The Phnom Penh Post

VN Index returns from Tet, aims at 990 points

-

RETURNING from the oneweek Tet (Lunar New Year) holiday, Vietnam’s benchmark VN Index is forecast to grow strongly with banks leading the market upturn.

The VN Index on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange inched down 0.22 per cent on February 1 to end at 908.67 points.

The southern market index has gained 1.8 per cent since the beginning of the year but recorded a slight weekly loss of 0.02 per cent before the holiday.

The HNX Index on the Ha Noi Stock Exchange rose 0.58 per cent during the pre-Tet trading week to finish at 103.34 points.

The northern market index, however, declined by 0.85 per cent from last year.

In its 2019 strategy report, VNDirect Securities Corporatio­n ( VNDS) expected the VN Index to “end the year at around 990 points, up 11 per cent from 2018 year-end levels”.

The company also said: “Vietnam’s stock market correction in 2018 after a heady 2017 rally has catalysed an ongoing transition from a momentumdr­iven investing strategy to a growth and value-based investing strategy.”

“With the market trailing price-toearnings having contracted to 15.5, down from 21.9 at the 2018 peak, and estimated 2018 market-cap weighted earnings growth of 25 per cent, skittish foreign investors are likely to re-enter the market in force, albeit selectivel­y.”

After being the world’s best performer in the first quarter of last year with a 19.3 per cent increase and peaking at 1,204.33 points in early April, the VN Index rapidly lost momentum and turned to one of the world’s worst performers in the second quarter of last year with a 19.7 per cent fall.

“The VN Index could breach the 1,000 point level, intra-year, if a USChina trade deal and Chinese fiscal stimulus materialis­e but the sentiment boost is likely to be transitory,” VNDS added.

Trade tensions between the US and China, starting early in March last year, have been and will continue to be the main concern among global investors.

Pressure on central banks

According to VNDS market strategy division head Dinh Quang Hinh, USChina trade tensions are one of two main factors that could have big impacts on the global financial markets this year along with the tightened monetary policies of central banks.

“The tightening policies central banks such as the [US] Federal Reserve and European Central Bank pursue will consequent­ly raise interest rates and make internatio­nal capital return to developed markets, especially the US, from emerging and frontier markets,” Hinh told Viet Nam News.

“The increases of interest rates globally will pressurise Vietnam’s lending rate levels, lowering investors’ interest in the stock market, as well as [influencin­g] foreign exchange rates and inflation,” he added.

“Many institutio­ns have curbed their world economic growth forecast for 2019 by 0.2-0.3 percentage points as tensions cause negative effects on internatio­nal trade and investment prospects,” he said, adding a slowing global economy may decelerate Vietnam’s internatio­nal trade this year.

“From our point of view, corporate earnings growth of listed companies is also predicted to decelerate in 2019 and that will also be a problem for the stock market,” Pham Tien Dung, deputy director of analysis and investment consultanc­y department at Bao Viet Securities Co (BVSC), told Viet Nam News.

The stability of the Vietnamese macro-economy was among the supporting factors for the stock market this year along with the con- sideration of the Financial Times Stock Exchange (FTSE) and Morgan Stanly Capital Internatio­nal (MSCI) to put Vietnam in their reviews on status upgrade, according to Dung.

Vietnam would remain a bright spot in Asia-Pacific for internatio­nal institutio­nal investors thanks to the nation’s political and macro-economic stability, which had helped its stock market stand against global risks, Dung said in a note.

“If being enlisted in FTSE and MSCI’s status reviews, Vietnam may lure $1 billion worth of capital from global exchange-traded funds, making it more attractive and less risky to global investors.”

“However, Vietnam needs to enhance its market transparen­cy and informatio­n accessibil­ity for all investors regardless of their nationalit­ies. Lifting the foreign ownership cap for local companies is another advantage to make foreign capital flow into Vietnam.”

Amidst investors turning to defen- sive stocks such as consumer, consumer-related, power and automotive, banks would continue being the flagship of the stock market this year, according to analysts.

Viet Capital Securities Corporatio­n (VCSC) brokerage division director Chau Thien Truc Quynh told tinnhanhch­ungkhoan.vn that bank stocks would remain the main driving force behind the market this year.

Among the 10 banks with the highest 2018 profits, Military Bank (HoSE: MBB) stood out as its shares had been undervalue­d and were fed off the buying story, she said.

According to Vietnam Internatio­nal Securities Corporatio­n market analysis department director Nguyen Hong Khanh, any changes in banks would be reflected in their share prices and any changes in their shares would have big impacts on the stock market, given the fact that a number of bank stocks have been added to the market’s bluechip VN30 Index.

 ?? VIET NAM NEWS ?? The VN Index on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange inched down 0.22 per cent on February 1 to end at 908.67 points.
VIET NAM NEWS The VN Index on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange inched down 0.22 per cent on February 1 to end at 908.67 points.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia