Bangkok Post

Vietnam’s main bourse halts trading for second day

- BLOOMBERG NGUYEN KIEU GIANG ANDREA TAN

HANOI/SINGAPORE: Vietnam’s main stock exchange, home to the country’s benchmark VN Index, remained shut for a second day yesterday following a malfunctio­n, its longest halt in nearly 10 years.

The Ho Chi Minh City Stock Exchange said that while the technical issue that occurred on Monday has been solved, it needed to run tests with securities firms to ensure the “safety and accuracy” of the trading system.

The closure means stocks including those of Vietnam Dairy Products JSC, PetroVietn­am Gas JSC and VietJet Aviation JSC are unavailabl­e to investors.

The bourse averaged $319 million worth of trading each day over the past month, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The exchange operator didn’t provide a timing for when trading will restart, according to the statement on its website. The market was expected to resume trading yesterday.

“It’s the longest halt since a three-day shutdown in May 2008 because of a computer glitch, and one that could have an impact on the market, especially in the eyes of overseas investors,’’ said Tyler Cheung, head of institutio­nal client division at ACB Securities JSC in Ho Chi Minh City, who added that his observatio­ns did not reflect the opinion of his firm.

“Being shut for multiple days will start to have an affect on market sentiment, especially from the offshore foreign investors who have recently joined, or are planning on joining the market,” he said.

“What we are hoping to hear is clarity from the exchange on what the causes are, when we can expect trading to resume and that the issues have been resolved.”

Markets in Asia have seen several trading halts recently.

Indonesia’s stock exchange suffered two disruption­s within 10 days in July. That same month, India’s biggest bourse suffered a three-hour halt, its longest ever.

Singapore Exchange Ltd was rebuked by its regulator after trading was shut early in July 2016 because of a technical malfunctio­n, and after it failed to follow through on two pledges to reopen.

Vietnam opened its stock market in July 2000 with just two listed companies and now has a total value of $170 billion.

The Southeast Asian nation was one of the world’s fastest-growing economies last year at 6.8% and started stock-index futures trading in August.

The Hanoi Stock Exchange HNX Index closed down a fraction, having risen as much as 1.3% earlier yesterday. The Unlisted Public Company Market rose 1.4% to its highest level since April 2016.

The VN Index was one of the 10 bestperfor­ming national gauges in the world in 2017, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, and has gained 10% in this year to stay among the top indexes.

“There’s more things happening in Vietnam than the exchange shutting for two days,” said Ruchir Desai, a Hong Kong-based senior investment analyst at Asia Frontier Capital Ltd, which holds Vietnamese stocks. “Most institutio­nal investors in Vietnam have a long-term view on the country and the macro outlook is positive.”

The Ho Chi Minh exchange has been working with Thailand’s stock exchange to investigat­e the matter, State Securities Commission chairman Tran Van Dung said in an emailed statement on Tuesday.

The Stock Exchange of Thailand declined to comment.

The Vietnam bourse experience­d a malfunctio­n in August that briefly affected data distributi­on.

“Glitches happen from time to time but multi-day shutdowns are rare these days, given most exchanges have robust recovery plans and systems,” said Morningsta­r Inc’s senior analyst Michael Wu.

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