Following the
announcement of Pakistan’s up gradation to Emerging Market status in the MSCI
Index, the market nosedived and continued the downward trend during the week ended
19th May as investors resorted to profit‐taking. The benchmark
index closed at 50,742, down 1.95%WoW. Average daily traded volumes fell by
1.45%WoW to about 350 million shares, with EPCL, DSL, WTL, LOTCHEM and SILK as
volume leaders. Key news flows during the week were: 1) As per provisional estimates
FY17 GDP growth came in at 5.28% as compared to 4.51% in FY16, missing budgeted
target of 5.7%, 2) As per State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) current account deficit
widened 205%YoY to US$7.247 billion during first ten months of current
financial year, 3) SBP granted an operating license to state‐run Bank of China to
meet the financing needs of CPEC projects, 4) Supreme Court has ordered National
Refinery to pay Rs305 million to SBP for failing to pay Saudi Aramco its dues
on time and 5) FBR has blocked Rs100 billion sales tax refunds and rolled back the
Refund Payment Orders( RPOs), claimed by the textile sector filed from the tax
period July 1, 2016 onwards. Stocks leading the bourse during the week were: LOTCHEM,
POL, PPL, AGTL and HMB, while laggards were: PSMC, HUBC, UBL, CHCC and MCB.
Foreign participation remained weak with outflows of US$16.4 million compared
to outflows of US$2.46 million a week ago. SBP is scheduled to announce Monetary
Policy on Saturday (May 20’17). It is anticipated to be a non‐event with policy
rate expected to remain unchanged. Budget FY18, to be released at the end of
next week, can present opportunities depending upon expected taxation measures.
Moreover, on the international front, continuation of oil supply cuts in the upcoming
OPEC meeting scheduled for 25th May.
Pakistan has been
reclassified as part of the MSCI Emerging Market (EM) Index effective June'17
with a lighter than expected pro forma weight of 0.14% (as of 20th April'17
with prices impacted by Panama Leaks) in the MSCI EM Index contrary to expectations
of close to a 0.19% weight as simulated by MSCI in April'16. If market momentum
continues, Pakistan should regain weight in line with expectations in the next
Semi‐Annual Index Review
by MSCI. Additionally, passive fund flow allocation will be at more reflective
weights and will likely continue through to the rebalancing of MSCI indexes in
Novemver'17. The list of Tier-1 stocks as part of the reclassified MSCI
Pakistan Index include: OGDC, HBL, UBL, MCB, LUCK and
ENGRO while 27 other
names have been nominated for the small cap index. Pakistan's graduation is
likely to have far‐positive
implications where apart from increasing foreign visibility, it draws
comparisons for multiple re‐rating
akin to 2006‐2008. Macros lend further
support (broad parallels can be drawn with macroeconomic indicators during the last
time Pakistan was part of MSCI EM) where FY17‐18 GDP growth of 5.1%, driven primarily by
development initiatives under CPEC, remains well above the EM average of 3.8%,
warranting improved valuation. Near term the broader market is likely to focus
on the Federal Budget FY18 (expected on 26th May) where investors
should expect targeted expansionary fiscal measures ahead of General Elections
in 2018.
Current account
deficit (CAD) for April'17 surged significantly to record at US$1.13 billion
compared to US$546 million in the preceding month. Despite trade deficit
shrinking by 2% on a MoM basis, CAD widened primarily on account of absence of
CSF inflows in April'17 (vs. inflows of US$200 million in March'17), further
aided by a sequential decline of 9%MoM in remittances. Consequently, the
current account deficit for 10MFY17 reached US$7.2 billion (2.3% of GDP), up 205%YoY
from US$2.4 billion in the corresponding period last year on the back of 1)
rapidly growing trade deficit as imports accelerated (+16%YoY) while exports
remained flat and 2) continuous decline in remittances (fall of 3%YoY as
compared rise of 5.3%YoY during 10MFY16) on the back of lower inflows from GCC
region (62% of total remittances). Moving forward, as trade deficit continues to
widen along with a decline in remittances, current account deficit is expected
to continue its downward spiral keeping deficit above US$8 billion (2.7% of
GDP) in FY17.
In a recent meeting,
ECC of the cabinet has decided to increase the quota of urea exports by another
300,000 to 600,000 tons owing to ample amount of urea inventory available in
the country. The committee also extended the deadline for urea export to end
October'17. Out of initial allocated quota of 300,000 tons, local manufacturers
were hardly able to export 40,000 tons of the commodity to East Africa region at
an estimated FOB price of US$230‐240/ton. In this regard, despite attractive quota allocation,
the recent downtrend in international urea prices (down 30% to US$170/ ton
breaking its last summer's low of US$171/ton touched in July'16) limited the attractiveness
of exporting the excess urea inventory. In this backdrop, analysts believe urea
exports are likely to remain unfeasible at current price levels. FFC is likely
to be the most impacted whereas FATIMA remains largely immune given its lowest
per bag manufacturing cost.