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KSE-100 Gains 1.3% in Strong Post-Eid Trading Session

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Pakistan’s benchmark index closes past 173,000 for the first time since January, as fertiliser giants, banks, and cement stocks ride a wave of US-Iran peace hopes — and a $1.1 billion Chinese deal.

Pakistan’s stock market returned from the Eid ul Adha break in no mood for caution. On Friday, May 29, the benchmark KSE-100 index surged 2,238 points — a gain of 1.3% in a single session — to settle at a fresh high of 173,963. It was the kind of broad-based buying that doesn’t happen on sentiment alone. Behind the numbers sat two distinct catalysts: the steady forward motion of US-Iran diplomatic talks, and a landmark corporate announcement that injected genuine earnings optimism into a market that had spent much of the spring fighting geopolitical headwinds.

The PSX opened on a strong footing, with investor sentiment improving amid encouraging progress in US-Iran negotiations and declining international oil prices. By the time trading closed, ten stocks — FFC, ENGROH, LUCK, EFERT, BAHL, HBL, MARI, TRG, SRVI, and MTL — had collectively contributed 1,773 of those 2,238 gained points. Traded volume clocked in at 550.4 million shares, with turnover settling at Rs40.8 billion. The Express Tribune

Context: A Market That’s Been Here Before — and Fallen Back

Pakistan’s equity story in 2026 has been one of dramatic swings shaped almost entirely by external forces. The KSE-100 opened the year near its all-time high of 191,032 points reached in January, having gained nearly 65% over the preceding 12 months. Then the Middle East conflict arrived as a structural variable, not a passing headline. TRADING ECONOMICS

In early March, panic selling tied to US-Israel-Iran tensions pulled the index down by more than 16,000 points in a single session — the largest single-day fall in the bourse’s history — with the KSE-100 settling at 151,973. That crater took weeks to fill. The Express Tribune

The recovery has been fitful but real. Ahead of the Eid ul Adha break on Monday, May 25, the benchmark rallied more than 3,800 points on hopes of a US-Iran deal, with the index closing at 171,725 — up 3,881 points or 2.31% for the session. Friday’s post-holiday session extended that momentum, pushing the index to its highest level in over four months. The week’s total gain reached 6,119 points, a 3.65% advance. Dawn

The macro backdrop, it must be said, is complicated. The IMF cut Pakistan’s economic growth forecast for fiscal year 2026-27 to 3.5%, down from an earlier projection of 4.1%, citing the impact of the ongoing Middle East conflict. Meanwhile, the State Bank of Pakistan raised its policy rate by 100 basis points to 11.5% in late April — a sharp pivot from its prior easing cycle — as inflation returned to 7.3% in March and global energy costs stiffened. That’s the economy market participants are trying to price in. IANS NewsDay News TV

1 — The Core Development: What Drove Friday’s KSE-100 Gains

The post-Eid KSE-100 session gain of 1.3% was the cleanest expression yet of a trade that’s been building for weeks: buy Pakistan equities when US-Iran peace talks advance, sell when they stall.

The rally was largely driven by expectations of progress in US-Iran negotiations, with Pakistan reportedly playing a role in facilitating backchannel diplomacy — a development that eased concerns over possible oil supply disruptions and supported equity market performance. Oil is not an abstraction here. Pakistan sources 90% of its total energy imports from the Middle East region, which means every $6 drop per barrel in crude improves the current account, lowers the import bill, and gives the central bank slightly more room than its April rate hike implied. DawnThe Express Tribune

Yet the session had a corporate dimension that went beyond geopolitics. Fauji Fertiliser Company, known on the PSX as FFC, surged Rs21.75 — a 4% single-day gain — after signing a $1.1 billion agreement with China’s Hualu Hengsheng to establish a coal-based fertiliser project under CPEC 2.0. That announcement did more than lift one stock. It signalled that foreign direct investment into Pakistan’s industrial base is not on pause despite the regional turbulence — and it gave institutional investors a concrete reason to add exposure rather than wait. The Express Tribune

Sector-wise, gains were led by commercial banks, cements, and oil and gas, with major contributions coming from Fauji Fertiliser, United Bank, Habib Bank, Engro Holdings, Lucky Cement, Bank Al Habib, and Meezan Bank. The Express Tribune

Ali Najib, Deputy Head of Trading at Arif Habib Limited, noted that broad-based buying emerged following positive developments over the Eid holidays, with expectations of a potential diplomatic breakthrough continuing to drive optimism across all major sectors. Investor interest remained strong across automobile assemblers, cement, oil and gas exploration, oil marketing companies, and power generation — the kind of breadth that distinguishes a genuine risk-on session from a narrow, momentum-driven spike. Pakistan Observer

2 — The Analytical Layer: What the Rally Actually Tells Us About Pakistan’s Market Structure

The speed with which Pakistani equities respond to geopolitical signals has become structurally unusual — even by emerging-market standards.

Why does US-Iran diplomacy move the KSE-100 so dramatically?

Pakistan sits at the intersection of three overlapping dependencies: energy imports priced in petrodollars, remittances from the Gulf diaspora, and a fragile current account that can swing from surplus to deficit within a single quarter depending on crude benchmarks. When US-Iran talks advance and Brent softens, all three variables improve simultaneously. That’s why a diplomatic progress report from Washington or Tehran can move the PSX by 2–3% before local fundamentals even enter the calculation.

