Friday, 17 February 2017

Sri Lankan shares fall for 2nd day; banks lead

Reuters: Sri Lankan shares declined in a shortened session on Friday, further moving away from a four-week closing high hit earlier in the week, as investors sold banking stocks amid concerns over rising market interest rates.

The Colombo stock index fell 0.22 percent to 6,159.87, its second straight session of falls, but posted a weekly gain of 1.1 percent after four straight weeks of declines.

"There was no big interest in the market, it was a dull day with low trade," said Dimantha Mathew, head of research at First Capital Equities (Pvt) Ltd.

"We saw a bit of profit-taking and that trend will continue for few more days until investors see some positive news."

Shares of Commercial Leasing and Finance Company Plc fell 9.4 percent, while Commercial bank of Ceylon Plc , the country's biggest listed lender, declined 0.7 percent. Conglomerate John Keells Holdings Plc dropped 0.1 percent.

Turnover stood at 329.4 million rupees ($2.19 million), less than half of this year's daily average of 622.4 million rupees.

Foreign investors offloaded a net 14.64 million rupees worth of equities, making them net sellers for the first time in 12 sessions, and extending the year-to-date net foreign outflow to 237.8 million rupees worth of shares.

The market will remain slow for the next few days and many investors will await direction from the sovereign bond issue, Mathew said.

The Sri Lankan cabinet approved a $1.5 billion sovereign bond issue to repay loans and manage interest payments, a cabinet spokesman said on Wednesday.

Yields on treasury bills rose 5-8 basis points at a weekly auction on Wednesday and are hovering at a more than four-year high.

The stock market traded for half a day due to a special holiday in lieu of National Day which fell on Feb. 4.

($1 = 150.5500 Sri Lankan rupees) 

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

Colombo Stock Exchange Market Review – 17th Feb 2017


Colombo bourse fell back to negative territory on Friday amid price decline in high caps. All Share index shed 13.85 index points (-0.22%) to end at 6,159.87 while 20-scrip S&P SL index lost 4.23 index points or 0.12% to close at 3,543.63.

Price depreciation in Ceylon Tobacco (LKR 830.20, -2.2%), Commercial Leasing & Finance (LKR 2.90, -9.4%) and Commercial Bank (LKR 142.00, -0.7%) adversely impacted the index performance.

Daily market turnover was LKR 329mn. Teejay Lanka was the top contributor to the turnover with LKR 107mn underpinned by two crossings of 2.6mn shares at LKR 39.50. Hemas Holdings (LKR 78mn), Tokyo Cement non-voting (LKR 37mn) and Tokyo Cement voting (LKR 25mn) made notable contribution.

Losers outweighed the gainers 64 to 37 while 65 stocks remained unchanged. High investor activity was witnessed in Pan Asia Bank rights, Central Investments & Finance and HVA Foods. Central Investments & Finance continued to decline as share closed at LKR 1.00, with a loss of 16.7%.

Meanwhile, Ceylon Cold Stores declared an interim dividend of LKR 14.00 per share.

Foreign investors were net sellers with a net outflow of LKR 15mn after eleven straight days of inflows. Foreign participation was 66%. Net foreign outflows were seen in Teejay Lanka (LKR 31mn), Tokyo Cement (LKR 15mn), Piramal Glass (LKR 7mn) while net foreign inflow was mainly seen in Tokyo Cement non-voting (LKR 27mn).
Source:LSL