

Vietnamese shares were ending a rough quarter in a sombre mood on Thursday amid increasing selling pressure which caused the VN-Index retreating from the 1200-point landmark.
The market closed largely unchanged on Wednesday as bullish and bearish sentiments entered a tug-of-war.
Vietnamese shares rose on Wednesday, propped up by a slew of banking and energy stocks.
Vietnamese shares on Monday surpassed the 1,200-point mark, underpinned by steel and banking stocks.
The stock market fell for a third week in the row, but the benchmark remained at the previous bottom of 1,150-1,160 points. Experts said that this is a positive signal helping strengthen investors’ sentiment this week.
Shares lost rising momentum in the last trading minutes on Friday as divergence continued to expand to the whole market.
Shares continued to slide in HCM City but recovered in Hà Nội on Wednesday as liquidity decreased on widening divergence.
Shares tumbled for a third day on Tuesday but the decrease narrowed on rising buying power, focusing on food & drink and banking industries.
The market continued the downward trend from the morning to end lower on Monday amid strong selling forces.
Vietnamese shares ended the week on a negative note, dragged by banking and securities stocks.
Vietnamese shares ended lower on Wednesday as investors shunned risky assets on worries about volatile global markets after aggressive interest rate hikes.
Vietnamese shares inched higher on Tuesday as investors snapped up beaten-down shares following a bruising selloff in the previous session.
Shares started the week on a negative note, hammered by losses in multiple sectors facing strong correction pressure during the trading time.
Shares finished the week on a negative note, as the selling force gradually grew stronger at the end of the session causing big falls in the market.