Vietnamese shares declined on March 1 after rising for four consecutive sessions, due to large-cap stocks underperforming as investors sold in pursuit of short-term profits.


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An investor follows transactions at Viet Dragon Securities Company.



The benchmark VN Index on the HCM Stock Exchange dropped 0.51 percent to close at 1,115.79 points. It has gained total 4.2 percent in the previous four days.

The HNX Index on the Hanoi Stock Exchange was down 0.74 percent to end at 127.10 points. The index inched up 0.60 points to end at 128.05 points on February 28.

More than 307.04 million shares were traded on the two local exchanges, worth 8.7 trillion VND (439.2 million USD).

The market trading condition was ruled by declining stocks, which were dominant over gainers by 280 to 201, while 248 other stocks ended flat.

Large-cap stocks returned to the negative territory as 17 of the 30 largest ones by market capitalisation in the VN30 Index suffered from investors’ sell-off pressure.

The UPCOM Index on the Unlisted Public Company Market (UPCoM) edged down 0.45 percent to finish 59.82 points. The unlisted market index gained 0.03 percent to finish at 60.09 points in the previous session.

Notably, Binh Son Refining and Petrochemical Company Limited (BSR) was heavily bought on UPCom, reaching the ceiling price as other petroleum stocks declined.

Before ATC session, large-cap stocks corrected together. Banking and petroleum stocks could no longer maintain their momentum. Rather, steel stocks such as HPG, HSG, NKG and the securities sector with SSI, HCM and SHS gained.

Foreign investors were net sellers of 167.13 billion VND on HOSE, concentrated on HCM (95.8 billion VND), HDB (45.8 billion VND) and VCB (30.6 billion VND). In addition, they sold a net of 31.11 billion VND on the HNX.

The VN Index ended the last trading session of February at 1,120 points, marking an increase of 14 percent compared to the beginning of this year, making it world’s fastest-growing market in the same period, followed by Brazil, Russia and Argentina.

The breakthrough in Vietnam’s stock market was mainly attributable to optimistic macro-economic fundamentals, positive business results of listed companies and high investor expectations for State divestment plans among many large State corporations.

According to the Prime Minister’s Document No 991/TTg-ĐMDN, 2018 will be the peak year for equitisation of State-owned enterprises (SOEs) and State capital divestment, with MobiFone, VTC, Genco 1 and 2 and Saigon Jewelry Company Ltd (SJC) conducting IPOs, attracting large cash flow from domestic and foreign investors.

In January, the initial public offerings (IPO) of Vietnam Rubber Corporation, PetroVietnam Oil Corporation, Binh Son Refining and Petrochemical Company and PetroVietnam Power Corporation were conducted successfully. They were three of the largest SOEs by capitalisation among the 69 SOEs listed in the equitisation plan of 2017.

Another major push was caused by the strong inflows of foreign capital. Foreign traders were responsible for net buying values of nearly 12 trillion VND in the first two months of the year, after total net purchases of 28 trillion VND in Vietnam’s stock market in 2017. 

According to Bao Viet Securities Company (BVSC), the VN Index is forecast to still move sideways in the next sessions with increasing selling pressure on large-cap stocks which have gone through strong uptrend.

Meanwhile, the BIDV Securities (BSC) said in its report that the market will remain volatile. It recommended investors observe when the division spreading across the market, which will push the risk to a higher level. - VNA