Federal & Punjab Govts initiatives/Progress

*That is why I voted for Sharifs … that is why 1.5 Crore in Pakistan voted for them …

**Inqlabi batai , josheelwe narai aur tabdeeli ke suhane spna **sb ko ache lgte h …mujhe bhi … lekin un **khabo ki tabeer **hmesha wo ni hoti …

Pakistan ki emotional youth aur all those Pakistanis** currently outside Pakistan** ko yh baat buht der se smjh m aye gi … ya shyd kbhi smjh m na aye … !

Idealism qiss-o-khanio m zuroor acha lgta h … haqeeqat m zameeni haqaiq mukhtalif aur baaz auqat khase **talkh **hote h …
***Market Watch: Earnings Optimism drives KSE’s Assault on Record Highs
**
Published: July 23, 2013

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The Karachi Stock Exchange’s (KSE) benchmark 100-share index gained 0.98% or 228.88 points to end at 23,657.81 points. PHOTO: AFP/FILE


KARACHI: *The country’s largest bourse resumes its assault on record highs, touching all-time high on the first day of the week with buying across various sectors on earnings optimism. The energy sector was on a roll ahead of the new energy policy approval due today.

The Karachi Stock Exchange’s (KSE) benchmark 100-share index gained 0.98% or 228.88 points to end at 23,657.81 points. Trade volumes climbed to** 327 million shares** compared with Friday’s tally of **238 million shares.
**

The index touched** new high** on the first session of the week with various sectors participating in the rally as investors continue to buy in earnings optimism.

“Major contributors to gains were index heavy power stocks ahead of the **new energy policy approval by the Council of Common Interests **due today and the federal cabinet later this week,” reported Fareesa Baig, analyst at Elixir Securities.

Energy and power, oil marketing companies and the cement sector were in the limelight and led the rally.** Oil and Gas Development Company, Pakistan State Oil **and Pakistan Petroleum were the leaders of the pack.

“Throughout the day, selling pressure was witnessed in the banking sector where investors preferred booking gains and switching positions to the cement sector,” said Fahad Ali, analyst at JS Global Capital.

However, index heavy financial scrips MCB Bank and Habib Bank rallied due to continued positive sentiments backed by rumours of possible lower minimum savings rate.

**Telecom sector **made a comeback after renewed interest of investors in Pakistan Telecommunication Company due to renewed interest after recent cash payout and optimism on earnings in the coming quarters.

Fertilizer sector remained under pressure on Monday where Engro Corporation managed to hit its upper circuit in the morning session, but then lost ground to close up 1.3%.

Shares of 363 companies were traded on Monday. At the end of the day 190 stocks closed higher, 135 declined while 38 remained unchanged. The value of shares traded during the day was Rs13.37 billion.

Bank of Punjab was the volume leader with 63.07 million shares losing Rs 0.05 to finish at Rs 15.02. It was followed by Fauji Cement with 38.67 million shares gaining Rs 0.57 to close at Rs 14.95 and Pakistan Telecommunication Company with 26.09 million shares gaining Rs 1.24 to close at Rs 26.8

**
Foreign institutional investors** were net buyers of** Rs 613 million**, according to data maintained by the National Clearing Company of Pakistan.

*Published in The Express Tribune, July 23[SUP]rd[/SUP], 2013.

*Market Watch: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

IMF bailout package may not be bad deal for Pakistan, say experts

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“The major problem with IMF loans is that there is no particular ownership for the loans among the political class,” SDPI Executive Director Dr Abid Suleri. PHOTO: FILE

****ISLAMABAD: The International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan agreement may not be a bad deal for Pakistan, but the government must introduce fiscal responsibility and reduce indirect taxation for any meaningful economic gains in the future.

These thoughts were expressed by experts at a seminar titled “Pakistan Federal Budget 2013-14 and Role of IMF”, organised by the Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI) on Monday.

The IMF has indicated a loan package worth $5.3 billion for Pakistan, subject to approval from the Washington-based fund’s executive board in September, which will be payable over ten years. Pakistan had applied for a $7 billion for balance of payment support.

