Showing posts with label shares. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shares. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Market plunges for third straight day

Investors watch stock prices at Vincom Securities Co. The VN-Index lost 3.34 points, or 0.73%, from a day earlier to close at 454.25 on Tuesday - Photo: Le Toan
HCMC – The local market declined for the third consecutive session on Tuesday, with the VN-Index shedding 3.34 points, or 0.73%, from the day earlier to close at 454.25 although liquidity improved sharply.

The market opened briefly higher again but subsequently fell back into negative territory and traded lower during the second matching phase to hit a low of 451.82 before rebounding slightly at the close.

On the Hochiminh Stock Exchange, demand surged 27.5% against the previous session to 53.8 million shares while supply rocketed 42.7% to over 64 million shares. Closing the day, the market’s total trading volume was 33.5 million shares worth VND884 billion, up 26% and 28% from a day earlier respectively.

Only 32 stocks advanced on Tuesday while 192 others closed in the red, including one stock hitting its ceiling price and 26 issues dropping to the floor prices.

Ocean Group Co. (OGC) took the lead in terms of liquidity but it lost 3.7% to VND28,200 per share on volume of 1.6 million shares. Vietnam Mechanization Electrification & Construction Co. (MCG) was the second biggest traded stock, adding 2.4% against the previous day to VND20,000 with 1.3 million shares changing hands.

Saigon Machinery Spare Parts Co. (SMA) began to trade over eight million shares on the bourse on Tuesday and it closed at VND15,000 against the reference price of VND16,200 with only 3,200 shares traded.

Foreign participation also recovered as investors acquired 3.8 million shares worth VND148 billion and offloaded 1.8 million shares worth 67 billion, making up 16.7% and 7.6% of the market’s buying and selling value respectively.

The Hanoi market also suffered three losing sessions in a row on higher turnover of VND587 billion. The HNX-Index fell 2.33 points, or 1.96%, against the previous session to close at 116.56.

There were 42 stocks rising while 258 others dropping back, of which one stock touched the ceiling price and 24 stocks plunged to the floor prices. Foreigners were slight net buyers again, accounting for 1.9% and 1.2% of the market’s buying and selling value respectively.

Vietnam International Securities Co. (VIS) in its report said investors once again became impatient and boosted selling towards the end of the session.

“We see that they were too cautious and declined to acquire shares at high prices, mostly because of strong fluctuations of gold and dollar prices. The Hanoi market also failed to improve as most investors still stayed on the sidelines,” VIS said.

HCMC Securities Corp. (HSC) said the buying size was more likely positioning than a major wave of buying. “However, with foreign limits in a host of blue-chips close to being full the smart money is picking up shares now while they can. We keep our positive medium and long-term stance while remaining cautious short term,” HSC said.

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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Volume up, shares off in HCM City

The Wall Street rally overnight could not prevent the VN-Index from shedding 0.73 percent on Oct. 19 to close at 454.25.


About 198 of 268 listed stocks on the HCM City Stock Exchange declined
will – 22 hitting the floor price. They were Hari Hamico Mineral (KSS),
down 1.5 percent to 29,400 VND; Sao Vang Rubber (SVR) and Tai Nguyen
Corp (TNT), each down 1.2 percent to 24,300 VND and 23,500 VND,
respectively.


Only three blue chips managed to gain,
including property trader Vincom (VIC), up 3.17 percent; Masan Group
(MSN), up 0.9 percent; and Bao Viet Holdings (BVH), up 0.79 percent.
Foreigners were the main force behind stock rallies, buying 187,190 BVH
shares, 97,250 VIC shares and 23,630 MSN shares.


Total volume on the day's trade on the southern market rose to 32 million shares, worth 880.2 billion VND (45.1 million USD).


In Hanoi , the HNX-Index surged 1.96 percent to 116.56 points, with decliners outnumbering advancers by 253 to 39.


No blue chips gained, while only two stocks hit the ceiling – Hanoi
Textbooks Printing (TPH), up 0.5 percent to 8,700 VND; and PetroVietnam
Southern Gas (PGS), up 2.5 percent to 38,300 VND.


Volume
of trade reached 27.8 million shares, up from 17.3 million on October
18, posting a turnover of 587.5 billion VND (44 million USD).

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Saturday, February 19, 2011

Indices slip on sluggish trade

Shares closed off slightly for a second day on the HCM Stock Exchange,
with the VN-Index slipping by 0.17 percent on Oct.18 to end the session
at 457.59 points.


Trades continued sluggish, with only 26.4 million shares changing hands, worth just 686.5 billion VND (32.3 million USD).


Vietnam Mechanisation Electrification and Construction (MCG), the
most-active share on the day with 1.6 million traded, was also the day's
top gainer, closing up 4.8 percent as its shareholders commenced a
planned purchase of 3.2 million shares.


Buying by
foreign investors began slowing down, as they just picked only a net of
about 100,000 shares on the HCM City market, worth a net of 11 billion
VND (564,102 USD). They were net buyers on the Hanoi market, but by
a volume of just 354,100 shares, worth only 8.2 billion VND (420,512
USD).


On the Hanoi Stock Exchange, the HNX-Index
also fell for a second day, ending the session down 0.67 percent to
118.89 points.


The value of trades grew by 4.2
percent over Oct. 15 to 371.2 billion VND (19 million USD), on a total
volume of 17.3 million shares. PetroVietnam Construction (PVX) was the
most-active share on the northern bourse, with 1.7 million traded.


