FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™
Dear Reader,

Registration with the Sri Lanka FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™️ would enable you to enjoy an array of other services such as Member Rankings, User Groups, Own Posts & Profile, Exclusive Research, Live Chat Box etc..

All information contained in this forum is subject to Disclaimer Notice published.


Thank You
FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™️
www.srilankachronicle.com


Join the forum, it's quick and easy

FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™
Dear Reader,

Registration with the Sri Lanka FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™️ would enable you to enjoy an array of other services such as Member Rankings, User Groups, Own Posts & Profile, Exclusive Research, Live Chat Box etc..

All information contained in this forum is subject to Disclaimer Notice published.


Thank You
FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™️
www.srilankachronicle.com
FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™

Encyclopedia of Latest news, reviews, discussions and analysis of stock market and investment opportunities in Sri Lanka

Click Link to get instant AI answers to all business queries.
Click Link to find latest Economic Outlook of Sri Lanka
Click Link to view latest Research and Analysis of the key Sectors and Industries of Sri Lanka
Worried about Paying Taxes? Click Link to find answers to all your Tax related matters
Do you have a legal issues? Find instant answers to all Sri Lanka Legal queries. Click Link
Latest images

Latest topics

» PEOPLE'S INSURANCE PLC (PINS.N0000)
by ErangaDS Yesterday at 10:24 am

» UNION ASSURANCE PLC (UAL.N0000)
by ErangaDS Yesterday at 10:22 am

» ‘Port City Colombo makes progress in attracting key investments’
by samaritan Thu Apr 25, 2024 9:26 am

» Mahaweli Reach Hotels (MRH.N)
by SL-INVESTOR Wed Apr 24, 2024 11:25 pm

» THE KANDY HOTELS COMPANY (1983) PLC (KHC.N0000)
by SL-INVESTOR Wed Apr 24, 2024 11:23 pm

» ACCESS ENGINEERING PLC (AEL) Will pass IPO Price of Rs 25 ?????
by ddrperera Wed Apr 24, 2024 9:09 pm

» LANKA CREDIT AND BUSINESS FINANCE PLC (LCBF.N0000)
by Beyondsenses Wed Apr 24, 2024 10:40 am

» FIRST CAPITAL HOLDINGS PLC (CFVF.N0000)
by Beyondsenses Wed Apr 24, 2024 10:38 am

» LOLC FINANCE PLC (LOFC.N0000)
by Beyondsenses Wed Apr 24, 2024 10:20 am

» SRI LANKA TELECOM PLC (SLTL.N0000)
by sureshot Wed Apr 24, 2024 8:37 am

» COCR IN TROUBLE?
by D.G.Dayaratne Tue Apr 23, 2024 7:59 pm

» Sri Lanka confident of speedy debt resolution as positive economic reforms echoes at IMF/WB meetings
by samaritan Mon Apr 22, 2024 9:28 am

» TAFL is the most undervalued & highly potential counter in the Poultry Sector
by LAMDA Mon Apr 22, 2024 12:58 am

» Construction Sector Boom with Purchasing manager's indices
by rukshan1234 Thu Apr 18, 2024 11:24 pm

» Asha Securities and Asia Securities Target AEL (Access Enginnering PLC )
by Anushka Perz Wed Apr 17, 2024 10:30 pm

» Sri Lanka: China EXIM Bank Debt Moratorium to End in April 2024
by DeepFreakingValue Tue Apr 16, 2024 11:22 pm

» Uncertainty over impending elections could risk Lanka’s economic recovery: ADB
by God Father Tue Apr 16, 2024 2:47 pm

» Sri Lanka's Debt Restructuring Hits Roadblock with Bondholders
by God Father Tue Apr 16, 2024 2:42 pm

» BROWN'S INVESTMENTS SHOULD CONSIDER BUYING BITCOIN
by ADVENTUS Mon Apr 15, 2024 12:48 pm

» Bank run leading the way in 2024
by bkasun Sun Apr 14, 2024 3:21 pm

» ASPI: Undoing GR/Covid19!
by DeepFreakingValue Thu Apr 11, 2024 10:25 am

» Learn CSE Rules and Regulations with the help of AI Assistant
by ChatGPT Tue Apr 09, 2024 7:47 am

