Sri Lankan shares ended weaker on Monday, from their more than three-week closing high hit in the previous session, as investors turned cautious ahead of the government's policy statement next month. The bourse touched a three-week high on Friday after investor sentiment was boosted with Sri Lanka raising $1.5 billion in its first sale of dual-tranche eurobonds last week, as over $5.5 billion in offers for the issue showed that global investors were bullish about prospects of the $82 billion economy.
After the bond deal, yields in local T-bill auction fell along with the 364-day T-bill rates at Wednesday's auction for the first time since April 15.
The benchmark Colombo stock index in thin trade ended down 0.11 percent or 6.88 points at 6,415.81, slipping from its highest since June 21 hit on Friday. It gained 0.9 percent last week.
Turnover stood at 357.5 million rupees ($2.46 million), well below this year's daily average of around 738.3 million rupees.
Overseas investors, who were net sellers of shares worth 4.92 billion rupees so far this year, were net buyers of equities worth 134 million rupees on Monday.

Copyright Reuters, 2016

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