Ocean Bank deputy director Nguyen Hong Hai said that stock markets
were coping with shortage of new capital inflows as both major
institutional investors saw not many changes in market situation.


Tightened credit contributed to limit capital inflows, even as the
number of shares listed on the market was expected to continue
increasing through the end of the year, Hai said.


Vietnam International Securities Co analysts predicted that indices
would fluctuate with a narrow band this week, as economic fundamentals
were sound enough to prevent a steep dip in the market./.

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Saturday, February 12, 2011

Sacomreal to list 100 million shares in Vietnam, chairman says

Sacomreal to list 100 million shares in Vietnam, chairman saysSaigon Thuong Tin Real Estate Joint- Stock Co., a unit of the fourth-biggest bank on Vietnam’s main stock market, plans to list 100 million shares on the Hanoi Stock Exchange next month, the unit’s chairman said.

The shares will start trading on Nov. 9, Dang Hong Anh said in a telephone interview Thursday.

Vietnam’s stock market debuts, 75 percent of which rose in the first eight months of the year, have all dropped bar one since September, amid concerns that high interest rates will crimp lending and the currency will fall further. The benchmark VN Index dropped 6.9 percent this year and closed at 458.66 today.

Sacomreal, as the Ho Chi Minh City-based property developer is known, plans to go ahead with the listing as “we still believe in our future because we target a 30 percent increase in profit a year from 2011 to 2015,” company General Manager Thai Van Chuyen said Thursday.

Sacomreal, whose businesses include real-estate, property consulting and office rental, has since 2008 started construction on projects including Sacomreal Hoa Binh Residential Building, Office Building General Limex and Tan Thanh Urban Area in Ho Chi Minh City, it said in a statement on its website.

The company had a pretax profit of VND668 billion ($33.4 million) in the first nine months of the year, exceeding the target of VND650 billion for the whole of 2010, Chuyen said.

Demand for office space in Ho Chi Minh City continues to grow, though rents are expected to come down, especially in buildings with lower occupancy, according to the third-quarter report from CB Richard Ellis Group Inc.

The unit of Saigon Thuong Tin Commercial Joint-Stock Bank is trading from 30,000 dong to 40,000 dong per share in the so- called over-the-counter market, Chuyen said. Companies don’t have to set initial prices for the first trading day on the country’s second-biggest bourse.

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Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Foreign investors drive market

Active trading by foreign investors helped the VN-Index register a
second day of gains, closing the day's trade at 458.66 points.


The index rose 0.21 percent, with 84 of the 267 listed stocks on the southern market advancing.


Many blue chips continued to rally thanks to consolidation by foreign
investors, such as Phu My Fertilisers (DPM), up 0.6 percent; Bao Viet
Holdings (BVH), 1 percent; the Corporation for Financing and Promoting
Technology (FPT), 0.5 percent ; and VietinBank (CTG), 1.06 percent.


Foreign investors on Oct. 14 pumped 114.96 billion VND (5.9 million
USD) into the southern market to own 3.03 million shares, including
144,350 BVH shares, 221,380 DPM shares and 188,120 REE shares.


Yet, the total trading volume stayed low at 23 million shares, down
3.7 percent from on Oct.13, for a meagre value of 594.4 billion VND
(30.5 million USD).


The Hanoi Stock Exchange's
HNX-Index inched up 0.05 percent to close at 120.45 points, helped by
rallies of banking and securities stocks.


They
included Asia Commercial Bank (ACB), up 0.36 percent; APEC Securities,
3.20 percent; Bao Viet Securities (BVS), 1.60 percent; Kim Long
Securities, 0.72 percent; and Sai Gon-Hanoi Bank (SHB), 0.88 percent.


Trading volume reached only 19.5 million shares, worth a total of 421.6 billion VND (21.6 million USD)./.

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Monday, February 7, 2011

Market barely inches up, trade low

HCMC – The southern stock market made a fractional gain in the second straight rising session on Thursday, in line with rallies in the world, but liquidity remained depressed. The VN-Index rose a mere 0.96 point, or 0.21%, from the day earlier to 458.66.

Demand on the Hochiminh Stock Exchange dropped 13.7% against the previous session to nearly 49 million shares while supply rose 6.3% to 49.4 million shares. Closing the day, only 23.2 million shares worth VND597 billion changed hands, falling by 7.2% and 14.5% against the session earlier respectively.

The market opened higher and quickly jumped to above 460 points before sellers stepped in, pushing the index down to 457.88 at the end of the continuous matching phase. The market then recovered slightly and finally closed in the positive territory.

The number of losers was still higher than that of gainers at 105 to 84, of which six stocks ended the day at their ceiling prices and nine others plunged to the floor prices.

Vietnam Mechanization Electrification & Construction (MCG) became the biggest traded issue, jumping 4.7% to VND17,900 per share with over one million shares traded, followed by Société De Bourbon Tay Ninh Co. (SBT), which closed flat at VND11,800 on the volume of 717,000 shares.

Foreigners were still net buyers as they bought 3.1 million shares worth VND115 billion and sold two million shares worth VND40 billion, accounting for 19.4% and 6.7% of the market’s buying and selling value respectively.

The Hanoi market moved higher on Thursday but turnover remained low at VND421 billion. The HNX-Index inched up a mere 0.06 point, or 0.05%, from the previous session to close at 120.45.

