The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) kicked off the week on a deeply negative note, reflecting broad-based weakness across various sectors amid sustained selling pressure that dragged the benchmark KSE-100 index into significant red territory for the first session of the new week.
In an astonishing display of volatility, the KSE-100 oscillated between its highest intraday level at 179,969.23 and a low of 173,574.26, marking a sharp decline that ended the day with a loss of 5,149.79 points – equivalent to about 2.87% of its value.
The trading session was characterized by aggressive liquidation efforts and weak market sentiment. External pressures played a crucial role in pushing the index down sharply. Notably, major sectors such as commercial banks, oil and gas, fertilisers, cement, and power all faced sustained pressure throughout the day.
Institutional selling proved to be the dominant force, overshadowed by limited support from local investors attempting to absorb the supply of shares. Market sentiment remained fragile in an environment of persistent foreign outflows, which were evident from data gathered during the previous session.
KTrade Securities reported that the KSE-100 closed at 174,453 points, a significant decline of 5,149 points or nearly 2.87% on Monday. The trading session was decisively negative with no signs of meaningful recovery attempts, indicating continued fragility in investor sentiment and persistent selling pressure.
The broad-based market declines were observed across commercial banks, oil and gas firms, fertiliser companies, cement producers, and power utilities. Key sectors including United Bank, Habib Bank, Meezan Bank, Fauji Fertilisers, Lucky Cement, and Hub Power all felt the impact of heavy selling, with banking stocks contributing significantly to the index’s downturn.
The trading environment revealed a general sentiment of reduced participation as even positive corporate announcements failed to alter investor outlook. Bank Alfalah’s Rs3 per share dividend announcement against expectations for Rs2.5 was met with no meaningful response from the broader market despite its influence on the sector.
Markets analysts pointed out an increasing margin pressure, suggesting that without strong catalysts, the bearish tone may persist. KTrade Securities advised investors to adopt a cautious stance in the coming days, given this prevailing market sentiment and sustained selling dynamics.
Trading volume surged by 65 million shares compared to Friday’s close of 708.9 million, with total traded value at Rs46.2 billion. Notable trading volumes included K-Electric, which saw its share price fall from Rs8.13 to Rs8.13 amid a loss of Rs0.42 for 63.9 million shares traded.
Overall, the new week began underpinned by strong negative momentum, with investors navigating through an environment characterized by heavy selling pressure and fragile sentiment, indicating significant challenges ahead in terms of market recovery or stabilization.


