Monday, 13 February 2017

Colombo Stock Exchange Market Review – 13th Feb 2017


Colombo bourse regained lost grounds on Monday as Fitch revised country's sovereign rating outlook from negative to stable. All Share index bagged 44.58 index points or 0.73% to end at 6,138.73 while high cap constituent S&P SL20 index gained 32.74 index points or 0.94% to close at 3,521.24.

Price appreciation in premier blue-chip, John Keells Holdings (LKR 149.90, +1.6%) along with Dialog Axiata (LKR 11.00, +3.8%), Commercial Bank (LKR 142.00, +1.4%) pushed the index to positive territory. Market breadth was positive where out of 201 stocks traded, 79 advanced, 55 slipped and 67 remained unchanged.

Daily market turnover reached LKR 785mn boosted by negotiated trades in selected blue-chips. Off-the-floor dealings were recorded in Hemas Holdings (1.5mn shares at LKR 107.00), John Keells Holdings (1.0mn shares at LKR 146.00) and Hatton National Bank (0.1mn shares at LKR 227.00). Aggregate value of crossings accounted for 41% of the turnover.

Accordingly, Hemas Holdings (LKR 304mn) and John Keells Holdings (LKR 238mn) were major contributors to turnover followed by Hatton National Bank (LKR 82mn) and Chevron Lubricants (13mn).
High investor activity was witnessed in John Keells Holdings, Dialog Axiata and HNB Assurance. Share price of both, Dialog Axiata and HNB Assurance increased amid the dividend announcements. Further, Overseas Realty advanced by +5.7% to LKR 20.30 supported by final dividend of LKR 1.25 per share.

Foreign investors were net buyers with a net foreign inflow of LKR 333mn. Foreign participation was 61%. Net foreign inflows were seen in Hemas Holdings (LKR 259mn), John Keells Holdings (LKR 70mn) and Chevron Lubricants (LKR 13mn). Foreign outflow was mainly seen in Hatton National Bank (LKR 29mn).
Source: LSL

Sri Lankan shares hit more than 1-wk closing high; blue chips gain

Reuters: Sri Lankan shares hit a more than one week closing high on Monday as investors picked up battered blue chips such as John Keells Holdings Plc and Dialog Axiata Plc, brokers said.

The Colombo stock index ended 0.73 percent firmer at 6,138.73, its highest close since Feb. 2.

The index hit its lowest closing level since March on Feb. 6.

"Bargain hunting in blue chips drove the market, but rest of the market, retailers and high net-worth investors are on the sidelines," said Dimantha Mathew, head of research at First Capital Equities (Pvt) Ltd.

"The only positive news we heard is the Fitch rating revision, but still investors are waiting to see the direction."

On Thursday, Fitch Ratings affirmed Sri Lanka's Long-Term Foreign- and Local Currency Issuer Default Ratings (IDR) at 'B+' and revised the outlook to 'stable' from 'negative'.

Shares of John Keells Holdings Plc rose 1.64 percent, while Dialog Axiata Plc jumped 3.77 percent and the biggest listed lender, Commercial Bank of Ceylon Plc climbed 1.36 percent.

Turnover stood at 785.1 million rupees ($5.21 million), more than this year's daily average of 625.8 million rupees.

Foreign investors net bought 332.6 million rupees worth of equities on Monday. They have net sold 371.2 million rupees worth of shares so far this year.

Sri Lankan stocks have been hit by political uncertainty arising from a decision of the ruling coalition parties to contest local polls separately, and on worries over a rise in market interest rates.

Last week, the country's central bank kept key rates steady for a sixth straight month, but flagged possible "corrective measures" in the months ahead in a sign further tightening might be on the cards to temper inflation pressures and safeguard a fragile rupee.

Yields on treasury bills are hovering at a more than four-year high.

Sri Lanka's stock and foreign exchange markets were closed on Friday for a Buddhist religious holiday. 

($1 = 150.7500 Sri Lankan rupees) 

(Reporting by Ranga Sirilal and Shihar Aneez; Editing by Biju Dwarakanath)

Thursday, 9 February 2017

Sri Lankan shares snap 2 days of gains; rising interest rates weigh on mkt

Reuters: Sri Lankan shares closed slightly weaker on Thursday, snapping two straight sessions of gains and hovering near a more than 10-month closing low hit earlier this week, as concerns over rising market interest rates weighed on sentiment.

The Colombo stock index ended 0.04 percent lower at 6,094.15. The index hit its lowest close since March 2016 on Monday.

