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Pakistan Stock Exchange
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Key Information
| Coordinates | 24°50′50.7″N 66°59′53.9″E / 24.847417°N 66.998306°E |
|---|---|
| Currency | Pakistani rupee (₨) (PKR) |
| No. of listings | 525 (December 2024)[2] |
| Market cap | Rs. 14.495 trillion (US$52 billion) (December 2024)[2] |
| Indices | KSE 100 Index KSE-30 Index KSE ALL Index KMI 30 Index KMI ALL Index |
The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX), founded as Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) in 1947, is a stock exchange based in Karachi, Pakistan.[3] In January 2016, the Karachi Stock Exchange merged with the Lahore Stock Exchange and Islamabad Stock Exchange to form the PSX, aiming to reduce market fragmentation and attract strategic investment partnerships.[4][5][6]
As of September 2025, PSX lists 525 companies with a total market capitalization of approximately PKR 18.276 trillion (about $64.83 billion USD).[7] The benchmark KSE 100 Index reached 156,181 Points, reflecting a 51.7% increase from the previous year.[8][7] The exchange has 1,886 foreign institutional investors, 883 domestic institutional investors, around 220,000 retail investors, 400 brokerage houses, and 21 asset management companies.[2]
The PSX was granted affiliate status by the World Federation of Exchanges (WFE) after it joined in June 2021, marking a significant milestone in its international recognition.[9][10] PSX has been ranked by Bloomberg as one of the best-performing markets globally in 2023, 2024, and 2025.[11][12][13]
History
[edit]1947–2016: Karachi Stock Exchange
[edit]
The Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) was founded on 18 September 1947, soon after Pakistan's independence. It was located in the Stock Exchange Building (SEB) on Stock Exchange Road, off I. I. Chundrigar Road (then McLeod Road), the heart of Karachi’s financial district.[14] Membership at the KSE was capped at 200, with each member holding a trading card.[15] The value of these cards fluctuated sharply, climbing from just over one million rupees before 1990 to nearly 40 million rupees in the mid-1990s, before falling to around 27.5 million rupees by 2002.[15]
Until 27 May 1998, trading at the KSE relied on the open outcry system, with buyers shouting "La-oo" and sellers responding "Lay."[15] The influx of foreign investors during the early 1990s highlighted the need for modernization. With the support of a US$125 million loan from the Asian Development Bank for capital market reforms, the KSE introduced the Karachi Automated Trading System (KATS), replacing manual trading with electronic execution.[15]
In 1999, the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) was created to regulate the country’s capital markets.[16] Khalid Mirza became its first chairman in March 2000.[17] At that time, the KSE suffered from widespread market manipulation, poor governance, and weak investor protection. Despite a market capitalization of only US$6 billion, the exchange was prone to extreme volatility, with most activity concentrated in just 30 of its 765 listed companies.[17] Malpractices included diversion of funds, absence of proper margin requirements, and predatory lending by brokers.[17] Commercial banks often lent to brokers who engaged in "cornering," further disadvantaging small investors.[17] Corporate governance was also weak: shareholder meetings were frequently delayed, and many firms opted to delist or liquidate assets, eroding investor confidence.[17]
Mirza’s reform agenda faced strong pushback from entrenched brokerage interests. Brokers staged demonstrations against SECP measures and accused him of being an "American agent."[17] Although the SECP reduced broker dominance on the KSE’s board of directors, they still controlled 60 percent of seats.[17] The Commission also gained authority to regulate auditors, but penalties for misconduct remained low at only US$30 per offense.[17] Transparency and accountability thus remained limited through the early 2000s.[17]
On 14 December 1999, the SECP introduced the Companies (Buy-back of Shares) Rules, 1999, providing a legal framework for corporate share repurchases. In 2002, Alhamd Textile Mills became the first Pakistani company to buy back shares under the new rules.[18]
2016–present: Pakistan Stock Exchange
[edit]The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) was established in January 2016 following the Government of Pakistan’s decision to merge the three main stock exchanges of Karachi, Lahore, and Islamabad into a single national bourse.[19] A two-day mock trading session was conducted by the Karachi Stock Exchange before the official launch on 11 January 2016. The merger was intended to reduce market fragmentation, improve regulatory oversight, and strengthen the case for strategic partnerships to bring in technological expertise and international investors.[19] It marked the second phase of the Stock Exchanges (Corporatisation, Demutualisation and Integration) Act, 2012, passed by a joint session of the Parliament of Pakistan.[20]
In 2017, a consortium of Chinese exchanges including the Shanghai Stock Exchange, Shenzhen Stock Exchange, and the China Financial Futures Exchange acquired a 40% strategic stake in PSX, making China its single largest foreign shareholder.[21] Through this partnership, PSX was linked with Chinese capital markets under the "China Connect" system, enabling greater cross-border investment flows.[21]: 155
By December 2024, the exchange had 525 listed companies with a combined market capitalization of approximately PKR 14.5 trillion.[22] The exchange operates several key indices, including the KSE 100 Index, KSE-30 Index, and KMI 30 Index, which are widely used benchmarks for market performance in Pakistan. Net number of companies do vary after excluding the list of companies which are non-compliant or de-listed.