There were 172 stocks rising versus 85 others falling, including seven stocks hitting the ceiling prices and seven others dropping to the floor prices. Foreigners were net buyers to the tune of around VND6 billion worth of shares.

HCMC Securities Corp. (HSC) it its comment said the only difference with Wednesday’s action was that buyers and sellers were much more in balance.

“Holders became relatively insensitive to further small losses, while buyers only placed small orders just in case. With an absence of economic, monetary and corporate news, there was no wonder that investors moved to the sidelines, waiting for something to happen somewhere,” the stock broker said.

Everyone was waiting for the other investors to pull the trigger and very few investors were actually doing anything, it said.

“On Friday again we saw the resilience of a number of stocks that don’t really go down anymore on days where the index loses ground, while they do move upwards if there’s an absence of bad news. Besides, these stocks can be found among the large caps as well as the smaller segment of the market. Solid companies with good fundamentals are certainly out there and don’t even come at a premium these days,” HSC said.

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Sunday, February 6, 2011

Market participants still lukewarm despite rally

HCMC – The local market bounced back on Wednesday given supporting news of interbank and lending rate cuts, with the VN-Index gaining 3.38 points, or 0.74%, from the previous session to close at 457.7. However, participation was still lukewarm, with the trade volume dropping and value merely inching up.

The market opened on a slightly weaker note and dropped 1.09 points to 453.23 after the first matching phase.  It recovered slightly from the second matching phase and then moved higher to close at the highest level of the day.

Liquidity stayed low with 25 million shares worth VND698 billion traded, dropping by 17% in volume but increasing by 12% in value against the previous session respectively. On the southern bourse, bids rose 5.7% to 56.7 million shares while offers plunged 20% from the day earlier to 46.4 million shares.

Up to 135 stocks closed the day higher while 71 stocks lost ground, of which 11 issues hit their ceiling prices and three others closed at the floor prices.

Ocean Group Co. (OGC) remained the most active traded stock, advancing 2% to VND30,100 per share on the volume of 1.2 million shares, followed by Agribank Securities Co. (AGR) that jumped to its ceiling price of VND12,800 with around 950,000 shares traded.

Foreign trading improved as the investors bought 4.3 million shares worth VND162 billion and offloaded 2.5 million shares worth VND63 billion, making up 25% and 10% of the market’s buying and selling value respectively.

HCMC Securities Corp. in its comment said on Wednesday’s gain was important in technical terms as the market broke through all major moving averages. “But with volumes at these levels we should not put too much fate in technical moves like these. Investor interest remains very low and it seems that risk tolerance is extremely low at this moment,” said the stock broker.

“Although on Thursday’s move could gather some momentum over the coming days and put price a bit higher, we believe that there are other factors such as the large supply overhang that continue to keep a lid on equity prices. Therefore, any rally is likely to be short-lived for the moment and probably for the coming weeks. With valuations and dividend yields at very reasonable levels, especially if we compare them to a number of other markets in the region, we continue to recommend investors to accumulate positions on any correction,” the broker added.

The Hanoi market also recovered on Wednesday but turnover kept moving down to just VND370 billion. The HNX-Index inched up 0.58 point, or 0.48%, from the previous day to 120.39.

Out of the 344 listed stocks, 134 closed the day higher and 121 stocks closed down, of which four stocks hit the ceiling prices and seven others closed at their floor prices. Foreigners were net buyers to the tune of VND4.6 billion worth of shares.

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Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Stock indices continue to decline

Blue chips tumbled on Oct. 12 on the HCM Stock Exchange, despite a rise
overnight in the US stock market, dragging the VN-Index down 1.09
percent to close at 454.32.


The volume rose 28.5
percent over the previous day to 28.3 million shares while the value
increased by 22 percent against Oct. 11 to 683.8 billion VND (35.1
million USD).


Decliners outnumbered advancers by
185-30, with nine out of the 10 largest capitalised shares declined.
Only insurer Bao Viet Holdings (BVH) remained unchanged.


The vast majority of the gainers were mid-cap and penny stocks,
including Ben Tre Aquaproduct Import and Export (ABT), Cuu Long Fish
(ACL), Godaco Seafood (AGD), Agribank Securities (AGR), logistics
Gemadept (GMD), HCM City Metal (HMC) and Tay Bac Minerals Investment
(KTB).


Ocean Group (OGC) reclaimed the position of
most active stock with 1.46 million shares changing hands, but it slid
nearly 2 percent to close at 29,500 VND (1.51 USD) per share.


On the Hanoi Stock Exchange, the HNX-Index fell by 1.2 percent to close at 119.81, a fourth successive day of loss.


Market volume advanced by 25 percent over Oct. 11 to 23.1 million
shares worth 526.1 billion VND (27 million USD), but losers still
largely outnumbered gainers by 238-51.


Blue-chips tumbled and of the 10 leading shares by capitalisation, only Asia Commercial Bank (ACB) closed unchanged.


PetroVietnam Construction (PVX) was still the most active with 2.4
million shares changing hands, closing down 1.35 percent to an average
of 21,900 VND (1.12 USD) per share.


Foreign investors picked up a net buy of 35 billion VND (1.8 million USD) worth of shares on Oct. 12 on both exchanges./.

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Thursday, January 20, 2011

Foreign investors boost City shares

Shares made only modest gains on the HCM Stock Exchange Oct. 7, on
sluggish trading totalling just 36.5 million shares, worth only 977
billion VND (50 million USD).


The VN-Index closed up just 0.29 percent to 462.05 points after reaching as high as 467 points earlier in the session.


