774 points on Monday with a total volume of 462.59 million shares. Meanwhile, the BRIndex30 also posted heavy losses, falling by 2,109.55 points or 5.69 percent to settle at 34,974 points. The total volume on BRIndex30 was 302 million shares. Topline Securities stated that PSX experienced a subdued trading session, in line with the cautious mood seen across global markets. Investor sentiment was dampened by rising geopolitical tensions, especially the intensifying conflict between Iran and Israel, which led to heightened uncertainty and widespread risk aversion. This nervousness triggered broad-based panic selling, it added. Despite the market's heavy losses, trading activity picked up notably as speculative investors and day traders rushed to take advantage of falling prices. The total turnover in the ready market surged to 595.01 million shares, up from 421.64 million shares in the previous session. In terms of traded value, the market recorded Rs 23.48 billion compared to Rs 15.65 billion a session earlier. Market capitalization, however, took a severe hit. The total value of all listed companies dropped to Rs 14.063 trillion from Rs 14.536 trillion in the previous session, wiping out roughly Rs 473 billion from the equity market in a single day. This erosion reflects the depth of selling pressure and investors' unwillingness to hold positions amid heightened uncertainty. Among individual stocks in the ready market, WorldCall Telecom remained the volume leader with a turnover of 53.30 million shares. The stock lost ground, closing at Rs 1.35. Sui Southern Gas followed with a turnover of 36 million shares to close at Rs 38.80. Pervez Ahmed Company traded 24 million shares, registering a modest increase and closing at Rs 2.72. Despite the overall bearish trend, a few stocks managed to post gains. Philip Morris Pakistan Limited surged by Rs 35.38 to close at Rs 1,136.01, while Faisal Spinning Mills climbed Rs 21.26, ending at Rs 335.17. On the other hand, several heavyweight stocks saw their prices collapse. PIA Holding Company LimitedB tumbled by a staggering Rs 1,115.38 to Rs 10,038.45, and Unilever Pakistan Foods fell by Rs 245.72 to Rs 22,900.00. Market breadth remained overwhelmingly negative throughout the day. Out of 468 companies traded in the ready market, only 56 managed to register gains, while 386 closed in the red, and 26 remained unchanged. The scale of declines indicated a widespread sell off, with most sectors under pressure amid growing investor concerns. The BR Automobile Assembler Index closed at 19,385.55, plummeting by 852.08 points, or 4.21 percent. Trading activity in the sector saw a total turnover of 3.93 million shares. The BR Cement Index also faced considerable pressure, concluding the trading session at 9,606.41 points. This represented a decrease of 605.15 points, a 5.93 percent drop. The sector's volume reached 59.79 million shares. Among the hardest hit was the BR Commercial Banks Index, which tumbled to 31,311.62 points, shedding a significant 5361 points for a percentage change of 14.62 percent. The banking sector recorded a turnover of 47.98 million shares. The BR Power Generation and Distribution Index down by 775.1 points, or 3.8 percent, finishing at 19,646.86 points. Its total turnover for the day stood at 31.02 million shares. The BR Oil and Gas Index also saw a notable decline, settling at 11,077.78 points after a drop of 483 points, or 4.18 percent. Volume in this sector was robust at 59.14 million shares. Finally, the BR Technology & Communication Index closed at 2,600.45 points, experiencing a significant fall of 191.09 points, equating to a 6.85 percent decline. This index recorded 87.18 million shares traded. In its commentary, JS Global said that PSX suffers heavy losses amid sharp sell-off, opening with a steep 2,000- point gap down amid panic selling. The index failed to recover throughout the session while the sharp decline reflects heightened fear driven by uncertainty and external pressures, it added. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025


Express Tribune
5 hours ago
- Express Tribune
Stocks slump in panic selling
Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) faced a sharp sell-off on Monday as escalating geopolitical tensions rattled investor confidence and triggered panic selling. Mounting fears of retaliation following the US attack on Iran spurred concerns of supply disruptions, inflationary pressure and a downbeat export outlook. The benchmark KSE-100 index plunged to the intra-day low of 4,135 points, touching 115,887 before trimming some of the losses and settling at 116,167, a plunge of 3,856 points, or 3.21%. It marked one of the steepest single-day declines in recent months. Analysts warned of continued volatility over unfolding developments in the Middle East, however, they added that global markets were yet to react, despite the fact that they were facing worst-case scenarios with oil, gold and the US dollar index only rising around 1%, 0.25% and 0.6%, respectively. According to Ahsan Mehanti of Arif Habib Corp, stocks slumped amid a sell-off in global equities due to escalation in Middle East tensions. Supply disruptions driven by expected retaliation to the US attack on Iran contributed to a weak export outlook and high inflation worries, which played a major role in selling activity at the PSX, he said. At the end of trading, the benchmark KSE-100 index recorded a sharp decrease of 3,855.77 points, or 3.21%, and settled at 116,167.47. In its review, Topline Securities commented that the PSX experienced a subdued trading session in line with the cautious mood seen across global markets. The KSE-100 index dropped sharply, falling as much as 4,135 points during intra-day trading, before wiping off some of the losses to settle at 116,167, down 3,856 points. Investor sentiment was dampened by rising geopolitical tensions, especially the intensifying conflict between Israel and Iran, which led to heightened uncertainty and widespread risk aversion. The nervousness triggered broad-based panic