Stock market pins hopes on foreign investors in September

Vietnam’s stock market will have to pin its hopes on foreign investors to continue recovering in September, said Bernard Lapointe – head of the research division at Rong Viet Securities Corporation.

In August, net selling by foreign investors exceeded a combined VND1.4 trillion (nearly US$59.7 million) on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange and the Hanoi Stock Exchange, a sharp drop from the VND2.4 trillion (US$102.3 million) in July.

This helped ease selling pressure and create conditions for the benchmark VN-Index on the HCM Stock Exchange to regain 3.5% last month.

Experts said money flow did not grow strongly but was mainly circulated among groups of stocks. Therefore, it will be difficult for the market to move further without a sudden change in money flow.

Although there haven’t been any signs the selling trend among foreign investors will halt, many large-cap stocks recorded net buying instead of net selling in August, especially consumer goods stocks like MSN (VND286 billion), VJC (VND237 billion) and HPG (VND206 billion).

Lapointe said the stock market will have to rely on foreign investors, though they are still prudent as inconsistent moves by US President Donald Trump have triggered worries about global economic instability.

Some experts forecast the VN-Index will stand at about 960 – 1,040 points in September as the US Federal Reserve is likely to raise interest rates this month.

Middle- and small-cap stocks will bring more opportunities for investors compared to large-cap ones, they noted.

Regarding government bonds, the Rong Viet Securities Corporation said in a recent report that the issuance of G-bonds seems to have encountered obstacles, and it will be hard to reach this year’s issuance target of VND200 trillion (US$8.5 billion).

By the end of August, VND106 trillion (US$4.5 billion) worth of G-bonds had been successfully issued, representing 53% of the target. G-bonds with 10- and 15-year terms were more attractive to investors thanks to relatively high dividends, while the issuance of other bonds with longer terms was not so positive.

This fact is contrary to what happened in 2017, when sales of G-bonds with 20- and 30-year terms surpassed targets, the report said.

Mời quý độc giả theo dõi VOV.VN trên

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