Reuters – Sri Lankan shares edged up on Wednesday following four straight sessions of losses, as investors shrugged off the impact of a proposed increase in value added tax to pick up battered shares, amid high turnover.
The bourse hit a more than seven-week low on Tuesday as selling pressure on stocks that were expected to take a hit from the proposed tax increase weighed on sentiment.
The government proposed last week to raise the value added tax (VAT) to 15 percent from 11 percent.
The benchmark Colombo stock index ended 0.34 percent higher at 6,451.61.
“Market is up with the renewed interest from the institutional and high net worth investors,” said Yohan Samarakkody, head of research at SC Securities (Pvt) Ltd.
“Investors have capitalised on the oversold counters and the fundamentals have not changed.”
Turnover stood at 1.43 billion rupees ($9.81 million), well above this year’s daily average of 744.5 million rupees.
Foreign investors net bought 28.9 million rupees worth of equities on Wednesday. They have net sold 2.1 billion rupees worth of shares so far this year.
Shares of conglomerate John Keells Holdings Plc rose 1.14 percent while Ceylon Insurance Plc jumped 5.30 percent and Sri Lanka Telecom Plc rose 2.70 percent.
The biggest listed lender Commercial Bank of Ceylon Plc rose 0.07 percent.