» Top AI tools in Sri Lanka
by ChatGPT Tue Apr 09, 2024 7:21 am

» HDFC- Best ever profit reported in 2023
by ApolloCSE Mon Apr 08, 2024 12:43 pm

» WAPO 200% UP
by LAMDA Sun Apr 07, 2024 10:41 pm

LISTED COMPANIES

Submit Post
ශ්‍රී ලංකා මූල්‍ය වංශකථාව - සිංහල
Submit Post


CONATCT US


Send your suggestions and comments

* - required fields

Read FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™ Disclaimer



EXPERT CHRONICLE™

ECONOMIC CHRONICLE

GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT (GDP)



CHRONICLE™ YouTube

Disclaimer
FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™ Disclaimer

The information contained in this FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™ have been submitted by third parties directly without any verification by us. The information available in this forum is not researched or purported to be complete description of the subject matter referred to herein. We do not under any circumstances whatsoever guarantee the accuracy and completeness information contained herein. FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™ its blogs, forums, domains, subdomains and/or its affiliates and/or its web masters, administrators or moderators shall not in any way be responsible or liable for loss or damage which any person or party may sustain or incur by relying on the contents of this report and acting directly or indirectly in any manner whatsoever. Trading or investing in stocks & commodities is a high risk activity. Any action you choose to take in the markets is totally your own responsibility, FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™ blogs, forums, domains, subdomains and/or its affiliates and/or its web masters, administrators or moderators shall not be liable for any, direct or indirect, consequential or incidental damages or loss arising out of the use of this information. The information on this website is neither an offer to sell nor solicitation to buy any of the securities mentioned herein. The writers may or may not be trading in the securities mentioned.

Further the writers and users shall not induce or attempt to induce another person to trade in securities using this platform (a) by making or publishing any statement or by making any forecast that he knows to be misleading, false or deceptive; (b) by any dishonest concealment of material facts; (c) by the reckless making or publishing, dishonestly or otherwise of any statement or forecast that is misleading, false or deceptive; or (d) by recording or storing in, or by means of, any mechanical, electronic or other device, information that he knows to be false or misleading in a material particular. Any action writers and users take in respect of (a),(b),(c) and (d) above shall be their own responsibility, FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™ its blogs, forums, domains, subdomains and/or its affiliates and/or its web masters, administrators or moderators shall not be liable for any, direct or indirect, consequential or incidental violation of securities laws of any country, damages or loss arising out of the use of this information.


AI Live Chat

You are not connected. Please login or register

Sri Lanka Newspapers Monday 27/02/2012

2 posters

Go down  Message [Page 1 of 1]

1Sri Lanka Newspapers Monday 27/02/2012 Empty Sri Lanka Newspapers Monday 27/02/2012 Mon Feb 27, 2012 5:28 am

CSE.SAS

CSE.SAS
Global Moderator

Analyst: ‘Take bold steps to provide accurate forecasts rather than trying to hide the obvious’
*Rs. 1bn net foreign inflows stimulates positive moods in desperate CSE
*Market digests ‘new’ economic climate


An equities market analyst says the Rs. 1 billion net inflow of foreign investment into the Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE) has lifted moods in a market desperate for change.

The All Share Price Index closed 1.07 percent higher on Friday to 5,566.30 points, continuing on a positive run after weeks of sharp declines.

"The market has moved from being extremely pessimistic to moderately bullish towards the end of the week. We have seen close to Rs. 1 billion in foreign purchases for the year and the main beneficiaries were JKH and COMB. This positive influx of funds has helped stimulate a positive mood in the market that was desperate for change," said Stefan Juriansz, Technical Analyst, Bartleet Religare Securities.

"However one concerning factor was that COMB has hardly moved from Rs. 100 while shares swapped hands. Once the selling stops we hope that the stock would resume its uptrend and keep Rs. 100 as support rather than becoming resistance for the stock. JKH on the other hand seems to have now found solid support at Rs. 160 and the stock now has the potential to move towards Rs. 210. If JKH were to head towards the technical target, the index which follows has the potential to move towards 6,100. This move up for the index would be a short term bullish correction in a bear market.

