Friday, Apr 04, 2025 | 04 Shawwal 1446

PSX sees selling pressure, KSE-100 down over 1,000 points

By Brecorder.com - March 24, 2025

Selling pressure was observed at the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX), with the benchmark KSE-100 Index registering a loss of over 1,000 points during the intraday trading on Monday.

At 12:40pm, the benchmark index was hovering at 117,368.16 level, a decrease of 1,074.01 points or 0.91%.

Selling was seen in key sectors including oil and gas exploration companies, OMCs, refineries, automobile assemblers and fertilizer. Index-heavy stocks including EFERT, INDU, MARI, OGDC, PPL and PSO traded in the red.

The PSX maintained a jubilant streak throughout the previous week, closing at an all-time high. This surge was driven by optimism surrounding a potential staff-level agreement for the release of the second EFF tranche, valued at $1 billion.

The benchmark KSE-100 index surged 2,906 points, or 2.5%, every week, closing at 118,442.18 points compared to 115,536.17 points in the previous week.

Internationally, financial markets made a mixed start on Monday with US stock futures rising but the dollar wavering ahead of a week driven by data, Chinese earnings and the threat of steep US tariff hikes on the horizon.

S&P 500 futures were up about 0.6% in the Asia morning and Nasdaq 100 futures rose 0.8%. Japan’s Nikkei and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng climbed about 0.2%.

The week holds global purchasing managers index gauges, the US Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation reading, inflation data in Australia and Japan, a budget update in Britain and major earnings in China.

But it is likely to be updates on US President Donald Trump’s plans for global reciprocal tariffs from April 2 that drive markets, and after a volatile month for stocks, bonds and currencies, analysts said there is no obvious trade ahead.

Trump has vowed to impose a complicated barrage of tariffs next week, the details of which are not clear save that they are to be calculated to reflect the impact of foreign tariffs and foreign value-added taxes on imports.

The S&P 500 eked out a gain on Friday after Trump hinted at flexibility. However, after a rollercoaster first two months in power - including tariff hits on China, Mexico and Canada - traders are shy of betting that Trump is ready to cut deals.

Ten-year US Treasury yields have fallen nearly 40 basis points from mid-February highs and were last steady at 4.27% and investors have been drawn abroad from US stocks, with sharp rallies in Hong Kong and Europe as Wall Street fell.

This is an intra-day update

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