Speakers at the seminar said that perhaps IMF was not coming to Pakistan to dictate policies, but to point out the difference in expenditure and revenues. They said Pakistan has a 48% mismatch in expenditures and revenues according to the Federal Budget 2013-14.

Farrukh Pitafi, an analyst and columnist, said the previous government had also negotiated with the IMF to improve the balance of payment situation. He said the promise of financial reform failed to materialise then because of a coalition government that could not develop consensus on the issue. Pakistan had abandoned a previous $11.3 billion loan programme in 2011, according to a previous report by The Express Tribune.

The speakers agreed that Pakistan should be happy someone is helping out the country in tough economic times.
“If the IMF loan agreement can help the country widen its tax-to-gross domestic product (GDP) base and overcome the energy crisis, then to me it is not a bad deal,” said Dr Abid Suleri, executive director of the SDPI.

But Suleri said unless the country wants to head towards another IMF fund facility in the future, we must practice fiscal discipline and cut down on indirect taxes, which punish the poor.

“The government needs to give a roadmap to reduce indirect taxation,” he said.
Suleri said the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) does not go for direct taxation, because indirect taxation is an easy source of revenue for them.

Speakers said Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) government decided to continue the Benazir Income Support Programme not because of some political generosity, but because IMF does not allow reduction in social safety related programmes as a policy.

Safiya Aftab, an economic expert and financial consultant, said the number of Pakistanis who file direct tax returns – a dismal 1.2 million Pakistanis file direct taxes and it is not certain how many of these actually pay taxes – has remained roughly stable over the past 10 years. Aftab said an optimistic assessment would be that this number can be doubled in the next five years through governmental effort, especially if the undocumented economy is brought under the government’s radar.

Responding to a question during the discussion, she said the government should not tinker with the allocation for provinces in the National Finance Commission award but put some conditionality in the award for provinces to generate their own revenue streams.

Suleri said the major problem with IMF loans is that there is no particular ownership for the loans among the political class. One government blames the loans taken by the previous governments creating a vicious cycle, he said.

The speakers said there is no solution in the short or medium term for cheaper electricity, and therefore the circular debt situation is going to persist. They urged the government to focus on improving governance and subsidising alternative energy solutions to cope with the power crisis.
*

Published in The Express Tribune, July 23[SUP]rd[/SUP], 2013.*

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

One question for you. If the stock market index goes up by 2000 points, how does that help Pakistan, or its economy?

And a side note. During Musharraf’s tenure, KSE went up 200%. The current spike is peanuts compared to that. KSE was labelled the best market in the world 2 years in a row. And in due time, it fell about 250%.

Please investigate as to how and why the stock market goes up, and then please let us know how it will help the power sector, education sector, or the person on the street in Pakistan…and then we can take it from there.

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

Now be a sport and remember to post news when it comes down down to the level of sharif family.

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

i'm no economist, but i dont think Stock Market index represents any sustained economy growth, if it went up for a week after PMLN win, it also came down for a week.

Stock market was also booming during shortcut aziz premiership, what happened then? it was all fake, it can still be faked

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

Stock market in Pakistan is mostly based on speculations. Nothing much has changed on the ground, so whats driving the market at present?

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

SE koi indicator ni hota economic growth or near term GDP growth ka .... dono m koi link ni hota ??

Musharraf tenure m 2003-2006 k period m siraf telecom sector m kitni jobs create hui ...better check the stats ...

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

Investors waqai bewaqoof h phir tau .... !

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

confidence ko zuror show krta h in country's economy

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

Our stock indices are not indicative of economic growth, or GDP growth. KSE has somewhere around 700+ companies listed, and the KSE index is composed of 100 companies, and without going into names and details, only 3 or 4 companies command upto 40% weightage in the index. A 1 rupee spike in the price of MCB adds 30-40 points to the index. Nowhere else in the world do you have such disparity, other than perhaps in mideast bourses like Saudi and UAE bourse.

During Musharraf's tenure, telecom sector exploded, but the stock market did not reflect that. It was primarily speculation in energy stocks (OGDC, PPL, POL etc) that led to the abnormal rise and eventual fall.