Market structure and operations
[edit]The Pakistan Stock Exchange operates as a demutualised entity under the Stock Exchanges (Corporatisation, Demutualisation and Integration) Act, 2012. Its ownership is divided between shareholders, brokers, and strategic investors, with the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) acting as the primary regulator.[23]
PSX offers trading across multiple asset classes, including equities, corporate debt instruments, government securities, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), futures, and derivatives.[24] Trading is conducted electronically through the Karachi Automated Trading System (KATS), which provides nationwide connectivity.
Clearing, settlement, and custodial services are provided through the Central Depository Company of Pakistan (CDC) and the National Clearing Company of Pakistan (NCCPL).[25] Settlement typically takes place on a T+1 basis, which was adopted on 9 February 2026 to align with international standards.[26][27]
PSX’s benchmark indices include:
- The KSE 100 Index, a capitalization-weighted index of 100 representative companies.
- The KSE-30 Index, tracking 30 most liquid stocks.
- The KMI 30 Index, an Islamic Sharia-compliant index of 30 firms.
- The All Shares Index, covering the full listed market.
Trading hours are Monday to Friday, with pre-open, regular, and post-close sessions. The exchange has also adopted circuit breakers and volatility controls in line with international best practices.[28]
Regulation and oversight
[edit]The Pakistan Stock Exchange is regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP), which supervises capital markets and protects investors.[29] The State Bank of Pakistan oversees financial stability and regulates banks involved in capital market activities.[30]
PSX was demutualized under the Stock Exchanges (Corporatization, Demutualization and Integration) Act, 2012, transforming it into a for-profit company with separated ownership and management.[31] The exchange operates a surveillance department to monitor trading, detect market manipulation, and enforce corporate governance. It also follows international standards through membership in the World Federation of Exchanges and alignment with International Organization of Securities Commissions principles.[32]
Associate companies
[edit]Notable companies in which PSX owns controlling or significant minority stakes include:
- National Clearing Company of Pakistan (49.71%)
- Central Depository Company (39.81%)
- Pakistan Mercantile Exchange (28.41%)
- E-Clear (25%)
- VIS Credit Rating (12.50%)
References
[edit]- ^ "Pakistan Stock Exchange Annual Report 2024" (PDF). Retrieved 22 May 2025.
- ^ a b c "5 Year Progress Report".
- ^ Pakistan Stock Exchange, PSXPakistan Stock Exchange. "Pakistan Stock Exchange". Pakistan Stock Exchange. Pakistan Stock Exchange. Retrieved 11 December 2025.
- ^ "Pakistan Stock Exchange formally launched". Dawn. 11 January 2016. Retrieved 16 September 2025.
- ^ "Ishaq Dar formally launches Pakistan Stock Exchange". The News International. Retrieved 16 September 2025.
- ^ Khan, Afzal. "Pakistan Stock Exchange opens". Khaleej Times. Khaleej Times. Retrieved 11 December 2025.
- ^ a b https://www.brecorder.com/news/40382995/pakistan-stock-exchange-posts-robust-rally
- ^ "World Exchange Market Statistics January 2025". World Federation of Exchanges. Retrieved 16 September 2025.
