Owais
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Hong Kong also awakes as SCRAs surge to $181 million
KARACHI (October 08 2006): Hong Kong, which had been dis-investing ever since the beginning of FY07 and had negative balances to the tune of $3.1 million under Special Convertible Rupee Accounts (SCRAs) until about the end of September, has brought in so far during October nearly $9.5 million, including $6.3 million on October 5.
Singapore, which continues to be the lead investor, also brought in $0.6 million by way of fresh funds on October 5. Accordingly, its cumulative net flow during FY07 reached $101.4 million on that date.
USA also strengthened its SCRAs, albeit nominally, with net flows during the year to October 5 rising to $26.753 million from $26.748 million a day before.
On the other hand, the balances of UK and Switzerland deteriorated a bit. UK's positive balances showed a net withdrawal of $0.011 million on October 5, with its overall balance declining to $71.154 million on that date, while negative balances of Switzerland deteriorated by another $0.416 million to reach $19.445 million on October 5.
No change in balances of any other country was observed. Meanwhile, the benchmark KSE-100 gained 112.27 points to close at 10,855.82 points on October 5 successfully crossing 10,800 psychological barrier.
The KSE-30 share index closed at 13,544.18 points, or 264.34 points higher than a day earlier, making a historical headway by jumping over 13,500 level for the first time. The volume-based BRIndex30 registered a positive change of 224.62 points to close at 11,720.83 points on October 5.
The bullish trend at the shares market was attributed to the news about increasing balances in non-residents' special convertible rupee accounts and acquisition of a domestic bank (Prime Bank) by a leading foreign bank (ABN Amro).
Price flare-ups were witnessed in banks and OGDCL scrips, in particular, and were triggered by reports of major public sector, or partly public sector, banks and OGDCL's GDR listing on London Stock Exchange. Accordingly, across-the-board buying was witnessed in KSE with NBP, MCB, Bank Alfalah and OGDCL playing the special lead roles.
The aggregate market capitalisation, accordingly, reached close to the Rs 3 trillion-mark amid healthy trading at the Karachi bourse, which was just 144 points behind the 11,000 milestone. Besides speculative buying in stocks related to oil and gas exploration and banking, cement sector also extended the needed support to allow the market reach the record capitalisation figure.
KARACHI (October 08 2006): Hong Kong, which had been dis-investing ever since the beginning of FY07 and had negative balances to the tune of $3.1 million under Special Convertible Rupee Accounts (SCRAs) until about the end of September, has brought in so far during October nearly $9.5 million, including $6.3 million on October 5.
Singapore, which continues to be the lead investor, also brought in $0.6 million by way of fresh funds on October 5. Accordingly, its cumulative net flow during FY07 reached $101.4 million on that date.
USA also strengthened its SCRAs, albeit nominally, with net flows during the year to October 5 rising to $26.753 million from $26.748 million a day before.
On the other hand, the balances of UK and Switzerland deteriorated a bit. UK's positive balances showed a net withdrawal of $0.011 million on October 5, with its overall balance declining to $71.154 million on that date, while negative balances of Switzerland deteriorated by another $0.416 million to reach $19.445 million on October 5.
No change in balances of any other country was observed. Meanwhile, the benchmark KSE-100 gained 112.27 points to close at 10,855.82 points on October 5 successfully crossing 10,800 psychological barrier.
The KSE-30 share index closed at 13,544.18 points, or 264.34 points higher than a day earlier, making a historical headway by jumping over 13,500 level for the first time. The volume-based BRIndex30 registered a positive change of 224.62 points to close at 11,720.83 points on October 5.
The bullish trend at the shares market was attributed to the news about increasing balances in non-residents' special convertible rupee accounts and acquisition of a domestic bank (Prime Bank) by a leading foreign bank (ABN Amro).
Price flare-ups were witnessed in banks and OGDCL scrips, in particular, and were triggered by reports of major public sector, or partly public sector, banks and OGDCL's GDR listing on London Stock Exchange. Accordingly, across-the-board buying was witnessed in KSE with NBP, MCB, Bank Alfalah and OGDCL playing the special lead roles.
The aggregate market capitalisation, accordingly, reached close to the Rs 3 trillion-mark amid healthy trading at the Karachi bourse, which was just 144 points behind the 11,000 milestone. Besides speculative buying in stocks related to oil and gas exploration and banking, cement sector also extended the needed support to allow the market reach the record capitalisation figure.