Heavy purchases by foreign investors in many blue chips helped lift
some shares, such as software giant FPT, developers Hoang Anh Gia Lai
(HAG), Masan Group (MSN) and Vincom (VIC), insurer Bao Viet Holdings
(BVH) and Phu My Fertilisers (DPM), but decliners outnumbered advancers
overall by 163-58.


Foreign investors accounted for over
half of overall market value on Oct. 7, responsible for transactions
totalling nearly 11.5 million shares and worth about 473.5 billion VND
(24.3 million USD). They were net buyers by a volume of nearly 6.7
million shares and a value of 301.2 billion VND (15.4 million USD).


Beta Securities Co analysts commented that Oct. 7's market gains were
entirely due to heavy foreign buys in blue chips and were not
sustainable.


Strong fluctuations on the foreign currency
market drove several institutional investors to increase securities
investments to disperse risk, added analysts from Saigon Securities Inc.


On the Hanoi Stock Exchange, which saw less impact from
foreign investors, the HNX-Index declined 1.78 percent on the day to
close at 122.62.


The volume of trades dropped by 20
percent from Oct. 6's session to about 23 million shares, with a value
of nearly 539 billion VND (27.6 million USD).


Losers
outnumbered gainers by 208-76, with PetroVietnam Construction (PVX)
again being the most-active share on a volume of 2.7 million. PVX closed
down 0.44 percent to 22,700 VND (1.15 USD).


Of the 10
leading shares by capitalisation on the northern bourse, Bao Viet
Securities (BVS), Tien Phong Plastics (NTP), PetroVietnam Insurance
(PVI) and PetroVietnam Technical Services (PVS) rallied.


Dramatic hikes in gold prices and the rising value of the US dollar on
the black market has spooked many domestic investors over the stability
of the economy, said Bao Viet Securities Co analyst Nguyen Duc Thi.


"There is no positive news currently supporting investor psychology,
and the market has not given any signs of a stable uptrend," Thi said./.

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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Market rises for third straight day

HCMC – The local market gained ground for the third consecutive session on Thursday as blue-chips continued moving up. The VN-Index rose 1.33 points, or 0.29%, from a day earlier to end at 462.05.

On the Hochiminh Stock Exchange, demand dropped 13.6% from the previous session to 62 million shares while supply surged 30.8% to nearly 84 million shares. Liquidity fell slightly with 37.3 million shares worth VND983 billion changing hands, decreasing by 2.5% and 6.4% respectively.

The market opened higher and gained a slight 1.27 points to 461.99 after the first matching phase and then rose further before jumping four points at the middle of the continuous matching phase, only to drop back steadily towards the end of the session.

The number of advancers was almost equal to that of gainers, at 159 to 162, of which nine stocks went to the ceiling prices and seven issues plunged to the floor prices.

PetroVietnam Fertilizer and Chemicals Corp. (DPM) became the most actively traded stock, gaining 4.7% to VND32,900 per share with 1.9 million shares changing hands. Eximbank (EIB) followed, falling 0.5% to VND17,800 with nearly 1.8 million shares traded.

Foreigners were strong net buyers again, acquiring 11.4 million shares worth VND473 billion and offloading 4.7 million shares worth VND172 billion, making up 48% and 17.5% of the market’s buying and selling value respectively.

The Hanoi market, meanwhile, declined strongly and turnover also tumbled to around VND540 billion. The HNX-Index shed 2.22 points, or 1.78%, from the previous session and ended the day at 122.62.

The market saw 122 stocks rising and 160 others falling, including seven stocks shooting up to the ceiling and five stocks dropping to the floor. Foreigners were net buyers, contributing 0.6% and 0.4% of the market’s buying and selling value respectively.

Vietnam International Securities Co. (VIS) in its daily report said the market still maintained the uptrend on Thursday given strong rallies of stock indices globally. Liquidity stayed low as most investors were cautious while some offloaded shares to take profits. The bustling gold market, meanwhile, seemed to be more attractive to local investors.

“The market is still in the cumulative stage and investors are waiting for the third quarter’s financial reports of listed firms. The VN-Index will move in a narrow margin in the last trading day of the week,” VIS said.

APEC Securities Co., meanwhile, said the slowing uptrend on Thursday was not surprising to investors as the VN-Index retreated more than twice when the market neared the range between 465 and 470 points since August. Low liquidity was a positive sign, showing the market had yet to reach the peak of the rising streak.

“We advise that investors stay outside the market on Saturday. The market will correct if the VN-Index broke the 470-point level but stock prices then will be higher than the recent correction stage,” APEC added.

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Monday, January 17, 2011

Market rallies to over 460 points

HCMC – The local market continued the uptrend, gaining almost ten points in the VN-Index in the second straight rising session Wednesday given strong rallies of many large caps. The VN-Index added 9.76 points, or 2.76%, against the previous session to close at 460.72.

The market opened higher and climbed slowly until the end of the second matching phase when buying suddenly accelerated and the index rose sharply to close at the daily high of 460.72.

Bids on the Hochiminh Stock Exchange were almost unchanged from the previous day at 72 million shares while offers rose 18% to over 64 million shares. Ending the session, there were 38.3 million shares worth VND1 trillion traded, rising by 15.3% and 25% against the session earlier respectively.

Advancers far outnumbered losers at 210 to 26, including 35 stocks hitting the ceiling prices and four others plunging to the floor prices.

