Thursday 24 November 2016

Colombo Stock Exchange Market Review – 24th Nov 2016


Colombo Equities eked out last minute gains on Thursday to close the session in green after eight consecutive days of losses. ASI closed at 6,253.28 up 10.60 index points or +0.2% while S&P SL 20 index gained 10.48 index points (+0.3%) to close at 3,478.53.

Index swung between gains and losses but managed to flip to the positive side at the close supported by gains in Ceylon Cold Stores (LKR 848.50, +14.5%). Further, shares of John Keells Holdings (LKR 146.10, +0.6%), Cargills Ceylon (LKR 180.00, +2.1%) and LOLC (LKR 76.50, +1.9%) edged higher in today’s trading session.

Market turnover reached LKR 517mn led by crossings which accounted for 51% of the turnover. CT Land & Development contributed bulk of the turnover (LKR 136mn) supported by two crossings of 1.7mn shares at LKR 58.20. John Keells Holdings made a contribution of LKR 127mn backed by two off-the-floor deals totaling to 0.8mn shares at LKR 146.00. Further, a crossing was seen in Access Engineering (1.6mn shares at LKR 24.00) and the share contributed LKR 58mn to the turnover. 

Reflecting the earlier weaknesses, losers outweighed the gainers 72 to 51. Central Finance was the mostly traded stock today while Access Engineering, Ceylon Cold Stores and Janashakthi Insurance managed to gain investor interest. 

Foreign investors were net sellers with net foreign outflow of LKR 6mn. Foreign participation was 29%. Top net outflows were seen in National Development Bank (LKR 16mn), Teejay Lanka (LKR 4mn) and Central Finance (LKR 2mn) while top net inflow was seen in Lanka Milk Foods (LKR 4mn).
Source: LSL

Sri Lanka shares end 8-day losing streak

Reuters: Sri Lankan shares snapped an eight-day falling streak to end slightly higher on Thursday, but concerns over recent tax proposals continued to weigh on sentiment.

The bourse hit its lowest close since April 7 on Wednesday on caution over the budget tax proposals, including revisions in corporate and withholding taxes.

The government aims to boost its 2017 tax revenue by 27 percent to 1.82 trillion rupees year-on-year, and meet a commitment given to the International Monetary Fund in return for a $1.5 billion loan in May.

The benchmark index of the Colombo Stock Exchange ended up 0.17 percent at 6,253.28. The bourse has fallen 2.77 percent over the past eight sessions through Wednesday after the budget was presented on Nov. 10.

The index was in oversold territory, with the 14-day relative strength index at 19.845 versus Wednesday's 15.978, Thomson Reuters data showed. A level between 30 and 70 indicates the market is neutral.

"Bargain-hunting was there but no big level of buying interest was seen... as investors are cautious due to rising interest rates," said Dimantha Mathew, head of research at First Capital Equities (Pvt) Ltd.

Foreign investors sold a net 5.6 million rupees ($37,800) worth of shares on Thursday, extending the year-to-date net foreign outflow to 1.27 billion rupees.

Analysts said the increase in various taxes and fees would reduce disposable income and challenge consumption-led growth.

Turnover was 516.9 million rupees, less than this year's daily average of 698.6 million rupees.

Shares of Ceylon Cold Store Plc jumped 14.54 percent while conglomerate John Keells Holdings Plc rose 0.55 percent and Lanka ORIX leasing Plc fell 1.86 percent. 

($1 = 148.2000 Sri Lankan rupees) 

(Reporting by Ranga Sirilal; Editing by Sunil Nair)

Sri Lanka hikes capital requirements for stock brokers

ECONOMYNEXT - Sri Lanka has hiked capital requirements for stock brokers effective from March 01, based on a formula for calculating risk, the Securities and Exchange Commission said.

At the moment all brokers should keep a minimum of 35 million rupees as liquid capital.
Under the new rule the brokers have to keep 1.2 times of a risk requirement covering multiple risks as a Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR).

