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The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) witnessed a massive selling pressure on Thursday as the benchmark KSE-100 index shed more than 2,000 points.
The market began its slide soon after opening at 45,369.14 points, with the benchmark KSE-100 index down 2,005 points, or 4.42 per cent, by 1:30pm. As per the PSX Rulebook, if the index goes five per cent above or below its last close and stays there for five minutes, trading in all securities is halted for a specified period.
The benchmark index closed at 43,234.15, down 2,134.99 points, or 4.71pc.
Intermarket Securities' head of equities Raza Jafri cited the widening trade deficit as the reason behind the plunge, saying it will keep the rupee under pressure and lead to "aggressive" increases in the interest rate.
"However, it is important to keep in mind that authorities have already commenced macro-course correction while global commodities are coming down due to Omicron [variant of the coronavirus]. There may be an element of one-offs in November imports too and coming months may show better numbers," he added.
The downturn in the market may be treated as an opportunity, he said.
The view was also shared by CEO of Topline Securities Mohammad Sohail who said the "shocking" import bill in November, coupled with the central bank's "aggressive borrowing" in yesterday's T-bill auction were behind the nosedive.
Global trend
Meanwhile, AKY Securities Chief Executive Officer Amin Yousuf noted that stock markets across the world were bearish on the back of countries imposing restrictions to control the spread of the Omicron variant. A similar effect was also seen at the PSX, he added.
The hike in the interest rate by 125 basis points by the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) during the auction of T-bills was also increasing investors' problems, Yousuf said. In addition, there was an expectation of further hike in the interest rate in the monetary policy announcement on December 14 because of which there was selling pressure in the market, he added.
Meanwhile, the US dollar soared to Rs176.30 in interbank market after gaining Rs1 in value.
Shehbaz holds govt responsible
Separately, PML-N President Shehbaz Sharif said in a statement that the stock exchange had not crashed, the government's economic policy and the steps it had taken had crashed.
"Recently, the government talked about its success. Today, there is a bloodbath at the stock exchange. The stock exchange falling 2,000 points is a sign of investor's distrust in the government's economic policies," he said.
Shehbaz also held Prime Minister Imran Khan responsible for investor's millions going down the drain. "We had warned that the trade deficit and increase in interest rates will kill the economy," he said.
He added that this was the consequence of taking foreign loans and the continuous depreciation of the rupee. He called for putting an end to this "destruction" and said that it was a matter of national security.
Rise in trade deficit, inflation
A day earlier, the government released provisional data that showed trade deficit rose steeply by 162.4pc in the month of November, driven largely by more than triple increase in imports compared to exports from the country.
The reversing trend in trade deficit was witnessed for the fifth consecutive month as merchandise trade deficit reached $5.107 billion in November against $1.946bn over the corresponding month last year. This is the highest trade deficit recorded in a single month in terms of value.
Earlier this week, data released by the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics showed inflation edged up to 11.5pc from 9.2pc, the highest increase noted in the past 20 months influenced by a record hike in fuel prices in October.
The massive rupee depreciation fuelled import-led inflation. Inflation measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI) increased to its highest level in 20 months — the period when global oil prices kept rising steadily undermining earlier gains.
Bloodbath at PSX as benchmark index plunges over 2,100 points
Analysts cite "shocking" import bill, SBP's "aggressive borrowing" in T-bill auction and global sell-off as reasons for plunge.
www.dawn.com