Sacombank (STB) took the lead in terms of liquidity and it ended the day up 0.6% at VND16,900 per share on the volume of two million shares. Tan Tao Investment Industry Corp. (ITA) came next, surging 4.8% from the day earlier to VND17,400 with 1.4 million shares traded.

Foreign participation was also strong as the investors acquired 7.5 million shares worth VND271 billion and offloaded 2.6 million shares worth VND100 billion. They accounted for 26.8% and 9.9% of the market’s buying and selling value respectively.

The Hanoi market made further gains on Wednesday but in lower turnover of VND639 billion. The HNX-Index rose by 2.82 points, or 2.31%, from the previous session and ended the day at 124.84.

There were 273 stocks rising while 39 stocks dropping, of which 20 stocks went to the ceiling prices while three stocks dropped to the floor prices. Foreigners were net buyers and accounted for 1.5% and 0.7% of the market’s buying and selling value respectively.

HCMC Securities Corp. (HSC) in its comment on Wednesday said the market rebounded further as foreigners continued to buy blue-chips fairly aggressively. Turnover was a little higher overall although this was entirely due to an increase in trading in the southern bourse. For the second consecutive day, foreigners were very active buyers and this pushed the VN-Index higher.

“The market has turned around quite abruptly with blue-chips leading the way and apart from the earnings news perhaps some investors are also hopeful that interest rates can indeed fall by the October 15th deadline announced by the Vietnam Banking Association. That would indeed be wonderful news but we remain a little cautious given the upside pressure on CPI (consumer price index) from faster money supply and credit growth and a weaker currency.

“However, for the next day or two, we are likely to see some further upside but we would caution investors not to chase up prices. We keep our medium to long-term positive stance but still think that the fourth quarter will be a tricky time for stocks,” the broker added.

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Friday, January 14, 2011

Market suddenly bounces back

HCMC – The local market suddenly rallied to over the 450-point level on Tuesday after two successive falling sessions. The VN-Index gained 5.13 points, or 1.15%, from the previous day to close at 450.96.

Liquidity, however, fell back sharply with 33.2 million shares worth VND839 billion traded, plunging by 33.7% and 31% against a day earlier respectively. Investors on the southern bourse bid for nearly 72 million shares, rising by 7.5% from the previous session, while they offered 54.3 million shares, a 34.4% decrease.

The market opened lower and hit a low of 440.63 in the second matching phase before a rebound. It enjoyed a late surge which included a four point jump at the close to end the day at the highs.

The market saw 131 stocks rising and 72 others closing down, of which 11 stocks went to the ceiling prices and seven others plunged to the floor prices.

Ocean Group Co. (OGC) once again was the most actively traded stock, rising 2.3% to VND30,800 per share with 1.6 million shares traded. Sacombank (STB) still stood at the second position, closing flat at VND16,800 on the volume of 1.4 million shares.

Foreigners remained strong net buyers as they bought 5.8 million shares worth VND220 billion and offloaded 1.9 million shares worth VND78.8 billion. They accounted for 26.2% and 9.3% of the market’s buying and selling value respectively.

The Hanoi market also recovered after a four-session losing streak while turnover fell to VND720 billion. The HNX-Index rose 1.1 points, or 0.91%, from the previous session to 122.02.

There were 171 stocks advancing and 96 others losing, of which 32 stocks closed the day at the ceiling prices and nine stocks dropped to the floor prices. Foreigners were net buyers again to the tune of VND7 billion worth of shares.

Fiachra Mac Cana, managing director of HCMC Securities Corp., said both markets rebounded in late trading after a weak start but volumes were lower. The late bounce was at least partly down to technical trading in the southern bourse and therefore perhaps less than convincing.

“Even so we are happy to see some buying support above the critical 118-point level on the HNX-Index. Market breadth widened somewhat, while foreigners were very active buyers again on Wednesday,” he said.

“While we think the late rebound was encouraging with volumes fairly low and market bids and offer levels trailing below recent averages it lacks conviction. Therefore, the market is still likely to test lower short term in our opinion. We keep our investment stance that medium to long-term players can continue to buy in gradually,” Mac Cana added.

Vietnam International Securities Co. (VIS) said the market would check the 450-point level for several times before a clearer tendency got visible. “The market may not see a strong decline as stock prices had suffered enough impacts of bad news. The market will see another rising session on Thursday,” VIS said.

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Saturday, January 8, 2011

Shares plunge on active trades

Shares plunge on active trades

The volume of trades on the nation's stock markets picked up on Oct. 4,
but benchmark indices closed down on both exchanges.


On the HCM Stock Exchange, the VN-Index slid 1.3 percent from Oct. 1's
close to end Oct. 4's session at 445.83 points. But volume increased by
nearly 39 percent over Oct. 1's level to 49.45 million shares, with a
value of almost 1.19 trillion VND (61 million USD).


Ocean Group (OGC), which operates in the fields of banking and real
estate development, continued to be the most-active share, with over two
million traded. OGC closed off 4.74 percent to 30,100 VND (1.54 USD).


Of the 10 leading shares by capitalisation, only
three – Bao Viet Holdings (BVH), Hoang Anh Gia Lai (HAG) and Hoa Phat
Group (HPG) – posted gains. Overall, decliners outnumbered advancers by
an overwhelming 219-18.


On the Hanoi Stock Exchange,
the HNX-Index plunged by 3.89 percent to close at 120.92. However,
market volume rose by 92 percent to over 44 million shares, while the
value of trades increased by 68 percent to 931.1 billion VND (47.8
million USD).


