NSE falls further as bears consolidate
August 7, 2019942 views0 comments
The Nigerian bourse extended its downtrend to two consecutive trading days after depreciating 42bps d/d due majorly to losses in Zenith Bank -139bps and DanCem -179bps, with the latter causing a 37bps decline during trading.
Market activity measured by volume and value went south, dropping 25% and 48% respectively with MTNN accounting for 33% of Turnover. Market breadth remained negative at 0.65x with 11 advances and 17 declines.
Excluding the end of session dip in DANGCEM, the index was relatively flat.
As such, activity in the large cap names on the bourse continues to determine the direction of the index. Analysts have said the down trend will continue in the absence of catalysts to re-energise investors’ apetite in the stock market.
The losses on Wednesday totalled N150bn since the beginning of August.
The stock market, which had long embarked on a losing streak, with occasional gains on some days, saw its capitalisation drop from N13.508 trillion on July 31 to N13.358 trillion on August 7 (Wednesday).
Sustained sell pressures in the local bourse dragged the benchmark index southwards as the All Share Index declined by 42 basis points to settle at 27,412.13bps while the year-to-date loss worsened to -12.8 percent.
Analysts said major losses in large cap stocks ― Dangote Cement Plc, Zenith Bank Plc and Union Bank Nigeria Plc ― depressed market performance.
Performance across sectors was largely bearish as four indices ended the trading day in red.
The insurance index led losers, shedding 1.92 percent due to major losses in Continental Reinsurance Plc, Wapic Insurance Plc and Mutual Benefits Assurance Plc.
Sell-offs in Dangote Cement Plc led a 0.70 percent decline in the industrial goods index.
Similarly, the banking index declined by 0.44 per cent, due to sell pressures in Zenith Bank and Union Bank.
The consumer goods index also shed 0.04 per cent on the back of price depreciation in Flour Mills of Nigeria Plc.
On the flip side, the oil and gas index led the gainers with a 0.19 percent, following bargain hunting in Conoil Nigeria Plc.
Activity level weakened as volume and value traded fell by 24.4 percent and 47.8 percent to 128.956 million units and N1.182 billio12n, respectively.
The top traded stocks by volume were FBN Holdings Plc (30.9 million units), Transnational Corporation Plc (16 million units) and FCMB Group Plc (11 million units), while MTN Nigeria Communications Plc (N390.8m), FBN Holdings (N162.1m) and Zenith Bank (N148.6m) were the top traded stocks by value.
Investor sentiment, as measured by market breadth (advance/decline ratio), strengthened to 0.7x from 0.3x recorded on Tuesday as 11 stocks gained against 17 stocks that lost.
The top gainers were Aiico Insurance Plc with a 9.38 per cent price appreciation, Conoil with 6.33 percent gain, Lasaco Assurance Plc whose share price increased by 5.88 percent, Honeywell Flour Mills Plc with a 5.26 percent gain and Eterna Plc, which saw its share price appreciate by 1.85 percent.
Leading the losers’ table ith price depreciation of 9.85 per cent, 9.68 percent, 9.52 percent, 9.09 percent and 8.33 percent, were Red Star Express Plc, Continental Reinsurance, Jaiz Bank Plc, Japaul Oil and Maritime Services Plc and Mutual Benefits, respectively.
Analysts at Afrinvest Securities Limited said they maintained a bearish outlook for the rest of the week in the absence of any major catalyst.
They added that they saw opportunities for bargain hunting in stocks with sound fundamentals.