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KSE-100 Index ends flat with over 100 points gain

KSE-100 Index ends flat with over 100 points gain

The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) closed relatively flat as investors remained cautious ahead of the FY26 budget, with the benchmark KSE-100 Index settling with a gain of over 100 points on Tuesday.
At close, the benchmark index settled at 118,332.90, an increase of 111.78 points or 0.09%.
'A wait-and-see approach dominated sentiment, with participants largely staying on the sidelines in the absence of clear market moving triggers,' said Ismail Iqbal Securities.
On Monday, the KSE-100 index fell sharply as investors reacted to the postponed budget and uncertainty over the IMF's approval of the circular debt plan. The benchmark index dropped by 881.55 points, or 0.74%, settling at 118,221 points.
Internationally, the Asian shares eased on Tuesday, though US futures rose after President Donald Trump delayed his threatened 50% duties on European Union shipments, while the US dollar was headed for a fifth straight monthly loss.
In Japan, yields on super-long government bonds fell early in the session, retreating from their all-time highs in the wake of last week's heavy selloff in the bonds.
Markets in the US were closed on Monday for a holiday, making for thin overnight trading conditions and leaving investors latching on to lingering optimism from Trump's U-turn on his threat to impose 50% tariffs on imports from the EU next month, restoring a July 9 deadline.
Nasdaq futures were up 1.26% in Asia while S&P 500 futures similarly rose 1.11%. FTSE futures advanced 0.94%. UK markets were also closed on Monday.
Results from Nvidia are due on Wednesday, where the AI darling is expected to report a 65.9% jump in first-quarter revenue.
Elsewhere, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 0.17%, while Japan's Nikkei similarly fell 0.15%.
China's CSI300 blue-chip index edged 0.06% lower while the Shanghai Composite Index was little changed. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index dipped 0.1%.
Focus for investors this week will also be on speeches from a slew of Federal Reserve policymakers and Friday's US core PCE price index, for clues on the outlook for US rates.

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