Shares declined in value across the
board, with losers outnumbering gainers by 279-19, with all of the 10
leading shares by capitalisation declining in value.


PetroVietnam Construction (PVX) continued to be the most-active share
nationwide, with 5.3 million exchanged, but PVX declined by nearly 4
percent on Oct. 4 to close at 22,000 VND (1.13 USD) per share.


The number of new shares issued in the third quarter was nearly on par
with those issued in the first half of this year, the State Securities
Commission has reported. The value of shares made through public offers
reached more than 34.6 trillion VND (1.77 billion USD).


Foreign investors continued as net buyers on both exchanges on Oct. 4,
picking up over 4.8 million shares, worth a combined 162 billion VND
(8.3 million USD)./.

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Thursday, December 30, 2010

Market slightly rebounds

HCMC – The local market bounced back slightly on Thursday given strong demand for large caps at the end of the session. The VN-Index rose 1.58 points, or 0.35%, against the previous day to close at 454.52.

The market opened slightly in the red and traded for much of the day in a very narrow three-point range around Wednesday’s close before jumping 1.5 points at the close.

Liquidity also increased strongly as 40.6 million shares worth VND1.2 trillion were traded, surging by 22.4% and 34.8% against the session earlier respectively. On the Hochiminh Stock Exchange, bids rose 11.7% to 63.5 million shares while offers dropped 12.4% from the previous day to nearly 62.8 million shares.

The number of losers was more than twice that of advancers at 145 to 68, of which six issues went to the ceiling prices and nine others plunged to the floor prices.

Ocean Group Co. (OGC) once again led the market in terms of liquidity, ending the day down 1.9% to VND31,600 per share with 1.8 million shares traded, followed by Thuan Thao Corp. (GTT), gaining 4.5% from the previous session to VND11,500 on the volume of 855,000 shares.

Vimedimex Medi-Pharma Co. (VMD) began trading 8.1 million shares on the bourse on Thursday but it dropped 20% against the preference price to VND32,000 per share on the volume of around 164,000 shares.

Foreigners turned strong net buyers, acquiring 5.4 million shares worth VND190 billion and offloading 1.8 million shares worth VND54 billion. They accounted for 18.4% and 5.2% of the market’s buying and selling value respectively.

The Hanoi market fell for the third consecutive session on Thursday and turnover dipped to VND630 billion. The HNX-Index dropped 0.12 point, or 0.09%, from the previous session and ended the day at 127.29.

Only 74 stocks rose while 221 stocks lost ground, of which six stocks went to the ceiling prices while 10 stocks dropped to the floor prices. Foreigners were slight net buyers and accounted for 0.66% of the buying value and 0.6% of the selling value.

Fiachra Mac Cana, managing director of HCMC Securities Corp., said the markets closed mixed with the HNX-Index continuing to decline while the southern bourse moved higher. Trading volumes were unchanged overall as a dip in the northern bourse was offset by higher volumes in the southern market.

Sentiment, however, remained fragile as a weakening currency in the unofficial market coupled with higher gold prices dogged investors, he commented.

Vietnam International Securities Co. (VIS) said the 450-point level seemed to be especially firm for the VN-Index in the coming time when supply would far outpace demand on the market.

“The index traded narrowly around the level in recent sessions despite supporting news from the macro economy, which showed that investors were still very cautious. The market may move flat around the 455-point level within the next few days,” VIS predicted.

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Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Shares stall on economic worries

The VN-Index fluctuated throughout most of Sept. 30’s session before closing at 454.52 points, an increase of 0.35 percent.


The volume of trades on the HCM Exchange rose by nearly 15 percent
over Sept. 29 to nearly 38 million shares, with a value in excess of 1
trillion VND (51.3 million USD).


Decliners
outnumbered advancers by 139-68, although five of the 10 leading shares
by capitalisation managed gains, including Sacombank (STB), Eximbank
(EIB), developer Hoang Anh Gia Lai Co (HAG), software giant FPT and
insurer Bao Viet Holdings (BVH), with the latter reaching its ceiling
price for a third consecutive day.


Ocean Group (OGC)
was again the most-active share on the southern bourse with a volume of
over 1.8 million units, but OGC again lost value on the day, closing
off 1.86 percent to 31,600 VND (1.60 USD) per share.


Vimedimex Medi-Pharma Co (VMD) saw its first day of trading on the HCM
exchange, but VMD shares dropped to their floor price of 32,000 VND
(1.65 USD) per share.


On the Ha Noi Stock Exchange,
the HNX-Index closed essentially unchanged at 127.29 points. The value
of trades reached 630.6 billion VND (32.3 million USD) on a volume of
26.3 million shares, decreases of 25 percent in value and 21.6 percent
in volume.


Losers outnumbered gainers, meanwhile, by
an overwhelming 200-78. Among the 10 leading shares by capitalisation,
only Asia Commercial Bank (ACB) rose in value.


Kim
Long Securities (KLS) was the most heavily-traded share, with 2.27
million changing hands, but KLS ended the session down nearly 2 percent
to just 15,000 VND (0.75 USD) per share.


The US dollar on Sept. 30 began to recover slightly on the black market, reaching over 19,700 VND per dollar.


Foreign investors were net buyers on both national stock exchanges on
the same day, picking up a combined 136.6 billion VND (7 million USD)
worth of shares./.