selling, it observed. Topline added that major index-heavy stocks, including Engro Holdings, Pakistan Petroleum, Lucky Cement, OGDC and Mari Petroleum, were among the top laggards, dragging the index down by 1,054 points. In its commentary, Arif Habib Limited (AHL) stated that the week started with strong selling following escalation in the Middle East over the weekend. Only five shares rose while 93 fell, with Engro Holdings (-5.02%), Pakistan Petroleum (-6.3%) and Lucky Cement (-4.02%) being the biggest drags. Oil prices were being closely watched where a $5-per-barrel increase was estimated to raise Pakistan's annual import bill by $996 million and add nearly 22 basis points to the headline inflation, AHL noted. The brokerage house observed that the KSE-100 "is now trading back below 120,000, which will serve as resistance". Equities would react to news flow from the Middle East, however, it should be noted that global markets had not yet reacted to an extreme situation. Oil prices were up less than 1%, gold was only marginally higher by 0.25% while the dollar index was up 0.6%, AHL pointed out. "Any diplomatic resolution this week can see risk assets rally sharply." JS Global analyst Mubashir Anis Naviwala remarked that the PSX suffered heavy losses amid a sharp sell-off, opening with a steep 2,000-point gap down amid panic selling. The index failed to recover throughout the session, touching the low of 115,887 and eventually closing with a massive loss of 3,856 points at 116,167. Total traded volume stood at 595 million shares, with top activity in WorldCall Telecom, Sui Southern Gas Company, Pervez Ahmed Consultancy, K-Electric and Kohinoor Spinning Mills, he noted. The sharp decline reflected heightened fears driven by uncertainty and external pressures. "We advise investors to remain cautious, focusing on risk management and selective accumulation," the analyst added. Overall trading volumes increased to 595 million shares compared with Friday's tally of 421.6 million. The value of shares traded was Rs23.5 billion. Shares of 468 companies were traded. Of these, 56 stocks closed higher, 386 fell and 26 remained unchanged. WorldCall Telecom was the volume leader with trading in 53.3 million shares, falling Rs0.10 to close at Rs1.35. It was followed by Sui Southern Gas Company with 36 million shares, losing Rs4.2 to close at Rs38.8 and Pervez Ahmed Consultancy with 24 million shares, dropping Rs0.12 to close at Rs2.72. Foreign investors bought shares worth Rs162 million, the National Clearing Company reported.


Business Recorder
14 hours ago
- Business Recorder
KSE-100 nosedives nearly 3,900 points as US-Iran tensions spike
Intense selling pressure gripped the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) on Monday amid escalating geopolitical tensions following a US attack on Iran, with the benchmark KSE-100 settling with a loss of nearly 3,900 points. Bearish sentiments prevailed throughout the trading session, dragging the benchmark index to an intra-day low of 115,887.49. At close, the KSE-100 Index settled at 116,167.47 level, a decrease of 3,855.77 points or 3.21%. This is the lowest level seen after May 9, 2025, said Arif Habib Limited (AHL), in a note. Across-the-board selling was observed, especially in key sectors including automobile assemblers, oil and gas exploration companies, OMCs, power generation, refinery and commercial banks. Index-heavy stocks, including HUBCO, OGDC, PPL, POL, MARI, and PSO, settled in the red. During the previous week, the PSX endured turbulence as a combination of rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, volatile international commodity prices, and mixed domestic economic indicators rattled investor sentiment. The benchmark KSE-100 Index remained in sharp retreat from its recent highs. On a week-on-week basis, the benchmark settled at 120,023.23 points, reflecting a 1.7% decline compared to the previous week's close at 122,143.57 points. Internationally, shares slipped in Asia on Monday and oil prices briefly hit five-month highs as investors anxiously waited to see if Iran would retaliate against US attacks on its nuclear sites, with resulting risks to global activity and inflation. Early moves were contained, with the dollar getting only a minor safe-haven bid and no sign of panic selling across markets. Oil prices were up around 2.8%, but off their initial peaks. Optimists are hoping Iran may back down now that its nuclear ambitions have been curtailed, or that regime change might bring a less hostile government to power there. Stocks slide, oil and gold jump after Israel strikes Iran One key factor will be access through the Strait of Hormuz, which is only about 33 km (21 miles) wide at its narrowest point and through which around a quarter of global oil trade and 20% of liquefied natural gas supply passes. For now, Brent was up a relatively restrained 2.7% at $79.12 a barrel, while U.S. crude rose 2.8% to $75.98. Elsewhere in commodity markets, gold edged down 0.1% to $3,363 an ounce. Share markets were proving resilient so far, with S&P 500 futures off a moderate 0.5% and Nasdaq futures down 0.6%. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.5, and Japan's Nikkei eased 0.9%. Europe and Japan are heavily reliant on imported oil and LNG, whereas the United States is a net exporter. Meanwhile, the Pakistani rupee posted a marginal decline against the US dollar, depreciating 0.06% during trading in the interbank market on Monday. At close, the local currency settled at 283.87, a loss of Re0.17 against the greenback. Volume on the all-share index increased to 595.01 million from 421.64 million recorded in the previous close. The value of shares improved to Rs23.49 billion from Rs15.65 billion in the previous session. WorldCall Telecom was the volume leader with 53.30 million shares, followed by Sui South Gas with 35.99 million shares, and Pervez Ahmed Co with 24.02 million shares. Shares of 468 companies were traded on Monday, of which 56 registered an increase, 386 recorded a fall, while 26 remained unchanged.