Sri Lankan shares rose for the first time in 10 sessions on Friday as investors bought beaten-down equities. The benchmark Colombo stock index ended 0.06 percent firmer at 6,287.09, after shedding 2.83 percent in the nine sessions through Thursday. It lost 1.3 percent this week, its third straight weekly fall. Turnover stood at 707.2 million rupees ($4.85 million), less than this year's daily average of 740.2 million rupees.
Global uncertainty after Britain's vote to leave the European Union also weighed on the market with continued foreign selling. Overseas funds offloaded shares worth a net 128.7 million rupees on Friday, extending the year-to-date net foreign outflow to 6.25 billion rupees worth of equities.
Shares of Sri Lanka Telecom Plc rose 0.53 percent, while Dialog Axiata Plc gained 1.92 percent. "We saw some bargain hunting in the market. It's a fresh month and investors were on the buying side after the margin covering at the end of the month," said a stockbroker asking not to be identified. The stock index hit a near five-month low on Thursday, as comments from a minister earlier this week on the imposition of capital gains tax on equities, continued to dampen sentiment which was already hit by high interest rates and policy uncertainty.
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