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Saturday, December 25, 2010

Investors remain skittish about economy

Stock indices fell on both of the nation’s stock exchanges on Wednesday despite the State Bank of Vietnam’s announcement this week resolving investor uncertainty about Circular No 13, as well as economic growth announced by the General Statistics Office (GSO) at a healthy 6.52 percent in the first nine months of the year.

On the HCM Stock Exchange, the VN-Index closed down 0.48 percent to 452.94 points, despite rising throughout most of Sept. 29’s session. Over 33 million shares were exchanged, worth VND896.1 billion (US$46 million) – a decline of 15 percent in volume and 10 percent in value.

Decliners outnumbered advancers by 173-42.

Ocean Group continued as the most-active share on the southern bourse on a volume of just around a million shares, closing unchanged at VND32,200 ($1.65).

Of the 10 leading shares by capitalization, insurer Bao Viet Holdings (BVH), Eximbank (EIB) and real estate developer Vincom (VIC) posted gains, while software giant FPT (FPT), Sacombank (STB), and developers Hoang Anh Gia Lai (HAG) and Masan Group (MSN) declined.

On the Hanoi Stock Exchange, the HNX-Index fell by an even more substantial 2.12 percent to close the day at just 127.41 points. Market value declined by 14 percent to VND842.7 billion ($43.2 million) on a volume of 33.54 million shares, while losers outnumbered gainers by an overwhelming 264-38.

PetroVietnam Construction (PVX) resumed its role as the most-active share nationwide with 2.57 million shares traded, but the shares closed down 2.9 percent to VND23,300 ($1.95).

VNDirect Securities Co analyst Pham Vu Dong on Wednesday told financial information website cafef.vn that, excluding growth, all other economic indicators were unfavorable. He noted high inflation in September and a trade deficit that could reach $13.5 billion by year’s end, along with sluggish credit growth.

“The domestic economy is unlikely to undergo a sudden turnaround in the remaining months of the year,” Dong said.

Gold prices continued to lure investors away from stocks, as well, with domestic gold prices hitting another record high on the same day at over VND31 million ($1,590) per tael. A tael is equal to 1.2 troy ounces.

ACB Securities Co analysts also noted that Circular No 19, which supplements Circular No 13, retained the risk coefficient ratio for securities at 250 percent, a level unlikely to encourage banks to loan further funds for securities investment.

Foreign investors continued as net buyers on both exchanges on the same day, picking up VND38.5 billion ($2 million) worth of shares.

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Investors remain skittish about economy

Stock indices fell on both of the nation’s stock exchanges on Sept. 29
despite the State Bank of Vietnam’s announcement this week resolving
investor uncertainly about Circular No 13, as well as economic growth
announced by the General Statistics Office (GSO) at a healthy 6.52
percent in the first nine months of the year.


On the HCM Stock
Exchange, the VN-Index closed down 0.48 percent to 452.94 points,
despite rising throughout most of Sept. 29’s session. Over 33 million
shares were exchanged, worth 896.1 billion VND (46 million USD) – a
decline of 15 percent in volume and 10 percent in value.


Decliners outnumbered advancers by 173-42.


Ocean
Group continued as the most-active share on the southern bourse on a
volume of just around a million shares, closing unchanged at 32,200 VND
(1.65 USD).


Of the 10 leading shares by
capitalisation, insurer Bao Viet Holdings (BVH), Eximbank (EIB) and real
estate developer Vincom (VIC) posted gains, while software giant FPT
(FPT), Sacombank (STB), and developers Hoang Anh Gia Lai (HAG) and Masan
Group (MSN) declined.


On the Hanoi Stock Exchange, the HNX-Index
fell by an even more substantial 2.12 percent to close the day at just
127.41 points. Market value declined by 14 percent to 842.7 billion VND
(43.2 million USD) on a volume of 33.54 million shares, while losers
outnumbered gainers by an overwhelming 264-38.


PetroVietnam
Construction (PVX) resumed its role as the most-active share nationwide
with 2.57 million shares traded, but the shares closed down 2.9 percent
to 23,300 VND (1.95 USD).


VNDirect Securities Co
analyst Pham Vu Dong on Sept. 29 told financial information website
cafef.vn that, excluding growth, all other economic indicators were
unfavourable. He noted high inflation in September and a trade deficit
that could reach 13.5 billion USD by year’s end, along with sluggish
credit growth.


“The domestic economy is unlikely to undergo a sudden turna-round in the remaining months of the year,” Dong said.


Gold
prices continued to lure investors away from stocks, as well, with
domestic gold prices hitting another record high on Sept. 29 at over 31
million VND (1,590 USD) per tael. (A tael is equal to 1.2 troy ounces).


ACB
Securities Co analysts also noted that Circular No 19, which
supplements Circular No 13, retained the risk coefficient ratio for
securities at 250 percent, a level unlikely to encourage banks to loan
further funds for securities investment.


Foreign investors
continued as net buyers on both exchanges on Sept. 29, picking up 38.5
billion VND (2 million USD) worth of shares./.

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Wednesday, December 22, 2010

VietABank to issue 137 million shares

Customers transact at a transaction office of VietABank. The bank will issue shares to increase capital to VND3 trillion - Photo: Le Toan
HCMC – Vietnam Asia Commercial Bank (VietABank) will issue nearly 137 million shares to increase its chartered capital from VND1.63 trillion to VND3 trillion to comply with the central bank’s regulations.

