Share prices and market volumes both declined
significantly on Nov. 17, despite the Ministry of Finance’s approval of
an additional 1,000 VND-per-litre cut in domestic petrol prices last
weekend.


On the Ho Chi Minh City exchange, the VN-Index lost
7.02 points, or 1.99 percent, to close at 345.05, but trading volume
plunged by an even more dramatic 23 percent over the previous day, to
just 10.6 million shares, for a total value of 379.2 billion VND (22.57
million USD) on the day.


Except for Sacombank (STB), with 1.7 million shares
changing hands, and Saigon Securities Inc (SSI) with 831,000 shares,
most shares saw only minimal trading activity.


Foreign investor transactions were also modest, with
only 785,000 shares bought and a million units sold. Net sales reached
just 3.7 billion VND (220,000 USD) on the day.


“It’s hard to determine whether the market has
experienced its worst time,” said,” said EuroCapital Securities analyst
Ngo Van Minh. “With few factors expected [in the coming weeks] to
support market growth, there’s little chance that the market will rally
in the short to medium term”.


A EuroCapital Securities report cited negative
international developments over the past week, including news that the
eurozone had fallen into recession, the struggles of the US automotive
industry, and increasing global unemployment. The report also quoted a
Standard & Poor’s rating that forecast Vietnam to be among three
nations in Asia most at risk of the credit crisis, alongside Pakistan
and Sri Lanka .


Vietcombank had adjusted its bad debt target for the
year from 2.8 percent to just under 5.8 percent, a move suggesting the
economy was still facing many dangers ahead, it said.


Sacombank had also started buying back 25 million
shares, and a number of State-owned commercial banks had slashed
lending rates this week in an efforts to ease business access to credit
and try to shore up confidence, the report said.


Since the situation on world financial markets
remained unpredictable and was tending to get worse, Minh said,
domestic companies’ year-end business results might be disappointing.


In Hanoi on Nov. 17, trading volume dropped 47.5
percent to 4.7 million shares with a total value of 130.7 million VND
(7.8 million USD). The HASTC-Index shed 2.41 percent to end the day at
110.35 points.


Asia Commercial Bank led the Hanoi market, but with
orders for only 660,000 shares, followed by Petroleum Technical
Services Corp (PVS) and Kim Long Securities (KLS) with around 400,000
shares traded each.