"Technically the ASPI is stuck in a downward trading channel with a channel resistance of about 5,650, while the MPI will face heavy resistance at 5,000. The market would be looking to break above these levels next week and head higher, however such a move without some consolidation will be difficult and ideally we would look for the market to drift towards 5,350," Juriansz said.

The Economy

Even though the index seems to have found temporary support, we believe that the economy may see signs of hitting a plateau, he said. "The Central Bank will have a difficult job striking a balance between inflation and growth and will try not to raise rates in the face of steep inflation which is supposed to be ‘6 percent’."

As reported in The Island Financial Review last week, Standard Chartered Bank in its latest country report suggests that the Central Bank would have to raise rates by 0.75 basis points and the rupee to devalue further this year as market forces cannot be stopped.

"We feel more rate hikes may be in the cards as we feel that the hefty loan growth may not be sustainable over the long run. Bank sector asset quality has hugely improved from the lows of December 2009 where NPLs peaked at 8.5 percent to 3.8 percent in December 2011," Juriansz said.

"If the loan growth continues at these high levels, we may see asset quality being compromised in the longer run coupled with the higher forecast interest rates. We however find the current quality of banking assets satisfactory with the more stringent CBSL reporting regulations. At present the market has digested the new economic climate that revealed itself last week. It is now imperative that the key stakeholders take bold steps to provide the market and the economy with accurate forecast rather than trying to hide the obvious. The market is fragile and unexpected announcements or unstoppable market moves can kill the momentum and will bring about the next leg of the bear market."
http://island.lk/index.php?page_cat=article-details&page=article-details&code_title=46160



Last edited by CSE.SAS on Mon Feb 27, 2012 5:56 am; edited 1 time in total

CSE.SAS

CSE.SAS
Global Moderator

Low interest rate regime and improved business sentiment swell commercial bank credit to private sector by 34%; cumulative amount tops Rs. 2 trillion mark

Two full years since end of war has seen lending to private sector balloon by over Rs. 800 b

Private sector borrowing last year had swelled by an unprecedented Rs. 511 billion or 34%, thereby seeing the cumulative amount top the Rs. 2 trillion mark, as per latest Central Bank data.

The half a trillion in borrowing last year was a record high and the 34.5% growth was on top of the 25% increase seen in 2010 over 2009. The combined value of credit of the private sector in the full two years since the end of the war amounts to a staggering Rs. 811 billion.

Credit to private sector via commercial banks’ Domestic Banking Units had grown by 36.6% to Rs. 1.82 trillion in 2011, and from Foreign Currency Banking Units (FCBUs) grew by 17% to Rs. 184 billion. In 2010 the respective growths were 28% to Rs. 1.33 trillion and 4.6% to Rs. 157 billion.

Analysts said credit growth was due to the post-war rebound in the economy and business sentiments fuelled by the low interest rate regime.

Whilst full year data is not available, in the first nine months of 2011, commercial bank loans to the construction sector accounted for 15% of the total, followed by agriculture and fishing (14%).

Credit via pawning had a share of about 13% and reflected the biggest increase as in the case of 2010. Credit to wholesale and retail trade emerged as the fourth largest with a share of about 8%, followed by financial and business, textiles and apparel and consumer durables.

Following its last monetary policy review, the Central Bank early this month admitted that 34.5% growth was “substantially exceeding projections”.

It said provisional estimates indicated that within the credit extended to the private sector by commercial banks, trade-related credit and credit driven by import-related items such as motor vehicles and consumer durables increased significantly.

Import-related credit increased by over 34 per cent during 2011, while the increase in credit for export activity was only around eight per cent during the year. Pawning also displayed a significant increase in 2011.

To check explosive credit growth and to achieve other macroeconomic goals, the Monetary Board decided to increase policy rates in February (first time since 2007) as well as request banks to cut down lending.