"Interest rates are the real concern," said Prashan Fernando, CEO at Acuity Stockbrokers. "If the central bank raises the rates, it is going to hit the market."

The central bank on Tuesday kept its key rates steady for a sixth straight month, but flagged possible "corrective measures" in the months ahead in a sign further tightening might be on the cards to temper inflation pressures and safeguard a fragile rupee.

Sri Lankan stocks, which have been declining since October, have been hit by political uncertainty arising from a decision of the ruling coalition parties to contest local polls separately, and on worries over a rise in market interest rates.

Yields on treasury bills rose 2-8 basis points at a weekly auction on Tuesday, hovering at more than four-year high.

Market turnover was 719.3 million rupees ($4.78 million) ($3.37 million) on Thursday, more than this year's daily average of 620.2 million rupees.

Foreign investors, who have been net sellers of 703.8 million rupees worth of shares so far this year, net bought 322.2 million rupees worth of equities.

Shares of John Keells Holdings Plc rose 0.34 percent, while Sri Lanka Telecom Plc fell 2.51 percent and Dialog Axiata Plc declined 1.85 percent.

Sri Lanka's stock and foreign exchange markets will be closed on Friday for a Buddhist religious holiday. 

($1 = 150.5000 Sri Lankan rupees) 

(Reporting by Ranga Sirilal and Shihar Aneez; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)

Colombo Stock Exchange Market Review – 9th Feb 2017


Colombo bourse concluded the session on mixed note despite foreign inflows. All Share index shed 2.24 index points (-0.04%) to close at 6,094.15 while 20-scrip S&P SL index edged up 3.30 index points or 0.09% to end at the session 3,488.50.

Two telcos, Dialog Axiata (LKR 10.60, -1.9%) and Sri Lanka Telecom (LKR 35.00, -2.5%) contributed negatively to the index performance while gains in Hemas Holdings (LKR 105.90, +1.3%) and John Keells Holdings (LKR 146.00, +0.3%) eased the impact.

Daily market turnover was 719mn. John Keells Holdings was the top contributor to the turnover with LKR 374mn underpinned by a single crossing of 0.3mn shares at LKR 146.00. Ceylon Cold Stores (LKR 68mn), Hemas Holdings (LKR 48mn) and Seylan Bank (LKR 45mn) made notable contribution. Single crossing was seen in Seylan Bank where 0.5mn shares changed hands at LKR 97.00.

Market breadth was negative where out of 191 stocks, 63 slipped and 48 advanced. High investor activity was seen in John Keells Holdings, Richard Pieris and Teejay Lanka. Richard Pieris declared an interim dividend of LKR 0.60 per share.

Foreign investors stood on buy side with a net foreign inflow of LKR 322mn. Foreign participation for the day was 52%. Net foreign inflows were seen in John Keells Holdings (LKR 345mn), Hemas Holdings (LKR 27mn), Tokyo Cement non-voting (LKR 6mn) while net foreign outflow was mainly seen in Seylan Bank (LKR 43mn).

Please note Colombo Stock Exchange will be closed tomorrow (10th February 2017) due to public holiday.
Source: LSL

Wednesday, 8 February 2017

Sri Lankan shares edge up, but rising rates weigh

Reuters: Sri Lankan shares edged up on Wednesday, continuing to recover from an over 10-month closing low hit earlier in the week, as investors picked up battered blue chips, but concerns over rising market interest rates weighed on sentiment.

The Colombo stock index ended 0.1 percent firmer at 6,096.39. The index hit its lowest close since March 2016 on Monday.

"Investors are looking for bargain prices," said Reshan Kurukulasuriya, chief operating officer, Richard Pieris Securities (Pvt) Ltd, adding shares of John Keells Holdings Plc saw strong buying.

Sri Lankan stocks, which have been declining since October, have been impacted by political uncertainty arising from a decision of the ruling coalition parties to contest local polls separately, and on worries over a rise in market interest rates.

The central bank on Tuesday kept its key rates steady for a sixth straight month, but flagged possible "corrective measures" in the months ahead in a sign further tightening might be on the cards to temper inflation pressures and safeguard a fragile rupee.

Yields on treasury bills rose 2-8 basis points at a weekly auction on Tuesday, hovering at more than four-year high.

Market turnover was 506.8 million rupees ($3.37 million), lower than this year's daily average of 616.5 million rupees.

Foreign investors, who have been net sellers of 1.03 billion rupees worth of shares so far this year, net bought 152.3 million rupees worth of equities on Wednesday.