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

investors are not stupid i agree. The unregulated markets like Pakistan are like paradise for investors as you can make a lot of money if you play it right. The big guns have been creating artificial bubbles during musharrafs regime as well, raise the market to record levels and then earn profits (profit taking) throwing it spiralling downwards. The big investors did earn a lot during that time, the ordinary people got crushed during these games.

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

Yes, Stock Exchange performed well after elections and that reflects some optimism from business community about future. It reflects;

  1. how badly people thought about the previous government and how depressed stock market was before elections.
  2. relief that we did not get a hung parliament.

This is basically positive sentiment stemming out of the relief of getting rid of the massively corrupt and inept PPP government.

Still, it doesn't reflect comparison of PML(N) government v/s PTI. Who knows, things could have been even better with the index at 30,000 now ;)

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

so PML-N policies have already taken effect on economy to boost KSE? What was the effect on GDP from May 11th to July 23rd?

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

two or three factors in this rise:

1) investors are MOSTLY from business community. When new budget was announced, this particular segment was the biggest beneficiary as there were some reliefs and no plans were announced to increase tax net.

2) the rumors of 15bn USD from saudi govt increased the confidence to no end. So its a false rise like it happened in the past.

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

But stock market performance during previous government was not bad either. Your reason for voting Sharifs carries no weight.

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

Flashy ‘frontier market’ gains lure investors

NEW YORK (AP) — Bulgaria, the United Arab Emirates and Pakistan. An itinerary for a traveler with a flair for languages or a list of scenes for a spy thriller set during the Cold War?

Neither. It turns out they are among the countries with the best-performing stock markets in the world this year. And the success of these so-called frontier markets, mainly in Asia and Africa, has attracted U.S. investors eager to find the next set of rapidly growing countries now that Brazil and other emerging markets have fallen into a slump.

“These places might scare some people,” says Russ Koesterich, global chief investment strategist at the money-management giant BlackRock. “But they’re seeing some of the fastest growth in the world.”

People had a similar response when investors were dabbling in emerging markets during the 1990s, Koesterich says. “Brazil and India — those used to be scary places, too.”

Unlike the U.S. and Europe or even emerging markets like China and Brazil, frontier-market countries are a grab-bag group with little connection to each other. But they have a few things in common. They’re small, growing quickly and some, like Kuwait and Qatar, are rich. Many of them shunned the outside world for years and are slowly opening their doors to outside investments.

Thanks to rapid economic growth, the MSCI Frontier Market index has gained 22% the past 12 months. That compares with a 3% rise for MSCI’s emerging market index, and 25% for the Standard & Poor’s 500 benchmark index.

Investing in frontier markets carries plenty of dangers. Argentina’s government could decide to take over more private companies and leave investors with nothing. The war in Syria could spill into Lebanon and Jordan, upending their thriving markets. Cote d’Ivoire, Pakistan and many of the 37 frontier countries have had coups, wars and other turmoil over the past two decades.

“Buying into them has to be a long-term play,” says Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at BMO Private Bank. “You have to take some leaps of faith.”

The steady rise of their stock markets has apparently helped investors put aside their worries. They’ve dropped money into frontier market funds week after week, raising the total to $3 billion so far this year, according to EPFR Global, a company which tracks the flow of investment funds. That’s triple the amount deposited in them last year and just shy of the full-year record of $3.07 billion in 2010.

Cash has streamed in so quickly that Franklin Templeton’s $1.3 billion frontier fund has decided to start turning away new investors. Its top holdings include a Romanian oil and gas producer, OMV Petrom, and a batch of companies from Qatar and other countries on the Persian Gulf.

Last month, Wells Fargo’s private banking group, which manages $170 billion in clients’ money, took its first step into the frontier, pulling a portion of its money out of emerging-markets like Brazil, China and India and putting it into countries like Pakistan and Vietnam.

A key reason for the move was that the frontier markets are largely insulated from problems plaguing bigger countries, said Sean Lynch, the global investment strategist for Wells Fargo Private Bank.

