KARACHI: The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) on Friday allowed
non-resident investors to conduct shares margin trading in order to increase
trading volumes and inflows in the equity market.
“It
has been decided to allow movement of funds from SCRA (special convertible
rupee account) towards margin requirement for ready/cash market transactions in
the Pakistan Stock Exchange,” the SBP said in a notification.
Analysts
said the decision followed permission to non-resident investors to conduct
margin-based trading.
Earlier,
fund transfer from SCRA to meet margin requirement for ready/cash market
transaction was not permitted.
Analyst
Ahsan Mehanti at Arif Habib Limited said the fresh measure is positive to
increase market depth as well as trading volumes at the bourse.
“Earlier,
non-resident investors had to pay 100 percent value of the shares they bought,”
Mehanti said. “Now they can conduct margin based trading, which would enhance
their investment scope.”
Non-residents
are allowed to trade in the shares quoted on the local bourse through SCRA
opened in local banks. Such accounts are fed by remittances from abroad or
transfer from a foreign currency account maintained by the non-resident
investor in Pakistan.
The
SBP also allowed pledging of securities held in the Central Depository
Company’s (CDC) account of non-residents as an alternative to cash to meet
margin requirements.
“The
securities available in account/sub-account may be pledged in favour of the
National Clearing Company of Pakistan Ltd in case of non-availability of funds
in SCRA to meet margin requirements against purchase and sale transactions of
non-resident investors in ready/cash market till settlement of respective
transaction,” said the SBP’s notification.
Separate
account or sub-account is to be opened and maintained at CDC for each
nonresident investor, eligible for investment in securities quoted on a local
bourse.
Chief
commercial officer Khurram Schehzad at JS Global Capital said this would
encourage foreign investment in the capital market.
“These
facilitation measures would provide non-resident investors with more options
and encourage inflows,” Schehzad said.
The
outstanding amount of margin financing stood at Rs14 billion as on December
2016. Foreign investors, both individual and institutions, hold more than 30
percent of free-float, which is around 24 percent of market capitalisation of
$90 billion.
Pakistan
Stock Exchange emerged as the best performing stock market in Asia and 5th best
in the world in 2016 with the benchmark KSE 100-share Index gaining 43.05
percent.
Analysts
said the country’s capital market is expected to continue its upward trend and
deliver a healthy double-digit return in 2017.
The
view is premised on robust double digit corporate earnings growth, expected
foreign inflows as a result of the bourse’s up-gradation to Morgan Stanley
Capital International Emerging Market Index, proceeds from PSX divestment, a
likely introduction of new margin financing product and attractive valuations,
they added.
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