- ^ "PSX joins World Federation of Exchanges". Daily Times. 2 June 2021. Retrieved 4 December 2025.
- ^ "PSX Joins World Federation of Exchanges as Affiliate" (PDF). Pakistan Stock Exchange. Retrieved 16 September 2025.
- ^ Mangi, Faseeh; Chakraborty, Chiranjivi (20 October 2023). "Pakistan is World's Second-Best Stock Market as Key Index Rises". Bloomberg. Retrieved 3 December 2025.
- ^ Khan, Ashraf (25 December 2024). "Pakistan posts 'massive' 86% share rally against all odds". Nikkei Asia. Retrieved 4 December 2025.
- ^ Simon, Alex Gabriel; Mangi, Faseeh (18 November 2025). "Pakistan's Mom-and-Pop Investors Drive 40% Rally in Stocks". Bloomberg. Retrieved 3 December 2025.
- ^ Dawn.com (11 January 2016). "Pakistan Stock Exchange formally launched". Dawn.com. Retrieved 24 February 2022.
- ^ a b c d Hussain, Dilawar (23 September 2002). "Stock trading: identification of buyer/seller, fair or foul". Dawn.
- ^ Bashir, Mohsin; Sufi, Aneka (15 July 2021). "Khalid Mirza at SECP". Asian Journal of Management Cases. doi:10.1177/09728201211014674.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Behar, Richard (29 April 2002). "Kidnapped Nation". Fortune.
- ^ Hussain, Dilawar (15 April 2002). "First-ever share buy-back offer". Dawn.
- ^ a b "Pakistan Stock Exchange formally launched". Dawn. 11 January 2016.
- ^ "Ishaq Dar formally launches Pakistan Stock Exchange". The News International. Retrieved 24 February 2022.
- ^ a b Curtis, Simon; Klaus, Ian (2024). The Belt and Road City: Geopolitics, Urbanization, and China's Search for a New International Order. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. pp. 154–155. doi:10.2307/jj.11589102. ISBN 9780300266900. JSTOR jj.11589102.
- ^ "5 Year Progress Report - Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX)". PSX. Retrieved 22 May 2025.
- ^ "Corporatization, Demutualization and Integration of Stock Exchanges Act, 2012". SECP. Retrieved 15 September 2025.
- ^ "Products and Services". Pakistan Stock Exchange. Retrieved 15 September 2025.
- ^ "About Us". CDC Pakistan. Retrieved 15 September 2025.
- ^ Dilawar, Ismail (10 February 2026). "Pakistan capital market adopts one-day settlement of transactions ahead of EU, UK markets". Arab News. Retrieved 24 February 2026.
- ^ "Pakistan Capital Market Successfully Transitions to the T+1 Settlement Cycle" (PDF). Pakistan Stock Exchange Limited. 10 February 2026. Retrieved 23 February 2026.
- ^ "Market Timings". Pakistan Stock Exchange. Retrieved 15 September 2025.
- ^ "About SECP". SECP. Retrieved 16 September 2025.
- ^ "Financial Sector Supervision". State Bank of Pakistan. Retrieved 16 September 2025.
- ^ "The Stock Exchanges (Corporatization, Demutualization and Integration) Act, 2012". SECP. Retrieved 16 September 2025.
- ^ "World Federation of Exchanges Members". World Federation of Exchanges. Retrieved 16 September 2025.
External links
[edit]Pakistan Stock Exchange
View on GrokipediaThe Pakistan Stock Exchange Limited (PSX) is the principal stock exchange in Pakistan, headquartered in Karachi, operating as a digitized marketplace for trading equities, debt securities, and derivatives among over 500 listed companies spanning more than 35 sectors.[1] Established on September 18, 1947, as the Karachi Stock Exchange with initially five listed companies and paid-up capital of Rs 37 million, it evolved through demutualization and merged in January 2016 with the Lahore and Islamabad Stock Exchanges under regulatory mandates to form a unified national entity, enhancing market efficiency and investor access.[2] [3] PSX maintains 11 key indices, including the benchmark KSE-100 Index, launched in November 1991, which tracks the performance of 100 leading companies weighted by free-float adjusted market capitalization, serving as a primary gauge of market health.[4] The exchange has facilitated capital mobilization for economic growth, with annual reports highlighting its role in providing reliable trading infrastructure amid Pakistan's developing financial landscape.[5] However, PSX has faced notable volatility, exemplified by sharp declines such as the over 6,500-point drop in the KSE-100 in May 2025 triggered by escalated India-Pakistan tensions, underscoring its sensitivity to geopolitical risks alongside domestic issues like market manipulation and governance challenges.[6] [7]
History
Origins and Early Development (1947–1990s)
The Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) was founded on September 18, 1947, mere weeks after Pakistan's independence, serving as the primary platform for securities trading in the nascent state. It was formally incorporated as a company limited by guarantee on March 10, 1949, under the name Karachi Stock Exchange (Guarantee) Limited. Trading commenced with five listed companies and a total paid-up capital of 37 million rupees, operating through manual open outcry methods in Karachi's commercial hub.[2][3] By 1960, the exchange had expanded to 81 listed companies, achieving a market capitalization of 1.8 billion rupees, indicative of modest growth amid efforts to build industrial and financial infrastructure post-partition. The Lahore Stock Exchange was established in October 1970 to cater to regional trading needs in Punjab, while nationalization policies in the early 1970s, including the 1972 takeover of key industries, curtailed private investment and contributed to market stagnation. Restoration of private enterprise in the 1980s under military rule gradually revived investor confidence and trading volumes.[2][8] The Islamabad Stock Exchange opened in October 1989, extending market access to northern regions and diversifying trading centers. Deregulation accelerated in early 1991 with the liberalization of foreign investment access in February and the repeal of controls on capital issues, enabling companies greater flexibility in equity issuance. On November 1, 1991, the KSE-100 Index was introduced as the principal benchmark, tracking the performance of the 100 largest companies by market capitalization and free-float adjusted shares, succeeding the less representative KSE-50 Index. These reforms fostered renewed expansion, with listed companies surpassing prior peaks by the mid-1990s.[2][3]Expansion and Pre-Merger Era (2000s–2015)
The Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE), as Pakistan's dominant stock market venue prior to the 2016 integration, underwent notable expansion during the 2000s, driven by macroeconomic stabilization, regulatory enhancements, and rising investor participation. Trading volumes surged amid economic growth under policies promoting privatization and foreign investment inflows, with the benchmark KSE-100 Index posting strong gains after early volatility. For instance, from December 2004 to March 2005, the index climbed 65% from 6,218 to 10,303 points, reflecting heightened market activity and value traded escalating from Rs. 20 billion to substantially higher levels.[9] This upward trajectory peaked at 15,760 points on April 20, 2007, supported by annual GDP growth exceeding 5% and liberalization measures that boosted domestic savings channeled into equities.[10] Market capitalization expanded significantly, reaching approximately $61 billion by 2007, underscoring the exchange's role in capital formation amid a period of relative political stability. However, the 2008 global financial crisis, compounded by domestic factors such as political unrest and allegations of market manipulation, triggered a sharp correction, with the index plummeting over 50% from its high to around 8,000 points by October 2008.[10] Structural reforms bolstered resilience and modernization efforts. In 2002, the KSE implemented the Karachi Automated Trading System (KATS), financed partly by an Asian Development Bank loan, which digitized trading processes and improved efficiency over manual operations. Further, the Stock Exchanges (Corporatisation, Demutualization and Integration) Act, enacted in March 2012, facilitated the KSE's demutualization, converting it into a public limited company effective August 27, 2012, to disentangle broker ownership from regulatory functions and enhance professional governance.[3] [11] Post-crisis recovery gained momentum from 2009 onward, with the index rebounding to close 2014 at 32,131 points, a 27.2% annual increase, amid renewed foreign interest and listings exceeding 500 companies.[12] Trading hours were extended, and sectoral indices proliferated to attract specialized investment, though challenges like intermittent political disruptions and energy shortages periodically tempered gains. By 2015, these developments positioned the KSE for consolidation, highlighting its evolution from a broker-dominated entity to a more institutionalized market, albeit still fragmented alongside smaller exchanges in Lahore and Islamabad.[13]Formation of PSX and Integration (2016–Present)
In 2012, the Pakistani government enacted the Stock Exchanges (Corporatisation, Demutualisation and Integration) Act to facilitate the corporatization and consolidation of the country's fragmented stock exchanges, addressing issues such as separate management structures, trading platforms, and market indices that hindered overall efficiency.[2] This legislation laid the groundwork for merging the Karachi Stock Exchange (established 1947), Lahore Stock Exchange (1970), and Islamabad Stock Exchange (1989) into a single entity. On August 25, 2015, the three exchanges signed a Memorandum of Understanding to initiate the integration process, overseen by the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP).[14] The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) became operational on January 11, 2016, marking the cessation of independent trading on the legacy exchanges and the launch of a unified national platform.[15][2] This transition integrated all brokers, listings, and trading activities under PSX, with the SECP approving the scheme to enhance liquidity, price discovery, and investor access while requiring the divestment of 60% of shares to strategic investors post-integration.[14] An inauguration ceremony followed in Islamabad, formalizing PSX as the sole stock exchange in Pakistan.[14] Following the merger, PSX pursued strategic ownership changes, transferring 40% of its shares to a Chinese consortium comprising the Shanghai Stock Exchange, Shenzhen Stock Exchange, and China Financial Futures Exchange to bolster technology, governance, and transparency.[2] The remaining 60% was allocated to the general public, aligning with demutualization principles and aiming to attract foreign investment for system upgrades.[14] This integration has resulted in a consolidated market structure, with subsequent developments focusing on operational enhancements rather than further mergers, as PSX maintains its position as Pakistan's exclusive exchange.[2]Organizational Structure and Operations
Governance and Regulatory Oversight
The Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) serves as the primary regulatory authority overseeing the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX), with responsibilities including licensing, enforcement of securities laws, and ensuring market integrity under the Securities Act, 2015, and related frameworks such as the Stock Exchanges (Corporatization, Demutualization and Integration) Act, 2012.[16][17] The SECP monitors PSX operations to prevent manipulative practices, protect investors, and promote transparency, including approval of PSX's rulebook updates, such as those implemented on February 16, 2024, which align with international standards for capital markets.[18][19] PSX operates as a self-regulatory organization (SRO) within this framework, maintaining internal governance through a Board of Directors comprising independent, shareholder, and SECP-nominated members to balance oversight and operational autonomy.[20] As of 2025, the board is chaired by Dr. Shamshad Akhtar, an independent director with prior experience as Federal Finance Minister, and includes committees such as the Audit Committee, led by independent directors like Mr. Ruhail Muhammad, to handle risk management and compliance.[20][21] The board delegates specific financial and operational powers to management, including the CEO and Managing Director Farrukh H. Sabzwari, while retaining authority over strategic decisions and ensuring adherence to SECP directives, such as those mandating board elections for shareholder representation.[22][23] This dual structure—SECP's external regulation combined with PSX's internal board-led governance—aims to foster efficient markets, though enforcement relies on SECP's capacity to address issues like insider trading or non-compliance, as evidenced by periodic amendments to broker regulations and anti-money laundering rules.[24][17] Key supporting legislation includes the Futures Market Act, 2016, for derivatives oversight, and the Companies Act, 2017, for listed entity governance, ensuring PSX aligns with broader corporate standards without supplanting SECP's supervisory role.[17]Trading Systems, Hours, and Technology
The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) operates trading sessions structured into pre-open, continuous trading, and post-close phases for equities and other securities. On weekdays from Monday to Thursday, the pre-open session runs from 9:15 AM to 9:30 AM Pakistan Standard Time (PKT), followed by continuous trading from 9:32 AM to 3:30 PM, and a post-close session from 3:35 PM to 3:50 PM. Fridays feature adjusted timings to accommodate Jumu'ah prayers, with a first session pre-open from 9:00 AM to 9:15 AM and continuous trading until 12:00 PM, a break until 2:15 PM, a second session pre-open from 2:15 PM to 2:30 PM and continuous trading until 4:30 PM, and post-close from 4:35 PM to 4:50 PM. During pre-open, orders can be entered but not matched or canceled until the session ends, facilitating price discovery without immediate execution. Post-close allows limited order entry for the next day's reference price but no matching.[25] Specialized markets have aligned but distinct hours: the Negotiated Deal Market (NDM) for block trades operates from 9:30 AM to 4:30 PM Monday to Thursday and in split sessions on Fridays (9:15 AM–12:00 PM and 2:30 PM–5:00 PM), while debt securities like corporate debt (CDS), government debt (GDS), and GoP Ijarah Sukuk (GIS) trade from 9:30 AM to 3:30 PM daily. Trade rectification, for correcting errors, occurs from 3:50 PM to 4:30 PM Monday to Thursday and 4:50 PM to 5:30 PM on Fridays. These timings exclude public holidays, as per the PSX calendar, and all sessions use an order-driven auction mechanism with anonymous electronic matching based on price-time priority.[25] PSX employs the New Trading System (NTS), implemented on May 15, 2023, replacing the legacy Karachi Automated Trading System (KATS), which dated to 1997 and had undergone repeated patches but reached obsolescence. NTS integrates trading and surveillance functions into a single, high-performance platform with low latency, enhanced scalability, and faster execution speeds via upgraded servers, enabling higher throughput for order handling and real-time monitoring. This upgrade addressed prior vulnerabilities, including security gaps in KATS exposed during a failed 2021 rollout attempt that prompted a reversion. The system supports fully automated electronic trading for equities, debt instruments, ETFs, and derivatives, with broker access via front-end applications like the Karachi Internet Trading System (KiTS) for retail investors.[26][27][28] Settlement follows a T+2 cycle, where trades executed on day T are cleared and settled two business days later through the National Clearing Company of Pakistan Limited (NCCPL), involving central depository via the Central Depository Company (CDC). A transition to T+1 settlement is scheduled for February 9, 2026, to reduce counterparty risk and boost liquidity by accelerating fund and security availability. PSX's technology stack emphasizes reliability, with integrated risk management controls like circuit breakers (5% for most stocks, adjustable for volatile issues) to halt trading amid extreme volatility, and real-time surveillance detecting irregularities such as manipulation or excessive speculation.[29][30]Listed Securities and Market Segments
The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) facilitates trading in a range of securities across distinct market segments, primarily equities, fixed income instruments, and derivatives, enabling investors to access capital markets for spot transactions, debt financing, and hedging. As of 2025, PSX lists approximately 525 companies, predominantly through ordinary shares in the equity segment, alongside specialized instruments such as exchange-traded funds (ETFs), real estate investment trusts (REITs), government securities, corporate bonds, and futures contracts.[31] These segments operate under automated systems like the Karachi Automated Trading System (KATS) for equities and the Bond Automated Trading System (BATS) for debt, ensuring orderly execution and settlement.[32] In the equity segment, the Ready Market serves as the primary venue for trading shares of all listed companies, with settlement occurring on a T+2 basis, allowing for immediate liquidity in established firms across over 35 sectors including banking, cement, and energy.[33] This segment includes ordinary shares, preference shares, ETFs tracking indices or commodities, and REITs focused on real estate assets. Complementing it is the Growth Enterprise Market (GEM), designed for smaller enterprises with post-issue paid-up capital between PKR 25 million and PKR 200 million, primarily accessible to qualified institutional buyers and high-net-worth individuals to foster emerging business growth while mitigating risks through restricted participation.[33] The debt market lists both government and corporate fixed income securities, providing avenues for long-term funding and yield-seeking investments. Government instruments include Market Treasury Bills (short-term), Pakistan Investment Bonds (medium- to long-term), and Government Ijarah Sukuks compliant with Islamic finance principles, auctioned periodically for public debt management.