Foreign investors sell Vietnam blue chips worth over US$1 billion in the first half of the year, according to Yuanta Securities.
Matthew Smith, head of research at the company, said in a recent note that net selling by foreign investors in the period was $1.4 billion, 67 percent higher than in the same period last year.
Foreign investors were big sellers also in South Korea, Taiwan, the Philippines, Thailand, and India due to worries about the Covid-19 pandemic, global inflation and the dollar’s strength. In May alone they sold $12 billion worth of stocks in the six markets, 4 percent of it in Vietnam.
Four of the five blue chips they sold in Vietnam have run up sharply since the beginning of this year: HPG of leading steelmaker Hoa Phat by 71 percent, CTG of VietinBank by 48 percent, VPB of VPBank by 105 percent, and MBB of Military Bank by 78 percent.
Foreign investors sold $1.03 billion worth of the four stocks, accounting for 77 percent of their total sales in the market.
Smith said profit taking and portfolio restructure could have been the reasons for the liquidation, pointing out that the four shares had become too big as a ratio of their portfolios.
The fifth blue chip they sold out was VNM of dairy giant Vinamilk, of which they sold $271 million worth. But its price was 14 percent down for the year.
Smith said institutional investors have held on to VNM in recent years and not sold it, but in the last few months they have reversed this decision because the room for the country’s growth is shrinking. This is causing the foreign investors to sell Vietnam shares.