PSX extends losses for third straight session

Published June 24, 2026 Updated June 24, 2026 06:10am

KARACHI: Despite falling oil prices amid easing geopolitical concerns, the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) recorded yet another jittery session as investors remained undecided about the market’s direction and continued to offload their positions, pushing the benchmark KSE-100 index into the red for the third straight session on Tuesday.

Topline Securities Ltd said the PSX witnessed a weak and volatile session, with rollover-related pressure and fiscal year-end considerations weighing on investor sentiment. The benchmark index oscillated between an intraday high of 933 points at 179,405.56 and a low of 797 points at 177,674.37, before closing at 177,692.92, down 778 points or 0.44 per cent.

Overall participation remained cautious, with investors largely on the sidelines amid portfolio repositioning and profit-taking ahead of the fiscal year-end, leading to a lacklustre close across the broader market.

On the index contribution front, the index heavyweights United Bank Ltd, Bank Al-Habib Ltd, Engro Holdings, Fauji Fertiliser Company, and Bank Alfalah Ltd were the major laggards, collectively dragging the benchmark down by 595 points. On the flipside, Oil and Gas Development Company, Maple Leaf Cement Fact­ory, Pakistan Petroleum Ltd, Sui Northern Gas Pip­eline, and Colgate Palmo­live provided some support, collectively adding 217 points to the benchmark.

Ali Najib, Deputy Head of Trading at Arif Habib Ltd, stated that the PSX experienced another uneventful session. He explained that investor sentiment is expected to remain influenced by headlines, with short-term market movements driven by oil prices, geopolitical events, and blue-chip stock investments.

Market activity stayed subdued, with trading volume decreasing by 5.24pc to 765.15 million shares and total turnover declining by 2.02pc to Rs35.2 billion, reflecting cautious investor sentiment. K-Electric topped the volume chart with 83.4 million shares traded.

Published in Dawn, June 24th, 2026

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