Reuters: ** Sri Lankan shares ended at a 5-1/2-year low and the rupee fell on Monday as investors awaited a budget vote on Tuesday to assess the political stability of the government led by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.
** Sri Lankan Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweera last week presented the 2019 budget that raises spending while setting an ambitious goal to reduce the country’s large fiscal deficit. An interim budget vote is scheduled for Tuesday.
** Wickremesinghe-led government’s political stability has been questioned by the opposition since he was reinstated as prime minister after a 51-day political crisis.
** The Colombo Stock Exchange index slid 0.73 percent to 5,680.30, its lowest close since Sept. 10, 2013.
** The benchmark stock index had fallen 1.63 percent last week, recording its third straight weekly fall. It declined 2.9 percent in February, its second straight monthly fall.
** The turnover was 400 million rupees ($2.24 million), less than half of last year’s daily average of 834 million rupees.
** Foreign investors bought a net 6.1 million rupees worth of shares on Monday, but they have been net sellers of 5.96 billion rupees worth of equities so far this year.
** Shares in Hatton National Bank Plc fell 4.0 percent while Sri Lanka Telecom Plc lost 5.9 percent, Seylan Bank Plc ended 11.3 percent lower and Sampath Bank plc closed down 2.5.
** The rupee closed tad weaker at 178.50/65 per dollar compared to Friday’s close of 178.40/60. Inflows from a sale of $2.4 billion sovereign bonds were expected to boost the rupee.
** The sale is crucial for the island nation to boost investor sentiment, which was dented by rating downgrades by all three rating agencies after the political crisis in October.
** The rupee has climbed 2.3 percent so far this year as exporters converted dollars and foreign investors purchased government securities amid stabilising investor confidence after the country repaid a $1 billion sovereign bond in mid-January.
** Worries over heavy debt repayment after the 51-day political crisis that resulted in a series of credit-rating downgrades dented investor sentiment as the country struggled to repay its foreign loans.
** The rupee dropped 16 percent in 2018, and was one of the worst-performing currencies in Asia due to heavy foreign outflows.
** Foreign investors bought a net 636.3 million rupees worth of government securities in the week ended March 6, the first net inflow in three weeks, but they have sold a net 2.8 billion rupees so far this year, the central bank’s latest data showed.
($1 = 178.4500 Sri Lankan rupees)
(Reporting by Ranga Sirilal and Shihar Aneez; Editing by Shreejay Sinha)