EGX continues heading north in 3rd session after pound flotation, recording highest rates since 2010

Mohamed Ayyad
2 Min Read
Last July, Mehleb's government approved imposing a 10% tax on dividends in addition to another 10% tax on capital gains earned from investment in the stock market, but it halted the decision, citing maintaining market competitiveness. (Photo by Mohamed Omar)

The Egyptian Exchange (EGX) closed on Monday on high rises in the third session following the flotation of the Egyptian pound. The main index EGX30 closed with a hike of 5.38%—the highest rise since February 2010—registering 9,852.7 points.

The market saw trading valued at EGP 2.1bn, which is the highest since April 2010, with 688.9m in traded shares.

The spike comes from influence of foreign investors, both individuals and companies, purchasing shares worth EGP 486m.

The decision to liberate the national currency, leaving the pound to float and depreciating by roughly 60%, increased the attractiveness of the shares denominated in Egyptian pounds, as US dollar capitals can now purchase more than double what they could buy before the flotation.

The market saw 47,900 transactions on 185 listed companies, of which 141 shares went up, while 22 dropped. The remaining 22 shares’ value remained unchanged.

The market capital recorded EGP 475.77bn, registering profits worth EGP 17.5bn.

The Egyptians’ transactions were dominated by a selling trend, marking EGP 502.2m in sales accounting for 62.1% of all transactions.

Meanwhile, Arab and foreign investors were mostly buying. Their transactions registered EGP 16m and EGP 486.1m respectively, accounting for 11.6% and 26.2% of selling and buying operations.

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