Sri Lanka's stock market rose to a three-week high on Friday as investors bought large-cap shares with offshore investors buying in for a second straight session. The island's main share index closed 2.09 percent or 151.1 points firmer at 7,377.22, highest since March 11. It hit a record closing high of 7,811.82 on February 14.
Government data showed March inflation year-on-year rose beyond forecasts to a 26-month high of 8.6 percent. Analysts said worries over inflation might hurt the market with a possible supply disruption due to ongoing turmoil in the oil-producing Middle East and North Africa. Oil rose on Friday, with Brent nearing $118.
The day's turnover was at 1.6 billion Sri Lanka rupees ($14.5 million), less than last year's average of 2.4 billion rupees and well below this year's daily average is 3.2 billion rupees. Foreign investors were net buyers of shares worth 162.6 million rupees on Friday, the second straight session. They have sold a net 6.9 billion in 2011, and a record 26.4 billion in 2010.
The bourse is still Asia's best performer in 2011 with an 11.2 percent gain, after bringing in the region's best return of 96 percent last year. Traded volume was 93 million, against a five-day average of 59.4 million shares. The 30-day and 90-day average trading volumes were 64.2 million and 70 million, respectively. Last year's daily average volume was 67.9 million.
The bourse is trading at a forward price-to-earnings (P/E)ratio of 15.2, one of the highest among emerging markets, compared with an average 12.5 in Asian markets and 11.7 for global emerging markets, Thomson Reuters StarMine data showed. The rupee closed flat at 110.38/40 a dollar from Thursday's close after it trades at 110.20 on exporter conversions but bounced back on state bank buying, dealers said.
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