The repurchase rate and the reverse repurchase rate were increased by 50 basis points to 7.50% and 9% respectively. Furthermore, commercial banks were directed to moderate their credit disbursements so that overall credit growth in 2012 would not exceed 18% of their respective loan book outstanding at the end of 2011, while credit growth of up to 23% would be allowed for those banks which finance the excess up to 5% of the credit growth from funds mobilised from overseas.

Analysts said that 18% growth would still be high since it would be on a higher base. Based on provisional end 2011 credit to the private sector, the envisaged 18% amounts to Rs. 360 billion, which will be higher in comparison to what the private sector borrowed in 2010.

After dipping by near 6% in 2009, private sector credit in 2010 regained momentum growing by 25%. This too was on account of improved outlook for economic activity and the continued accommodative monetary policy stance of the Central Bank.

The expansion in credit flows was reflected in all sectors of the economy. In 2010, the Central Bank revised policy rates downwards twice, whilst it listed factors such as improved post-conflict economic conditions in the country, enhanced business confidence among entrepreneurs and the recovery in the global economy that helped spur credit flows to the private sector.

The 2010 performance also prompted the Central Bank to stress that these factors had helped ease the heightened risk averseness observed among commercial banks during the previous year, thus encouraging lending activities.
http://www.ft.lk/2012/02/27/private-sector-borrowings-top-rs-500-b-in-2011/

sriranga

sriranga
Co-Admin

Lanka ORIX Finance (LOFC) has one of the largest deposit bases in the Registered Finance Company sector. A member company of the LOLC Group, LOFC commenced commercial operations in June 2003 and was listed in the Colombo Stock Exchange last July.

As a Registered Finance Company (RFC) engaged in Finance Business its product range includes mobilizing savings and fixed deposits in both local and foreign currency by way of NRFC, RFC and SFIDA accounts, offering credit facilities such as loans, hire purchase and finance leases. In addition, LOFC operates as a trustworthy channel for worker remittance – one of the fastest developing businesses of the company today.

Recently, the Company entered into a landmark partnership with the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) headquartered in Rome, Italy to implement a special program to uplift the living standards of rural poor in Sri Lanka by conducting a series of educational programs aimed at raising awareness among migrant worker families on meaningful financial management and investment, they hope to economically empower rural Sri Lankans who seek foreign employment through financial inclusion. Migrant workers are given assistance in setting financial goals through special training programs and thereafter guidance and support to achieve same.

“The aim of doing this project is Economic Prosperity for Rural Poor through Remittances Disbursed via Lanka ORIX Finance” says, Brindley de Zylva, Managing Director/CEO. Explaining the benefits behind this program de Zylva added, “This program will offer them a free life insurance cover though the Insurance arm of the Group, LOLC Insurance Company Ltd which will cover any unexpected visits back home in case of a bereavement of an immediate family member or on loss of employment of the Migrant Worker. “

Similarly, the company has linked with LOLC Micro Credit Company Ltd to offer micro loans for income generating activities to reduce the dependence on remittances and ensure a source of sustainable income hastening the return journey of the migrant worker.

In order to ensure that their remittances reach their loved ones safely back home, LOFC has partnered exchange houses such as Xpress Money, Valutrans and Money Exchange Spain. Lanka ORIX Finance is the only non-banking institution in Sri Lanka to have joined the SWIFT network and be listed in the Bankers Almanac.

De Zylva said, “Since launching our Fixed Deposit schemes and our new value additions for Foreign Currency Business, we have attracted many Sri Lankans with investments in Foreign Banks to place these deposits with us. This is a testimony to the strength and stability of LOFC. We also offer better returns for their investments and value added benefits in Sri Lanka.”

Senior Citizens are given special treatment with higher interest rates and an emergency medical scheme covered by a strategic alliance with Medicalls.

Nearing a decade of experience as a RFC, Lanka ORIX Finance is the only Finance Company backed by a global financial giant, the ORIX Corporation of Japan and the first/only RFC authorized by the Central Bank of Sri Lanka to engage in foreign currency business. At present, the company has an island wide presence through its footprint of over 50 branches strategically located at various parts of the island.
http://www.dailynews.lk/2012/02/27/bus16.asp

http://sharemarket-srilanka.blogspot.co.uk/

Sponsored content



Back to top  Message [Page 1 of 1]

Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum