The stock market on July 3rd saw low liquidity, with the trading screen dominated by red despite the VN-Index only falling by just over 4 points.
In particular, PNJ shares were heavily sold off, hitting the floor price of 58,700 VND/share right from the opening of the trading session following the news that Mr. Dang Ngoc Thao, former Director of P-Lab Company (a subsidiary of PNJ), had been arrested. By the close of the session, PNJ had over 12.58 million shares offered for sale at the floor price and no buyers.

Regarding the sector structure, securities stocks continued to attract capital, leading to strong gains despite the market downturn: ORS and VDS hit the ceiling price, BVS increased by 5.63%, MBS by 4.88%, AGR by 3.9%, VND by 2.22%, VCK by 2.7%, SHS by 2.66%, etc.
Meanwhile, banking stocks leaned towards the red: LPB fell 2.11%, EIB and VIB both fell 1.2%, BVB fell 1.46%; MBB,SHB , CTG, STB, BID, VCB, TCB… fell nearly 1%.
Real estate stocks also declined across the board: BCM fell 2.48%, IDC fell 2.16%, CEO fell 2.04%, DIG fell 1.61%, DXG and KDH both fell 1.622%, PDR fell 1.36%...
In addition, other stock groups such as oil and gas, consumer goods, raw materials, and industrial stocks also plunged into the red.
At the close of trading, the VN-Index fell 4.27 points (0.23%) to 1,862.08 points, with 202 stocks declining, 107 rising, and 57 remaining unchanged. Conversely, at the close of trading on the Hanoi Stock Exchange, the HNX-Index rose 0.84 points (0.27%) to 307.57 points, with 56 stocks rising, 65 declining, and 60 remaining unchanged.
Liquidity continued to decrease, with the total trading value on the HOSE exchange reaching nearly 15,700 billion VND, a decrease of 1,500 billion VND compared to the previous session. Including the HNX exchange, liquidity was only around 17,100 billion VND.
Foreign investors continued to net sell on the HOSE exchange, offloading over 206 billion VND. The top three stocks experiencing the strongest net selling were TCB (nearly 90 billion VND), MSN (nearly 71 billion VND), and VIC (nearly 64 billion VND).
Source: https://www.sggp.org.vn/co-phieu-chung-khoan-tiep-tiep-but-pha-post860562.html