Under the plan approved by the State Bank of Vietnam, the bank will issue 9.58 million shares to pay 2009 dividend of 7% to existing shareholders, and sell 26.1 million to existing shareholders at VND10,000 each with the ratio of 100:16.

In addition, VietABank plans to sell over 100 million shares to local investors at the price not lower than VND10,000 each.

* HCMC Housing Development Bank (HDBank) has got approval from the State Securities Commission to issue 145 million shares to increase its chartered capital from VND1.55 trillion to VND3 trillion.

The bank will issue shares in two phases; 45 million shares in the first phase will be sold to existing shareholders at the face value, while 95 million shares will be sold to existing shareholders and the remaining five million shares to staff in the second phase at VND10,000 each.

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Sunday, December 12, 2010

Vietnam sees share offerings booming

HANOI – The State Securities Commission (SSC) this year has approved the largest ever number of share offerings by listed firms, sparking concerns of oversupply.

SSC as of the end of July had permitted enterprises issue around VND61 trillion worth of shares while it was only VND19.3 trillion in the whole 2009, said Bui Hoang Hai, deputy director of SSC’s Issuance Management Department.

Hai told a seminar in Hanoi last week that SSC had approved nearly 500 share issue applications this year.

In the first six months of 2010 alone, SSC had allowed listed organizations to issue VND18.6 trillion worth of shares to the public, VND1.1 trillion for their staffs and VND25 trillion for strategic shareholders. In addition, there were VND717 billion of shares offered via auctions at the stock exchanges, VND50 billion of bonus shares and VND86 billion worth of dividend stocks. 

Hai said that many enterprises are seeking to offer huge amounts of shares this year as they failed to do so last year due to poor profits. Meanwhile, commercial banks also want to offer shares to increase capital given new regulations requiring them to spur capital to at least VND3 trillion each or get disbanded.

However, due to the lack of transparency on the part of listed firms, stock investors may face risks.

The quality of information released by listed companied in Vietnam is still poor. Most enterprises have no specific and long-term issuance strategies and announce information barely at compulsory requirements, Hai said.

“Some information is not trustworthy and may cause misunderstanding,” Hai said. There are enterprises providing information of business results or share prices on the basis of non-standard calculations. “Few enterprises have responsibility for what they say in the announcements,” he stressed.

While some enterprises release information regularly, others have no official websites and rarely send notices to stock watchdogs. “I think that many investors cannot receive the information either,” Hai said.

Hai also noted that while share issuance in the world aims to attract capital from new investors, listed enterprises in Vietnam primarily offer shares to existing shareholders.

David Gerald, president of the Singapore Securities Investors Association, advised investors at the seminar to study the stock market thoroughly.

“Don’t join the market if you have no knowledge. You have to check the issuing companies,” he said.

“We have to create an equity market where investors have responsibilities, knowledge and bear the blame for their decisions,” Gerald added.

Other experts said transparent information and proper release via the media could help Vietnamese enterprises maximize the value in their initial public offerings (IPO).

According to SSC, Vietnam’s stock market capitalization as of the end of August reached VND650 trillion, or US$33.5 billion, equivalent to one-third of the country’s gross domestic product.

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Vietnam sees share offerings booming

HANOI – The State Securities Commission (SSC) this year has approved the largest ever number of share offerings by listed firms, sparking concerns of oversupply.

SSC as of the end of July had permitted enterprises issue around VND61 trillion worth of shares while it was only VND19.3 trillion in the whole 2009, said Bui Hoang Hai, deputy director of SSC’s Issuance Management Department.

Hai told a seminar in Hanoi last week that SSC had approved nearly 500 share issue applications this year.

In the first six months of 2010 alone, SSC had allowed listed organizations to issue VND18.6 trillion worth of shares to the public, VND1.1 trillion for their staffs and VND25 trillion for strategic shareholders. In addition, there were VND717 billion of shares offered via auctions at the stock exchanges, VND50 billion of bonus shares and VND86 billion worth of dividend stocks. 

Hai said that many enterprises are seeking to offer huge amounts of shares this year as they failed to do so last year due to poor profits. Meanwhile, commercial banks also want to offer shares to increase capital given new regulations requiring them to spur capital to at least VND3 trillion each or get disbanded.

However, due to the lack of transparency on the part of listed firms, stock investors may face risks.

The quality of information released by listed companied in Vietnam is still poor. Most enterprises have no specific and long-term issuance strategies and announce information barely at compulsory requirements, Hai said.

“Some information is not trustworthy and may cause misunderstanding,” Hai said. There are enterprises providing information of business results or share prices on the basis of non-standard calculations. “Few enterprises have responsibility for what they say in the announcements,” he stressed.

While some enterprises release information regularly, others have no official websites and rarely send notices to stock watchdogs. “I think that many investors cannot receive the information either,” Hai said.

Hai also noted that while share issuance in the world aims to attract capital from new investors, listed enterprises in Vietnam primarily offer shares to existing shareholders.

David Gerald, president of the Singapore Securities Investors Association, advised investors at the seminar to study the stock market thoroughly.

“Don’t join the market if you have no knowledge. You have to check the issuing companies,” he said.

“We have to create an equity market where investors have responsibilities, knowledge and bear the blame for their decisions,” Gerald added.

Other experts said transparent information and proper release via the media could help Vietnamese enterprises maximize the value in their initial public offerings (IPO).

According to SSC, Vietnam’s stock market capitalization as of the end of August reached VND650 trillion, or US$33.5 billion, equivalent to one-third of the country’s gross domestic product.

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