
Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) experienced a volatile trading session on Wednesday as early gains were wiped out by geopolitical concerns. The benchmark KSE-100 Index initially rose strongly following positive economic signals linked to IMF funding. However, the rally reversed sharply as investor sentiment weakened due to rising regional tensions.
Early trading saw the KSE-100 Index gain over 672 points, driven by buying interest across key sectors. Banking, cement, automobile, oil and gas, and power stocks all recorded early momentum. The optimism was supported by the State Bank of Pakistan’s confirmation of receiving 1.3 billion dollars from the International Monetary Fund.
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However, the momentum faded as geopolitical uncertainty triggered profit-taking across the market. Investors reacted to concerns linked to regional instability and ongoing tensions surrounding Middle East conflicts. As a result, the index fell by over 900 points, slipping into negative territory by midday.
Market activity showed mixed sentiment as trading volume remained strong but directionless. Analysts noted that external risks outweighed domestic economic positives during the session. Investors closely tracked both global developments and domestic financial signals.
Read more: PSX erases early gains, turns negative
Overall, the session reflected how quickly geopolitical risks can overshadow economic improvements in Pakistan’s equity market. Despite IMF-related inflows providing early support, uncertainty in the region kept pressure on investor confidence. Market watchers expect continued volatility in the short term.