Shares of John Keells rose 1.3 percent, Dialog Axiata Plc gained 2.9 percent and Sri Lanka Telecom Plc climbed 2 percent. 

($1 = 150.5000 Sri Lankan rupees) 

(Reporting by Ranga Sirilal and Shihar Aneez; Editing by Amrutha Gayathri)

Tuesday, 7 February 2017

Sri Lankan shares recover from 10-mth closing low on bargain-hunting

Reuters: Sri Lankan shares rose on Tuesday, recovering from a more than 10-month closing low hit in the previous session, as investors picked up battered blue chips after the central bank held its key policy rates steady, brokers said.

However, concerns over rising market interest rates continued to weigh on sentiment, they added.

The central bank kept its key rates steady for a sixth straight month, but flagged possible "corrective measures" in the months ahead in a sign further tightening might be on the cards to temper inflation pressures and safeguard a fragile rupee.

The Colombo stock index ended 0.4 percent firmer at 6,093.04, snapping two consecutive sessions of declines.

Bargain-hunting was seen in the later part of the session with investors picking up blue chips, said Dimantha Mathew, head of research at First Capital Equities (Pvt) Ltd.

Sri Lankan stocks, which have been declining since October, have been hurt by political uncertainty arising from a decision of the ruling coalition parties to contest local polls separately, and on worries over a rise in market interest rates.

Yields on treasury bills rose 2-8 basis points at a weekly auction on Tuesday.

Market turnover was 500.4 million rupees ($3.33 million), less than this year's daily average of 620.7 million rupees.

Foreign investors, who have been net sellers of 1.18 billion rupees worth of shares so far this year, net bought 110.6 million rupees worth of equities on Tuesday.

Shares of John Keells Holdings Plc rose 1.20 percent, Nestle Lanka Plc gained 2.56 percent and Sri Lanka Telecom Plc climbed 3.53 percent.

Hemas Holdings Plc gained 2.92 percent, Dialog Axiata Plc climbed 0.96 percent and Ceylon Tobacco Company Plc rose 0.36 percent. 

($1 = 150.4000 Sri Lankan rupees) 

(Reporting by Ranga Sirilal; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)

Colombo Stock Exchange Market Review – 7th Feb 2017


Central Bank’s decision to maintain the current policy rates pushed the Colombo bourse higher on Tuesday. All Share index gained 24.73 index points (0.41%) to end at 6,093.04. Similarly, high cap constituent, S&P SL20 index advanced by 11.76 index points or 0.46% to close at 3,478.08.

Nestle (LKR 2,000.00, +2.6%) spearheaded index gains along with John Keells Holdings (LKR 143.60, +1.2%), Sri Lanka Telecom (LKR 35.20, +3.5%) and Hemas Holdings (LKR 105.00, +2.9%).

Daily market turnover was LKR 500mn. Hemas Holdings contributed majority of the turnover (LKR 104mn) underpinned by a single crossing of 0.7mn shares at LKR 104.00. Swisstek (LKR 96mn), Teejay Lanka (LKR 83mn) and John Keells Holdings (LKR 64mn) made notable contribution.

Negotiated deals were recorded in Swisstek (1.3mn shares at LKR 67.00), Teejay Lanka (LKR 0.9mn shares at LKR 38.00) and John Keells Holdings (0.2mn shares at LKR 144.50). Aggregate value accounted for 44% of the turnover.

Market breadth was positive where out of 200 stocks traded, 81 advanced, 49 slipped while 70 remained unchanged. High investor preference was seen in Teejay Lanka and John Keells Holdings. Teejay Lanka advanced to LKR 38.90, +3.7%. Hemas Holdings, Dialog Axiata and Access Engineering were among heavily traded stocks.

Foreign investors stood on buy side with a net foreign inflow of LKR 111mn. Net foreign inflows were seen in John Keells Holdings (LKR 51mn), Hemas Holdings (LKR 30mn), Nestle (LKR 28mn) while net foreign outflow was mainly seen in National Development Bank (LKR 4mn). Foreign participation was 52%.

Meanwhile, at the Treasury bill auction today, yields advanced across the board. Three month treasury rate increased by 8bps to 9.16% and six month treasury rate increased by 2bps to 10.07%. One year yield advanced by 5bps to 10.47%. CBSL offered LKR 27bn worth Treasury bills and the auction was oversubscribed by 2.1 times with bids received amounting to LKR 57.5bn. It was decided to accept LKR 19.9bn worth of treasury bills.

Source: LSL