[34] Corporate debt encompasses term finance certificates, rated sukuks, and privately placed bonds, with listings enhancing issuer visibility and secondary market liquidity for instruments targeted at institutional investors.[35] Derivatives trading occurs through futures contracts, offering tools for price risk management on underlying equities and indices. Deliverable futures enable physical settlement of eligible shares at a predetermined future price and date, while cash-settled variants, including single-stock futures and index futures on the KSE-30 or Oil and Gas Tradable Sector Index (OGTI), allow gains or losses based on price differentials without delivery.[36] As of late 2024, PSX expanded cash-settled offerings, with contracts typically expiring quarterly to align with market cycles and corporate actions adjustments.[37]| Market Segment | Key Securities Traded | Settlement/Features |
|---|---|---|
| Ready Market (Equity) | Ordinary shares, ETFs, REITs | T+2; all listed companies |
| GEM (Equity) | Shares of small-cap firms (PKR 25-200M capital) | Restricted to QIBs/HNWIs; growth-focused |
| Debt Market | T-bills, PIBs, GIS, corporate sukuks/TFCs | Auction-based for govt.; secondary trading |
| Derivatives | Deliverable/single-stock futures, index futures (KSE-30, OGTI) | Cash or physical settlement; quarterly expiry |
Market Indexes
Primary Indexes (KSE-100 and KSE-30)
The KSE-100 Index serves as the primary benchmark for the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX), tracking the performance of the largest companies by free-float market capitalization and representing approximately 85% of the total market capitalization across all PSX sectors.[38] Introduced in November 1991 with a base value of 1,000 points, it comprises 100 constituents selected to ensure broad sector coverage, including the top company by free-float market capitalization from each of the 36 PSX sectors (excluding open-end mutual funds and exchange-traded funds), with the remaining 64 filled by the next largest free-float market capitalization companies in descending order.[39] Constituents must meet eligibility criteria, such as not being on the Defaulters' Counter or non-tradable for the prior six months, while new listings qualify if they represent at least 2% of the total free-float market capitalization following one recomposition cycle.[39] The index employs a free-float market capitalization-weighted methodology, calculated as the aggregate free-float market capitalization of its constituents divided by an index divisor, which maintains continuity despite corporate actions like stock splits or dividends.[39] A total return variant incorporates adjustments for cash dividends, bonuses, and rights issues to reflect reinvested returns, while the price return version excludes cash dividends.[39] Rebalancing occurs semi-annually, using data from the last working day of February (effective April 1) and August (effective October 1), with notices issued by March 15 and September 15, respectively, capturing 70-80% of the total free-float market capitalization.[39] In contrast, the KSE-30 Index focuses on the 30 most liquid large-cap companies, providing a narrower gauge of market liquidity and short-term trading dynamics rather than comprehensive sector representation.[38] Launched in June 2005 with a base value of 10,000 points, its constituents are selected based on stringent liquidity criteria, including prerequisites such as not being in the Defaulters' Segment, being listed for at least two months, having at least one year of operations, maintaining a free-float of 5% or more, trading on at least 75% of days, and exhibiting an impact cost of 1.5% or less.[40] Ranking prioritizes the top 30 companies by a composite score of 50% free-float market capitalization and 50% liquidity (measured via impact cost), emphasizing tradable shares available to the public.[40] Like the KSE-100, the KSE-30 uses free-float market capitalization weighting, computed as the total free-float market capitalization divided by a divisor adjusted for corporate actions such as bonus or rights issues but not cash dividends, with real-time updates during trading hours.[40] Free-float adjustments occur quarterly, and rebalancing is semi-annual, reviewed as of June 30 (effective September 15) and December 31 (effective March 15).[40] This liquidity-focused design distinguishes it from the broader KSE-100, making the KSE-30 suitable for investors prioritizing high-volume, low-impact trading stocks over full-market breadth.[38]| Aspect | KSE-100 Index | KSE-30 Index |
|---|---|---|
| Constituents | 100 companies; top 1 per 36 sectors + next 64 largest by free-float MC | 30 most liquid companies by 50% free-float MC + 50% liquidity score |
| Base Date/Value | November 1991 / 1,000 | June 2005 / 10,000 |
| Market Coverage | ~85% of PSX total MC; all sectors | Focus on liquid large-caps; no explicit sector mandate |
| Rebalancing | Semi-annual (Feb/Aug data; Apr/Oct effective) | Semi-annual (Jun/Dec review; Sep/Mar effective) |
| Key Adjustment | Total return variant includes dividends/bonuses/rights | No cash dividend adjustment; corporate action divisor changes |