When talk that the Federal Reserve would withdraw some of its support for the U.S. economy rattled stocks and bonds in the U.S. and Europe, many countries’ currencies sank against the dollar. But Lynch noticed that frontier countries’ currencies held up.

As a group, these less-developed countries aren’t as tied to the world’s developed economies. Their industries are growing by selling to customers at home or nearby. Kenya’s East African Breweries, for example, has most of its customers in neighboring African countries.

“They really seem impervious to what’s happening on the main stage,” says Ablin.

The main attraction for investors is the rapid economic growth. In theory, it should pull many people in those countries out of poverty, and as they begin to spend their higher pay on refrigerators and mobile phones, local businesses should flourish.

“A lot of them have growing populations and expanding workforces, and they don’t just rely on exports of food or oil,” Lynch says. “Look at Vietnam. They traditionally exported coffee, seafood and rice. Now they’re making high-end machinery.”

Not so long ago, these same traits lured investors to emerging markets. But after more than a decade of strong economic growth, the upstarts have slowed. Brazil, Russia and India are now closely tied to swings in global markets as well as to each other.

When China’s economy slows, for instance, it drags down financial markets in Brazil, which counts China as the top customer for its exported goods.

But if a frontier market like Ghana ran into trouble, Vietnam and Kuwait wouldn’t even notice.

As U.S. markets recently turned turbulent over renewed Fed worries, Ablin watched one frontier fund, the iShares MSCI Frontier 100, climb higher day after day. He recently bought a bunch of shares in the fund for his children and his BMO investment team is mulling a shift into frontier funds, too.

Still, a frontier market like Pakistan can leave some investors skittish. Osama bin Laden hid in Pakistan before he was killed in a U.S. raid in 2011. The country is often at loggerheads with neighboring India. And Pakistan has been the target of U.S. drone strikes against suspected Islamic militants near its border with Afghanistan.

Wells Fargo’s Lynch and many others in the investment world argue that the good news out of Pakistan is going unnoticed. An election last month brought Nawaz Sharif to leadership as prime minister. Sharif is considered pro-business and has pledged to take on unemployment, inflation and corruption. In early July, his government lined up a $5 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund.

All of that has helped drive up Pakistan’s stock market 11% this month. For the year, it’s up 28%. By contrast, China’s Shanghai Stock Exchange composite index has lost 10% during the same period, and Brazil’s Bovespa has dropped 22%.

A surging economy doesn’t guarantee dazzling investment returns, says Christian Deseglise, managing director at HSBC Global Asset Management.

Take China. Over the past five years, its economy expanded more than 10% a year on average. During that same period, the nation’s stock market fell 2%. Poorly managed companies still struggle to turn profits even as an improving economy sends them more customers.

“Some of these countries will have economies that do well but markets that do poorly, and vice versa,” Deseglise says.

That’s the main reason investors say they avoid staking too much on a single frontier country. It’s too easy to imagine something going wrong. So, investors often buy a little of all of them, spreading their bets over Africa, Europe and Asia.

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

How come the market is going up and Pakistani rupee is going down (it has lost 4.5 % during the past two months)?

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

Currency exchange rate is lower because of interest rate cuts by SBP. They recently cut it by 50 basis points and it is down to around 9% from 13.5% two years ago. Lower interest rates also favorably impact businesses in addition to making stocks more attractive compared to bonds/bank deposits... hence some +ive effect on stock exchange too.

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

THIS !

Re: Earnings optimism drives KSE’s assault on record highs

I think there is no direct relation between stock and currency rates. For increase in currency rates there should be positive economic growth, billions of dollars of investment by foreign countries and exports surpass the imports or if there is huge trade surplus. I think none of these factors are happening at the moment. Due to 'maut ke saudagar' factor, developed western countries will be reluctant for huge investments in Pakistan. The other major factor is billions of illegal money earned by people are converting and transferring to foreign countries to get immigration or spending in foreign country in real state or opening businesses, negatively affecting the foreign reserves in Pakistan, hence value of currency will go down and down, and unfortunately there will be no end to it.