"The current Rules on minimum Net Capital applicable to stockbroker firms do not address the different risks these firms are exposed to," the SEC said in a statement.

"…[T]he implementation of CAR will enable the SEC and the CSE (Colombo Stock Exchange) to set up trigger points and prompt brokers to proactively monitor and manage their CAR before it breaches the minimum threshold.

The full statement is reproduced below:

Adoption of a Risk Based Capital Adequacy Requirement

The Securities and Exchange Commission of Sri Lanka (SEC) on the recommendation of the Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE), directed the implementation of a risk based Capital Adequacy Requirement (CAR) of 1.2 times the risk requirement of stockbrokers subject to a minimum liquid capital requirement of Rs 35 Mn. The CAR Rules are applicable to all stockbroker firms excluding those licensed to deal only in debt securities, with effect from 1 March 2017.

The current Rules on minimum Net Capital applicable to stockbroker firms do not address the different risks these firms are exposed to. In the light of the foregoing limitations of the present Rules and in keeping with international standards a dire need to establish a risk-based capital adequacy requirement was felt. Having considered the capitalisation of stockbroker firms, their current activities and CAR regimes implemented in regional markets, the CSE together with the SEC developed the methodology for the Rules.

The International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO), which is the global standard setter for the securities sector sets out Principles of securities regulation and its members including SEC Sri Lanka are expected to implement these Principles in order to achieve the objectives of securities regulation i.e. protect investors, ensure that markets are fair, efficient and transparent and reduce systemic risk.

The regulatory Principle 30 states that “There should be initial and ongoing capital and other prudential requirements for market intermediaries that reflect the risks that the intermediaries undertake.”

This Principle identifies that capital must be sufficient to protect a financial institution’s customers and counterparties from various risks. In addition, an efficient capital adequacy structure is able to send timely warning signals to intermediaries to reassess their risk management practices, as a decline in the capital base can expose the intermediary to significantly higher levels of risks. Moreover, in order to ensure efficient functioning of capital markets it is imperative for all participants to have confidence in each other’s stability and the ability to effectively manage risk. The inability of an intermediary to honour his commitment can lead to serious market disruption and decline in investor confidence.

The CAR requirement will meet IOSCO Principle 30 by defining and enabling the monitoring of risk on a daily basis and linking the capital required to be maintained to address risk. Furthermore, the implementation of CAR will enable the SEC and the CSE to set up trigger points and prompt brokers to proactively monitor and manage their CAR before it breaches the minimum threshold. CAR will also aid in the development a risk based supervision framework.

This proactive approach will encourage stockbrokers to conduct their business operations more professionally and thereby help foster investor confidence in the capital market.

Sri Lanka’s 06-month, 01-year Treasuries yields rise at auction

ECONOMYNEXT – Yields on Sri Lanka’s six-month and one-year Treasury Bills rose at Wednesday’s auction while the yield on three-month bills remained steady, the debt office of the Central Bank said.

The three-month bill yield remained at 8.60 percent, having stayed unchanged since the action of October 21.

The six-month bill yield rose six basis points to 9.71 percent from 9.65 percent last week while the one-year bill yield rose five basis points to 10.25 percent from 10.20 percent last week.

The debt office got bids worth Rs47 billion and accepted bids of only Rs3 billion.

Sri Lanka bourse disaster recovery test Friday, one hour trading halt

ECONOMYNEXT – The Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE) said trading will be halted for about an hour on Friday 25th November 2016 for a disaster recovery exercise.

The CSE said it will conduct a planned failover to the Disaster Recovery site during trading hours using Version 7 of the Automated Trading System (ATS) Disaster Recovery Solution on Friday.

“The exercise will be an industry-wide activity as part of the Business Continuity Plan of the CSE with the participation of all stakeholders, to ensure the preparedness of all stakeholders to meet the recovery needs of the industry in the event of a disaster situation,” a statement said.

The CSE said it is required to impose a market halt of about one hour from 11.30 a.m. to 12.30 p.m. to facilitate the planned failover of the ATS from the production site to the CSE Disaster Recovery site.