The picture is more complicated, though. The same sensitivity that drives sharp rallies also produces the kind of 16,000-point single-session crashes seen in March. A market this reactive to external news is, by definition, not yet pricing primarily on domestic earnings. That’s both a vulnerability and — for the patient investor — an opportunity. With the market’s price-to-earnings ratio near 7x during the March trough, valuations appeared compelling, and Topline Securities CEO Mohammed Sohail noted that the rupee and bond yields remained stable throughout even the worst sell-off, indicating limited macro impact. The Express Tribune

That P/E compression argument has held up. The index has recovered roughly 14% from its March lows, and Friday’s session at 173,963 represents a meaningful rerating — though it’s still nearly 10% below the January all-time high.

What’s also notable is that retail participation appears to be returning. Market participation on the Monday pre-Eid session was healthy, with total traded volume reaching 506 million shares and overall turnover settling at Rs31.1 billion. Friday’s 550.4 million shares and Rs40.8 billion in turnover exceeded that comfortably — a sign that the holiday week’s momentum carried genuine depth, not just institutional positioning. Dawn

3 — Implications and Second-Order Effects: What Follows a 6,000-Point Week

A 3.65% weekly gain on the KSE-100 doesn’t just reward existing shareholders. It reshapes the calculus for the several agents sitting on the sidelines.

For the State Bank of Pakistan, a recovering equity market provides a partial offset to the inflation-fighting pain its April rate hike was always going to impose. Higher stock prices support household wealth effects, improve corporate access to equity capital, and reduce pressure on the banking system’s non-performing loan ratios as collateral values firm. That doesn’t mean the SBP will reverse course — the IMF has raised Pakistan’s inflation forecast to 8.4% for fiscal year 2026-27, up from 7.2% in the current year, and the Fund has pushed for continued monetary tightening to anchor price expectations. Still, a PSX that’s trading above 170,000 is a better backdrop for that medicine than one trading at 150,000. The Express Tribune

For Pakistan’s corporate sector, the FFC-Hualu deal deserves attention beyond its headline figure. A $1.1 billion CPEC 2.0 investment into domestic fertiliser production — at a moment when global food security pressures remain elevated and Pakistan’s agricultural sector accounts for roughly 24% of GDP — is structurally meaningful. It reduces long-term import dependence in a sector that has historically consumed scarce foreign exchange. If the deal executes, it will also create a domestic anchor for gas consumption, which matters for Mari Energies and OGDC’s long-term production pipelines.

For foreign portfolio investors, the recurring pattern of sharp drawdowns followed by swift recoveries will register as both a warning and an opening. Pakistan’s equities have gained nearly 46% year-on-year as of late May, even as the YTD change sits at a modest -0.85% — reflecting the volatility compressed within that 12-month range. The 52-week range of 115,887 to 191,032 tells you everything about the risk profile: this is a market for those who can tolerate the width of that band. Pakistan Stock Exchange

4 — The Counterargument: Is This Rally Built to Last?

Not everyone finds Friday’s 2,238-point session reassuring.

The sceptical reading runs roughly like this: the KSE-100 has now rallied sharply on US-Iran optimism at least three times in 2026, and each prior rally failed to sustain itself once the diplomatic headlines faded or reversed. The index remains structurally hostage to a negotiation it cannot influence, involving parties whose interests are genuinely difficult to reconcile. A final US-Iran agreement — if it comes — might actually trigger a “sell the news” response after months of “buy the rumour.”

KTrade Securities equity trader Ahmed Sheraz observed during one of those earlier reversals that the KSE-100’s volatility reflected “a lack of conviction across the market” and “broader momentum that remained subdued” whenever geopolitical clarity failed to materialise. That’s a reasonable baseline for caution. The Express Tribune

There’s also the SBP’s policy rate sitting at 11.5% — the highest it’s been since the aggressive tightening cycle began — which creates a real cost-of-capital headwind for leveraged investors and for corporate earnings in interest-heavy sectors like cement and real estate. The IMF has noted that Pakistan’s current account deficit projection has more than doubled to 0.9% of GDP, or about $5 billion, for the next fiscal year — a reminder that the external balance is tightening even as equity investors celebrate. Business Recorder

And then there’s the mutual fund gap. Only 14% of Pakistan’s mutual funds are invested in PSX equities — a structural underweight that has persisted for years. That figure limits the depth of domestic institutional buying and makes the market more vulnerable to episodes of foreign outflow or retail panic.

The bulls aren’t wrong. But the foundation of this rally is thinner than the headline numbers suggest.

Closing: The Signal in the Noise

Pakistan’s stock market has a habit of forcing investors to choose between two equally uncomfortable positions: being too cautious to participate in rallies that genuinely price in economic recovery, or too optimistic to protect against the crashes that geopolitical shocks reliably produce.

Friday’s post-Eid session was, in one reading, a simple relief trade — holiday-compressed sentiment released into a single session, amplified by one eye-catching corporate announcement. In another reading, it was something more durable: evidence that domestic earnings stories are beginning to reassert themselves alongside the diplomatic headlines, that CPEC 2.0 is generating real deal flow, and that investors who bought the March low at 151,973 have been vindicated by the subsequent 14% recovery.

Technical analysts had flagged 164,000 as the key breakout level, above which “the bulls made a move” to reclaim higher ground — and the index has now traded well clear of that zone for two consecutive weeks. TradingView

Whether the KSE-100 can sustain above 170,000 depends less on what happens at the Pakistan Stock Exchange than on what happens in Washington, Tehran, and the oil futures market. That’s the bind. A market of this quality, trading at these valuations, shouldn’t have to wait on a peace deal it can’t control.

For now, the bulls have the momentum — and the calendar. The next test will be whether they still have it once the Eid euphoria fully fades.

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