Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

EPF marks CSE re-entry buying 55mn Dialog shares

„Market sources say EPF bought 55mn Dialog Axiata shares for Rs.9 per each, on Friday, in 3 crossings „Since 2015, EPF had refrained from making new investment­s in CSE amid allegation­s and scandals „PM Ranil Wickremesi­nghe this March said EPF would re-e

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The pension state-run fund, the private Employees’ sector Provident Fund (EPF), marked its re-entry into the Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE) last week, with the purchase of 55 million shares of Dialog Axiata PLC for a considerat­ion of Rs.495 million, Mirror Business learns.

The market on Friday (May 17) saw three crossings of Dialog Axiata,

amounting to 55 million shares, at Rs.9 per share, which were believed have been bought by the EPF.

The sellers of the shares were believed to be foreign. Foreign investors sold a net Rs.997.3 million worth of shares on Friday, extending the year-to-date net foreign outflow to Rs.5.7 billion rupees worth of equities.

As at March 31, 2019, Dialog Axiata’s net asset value was Rs.8.77, up from Rs.8.26 three months ago.

As at same date, the EPF held 180.7 million or 2.22 percent of Dialog Axiata as the company’s second largest shareholde­r after the Malaysian parent, Axiata Investment­s (Labuan) Limited, which had over 6.7 billion shares or 83.32 percent of the issued shares of the company.

Market sources also said the EPF bought the shares of premier blue chip John Keells Holdings PLC (JKH), though this couldn’t be verified.

High-net-worth investors Harry Jayawarden­a and Rusi Captain were said to have been buying JKH shares in the market in the recent times, accounting for most of the local buying.

The EPF has a checkered history in the Colombo bourse.

Since 2015, the EPF had refrained from making new investment­s in the CSE as the superannua­tion fund failed to generate substantia­l returns on the investment it made in the country’s equity market.

On top of that the alleged involvemen­t of the EPF in the infamous Treasury bond scam made the Central Bank to suspend the fund’s all secondary market activities.

The EPF was severely criticized for some of its investment­s in several mid-tier companies, which some alleged were the results of some corrupt officials and unscrupulo­us elements in the Colombo bourse.

Also, the EPF was caught in a notorious ‘pump and dump’ scheme, where some high-net-worth investors dumped the stocks on the fund, as the EPF was scandalous­ly referred to as the ‘buyer of last resort’, at the time.

However, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe this March said the EPF would return to the CSE with a new security system in place.

He noted that the EPF’S return would raise the investor confidence in the market.

According to the data available for the year 2018, around 92 percent of the Rs.2.3 trillion fund was invested in government securities while 3.3 percent in stocks and 1.9 percent in corporate bonds.

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