The main stock index ended 0.75%, or 52.26 points, weaker at 6,909.15, its lowest close since 10 April. “Nothing much is happening with very low retail and high net worth investor participation,” said Dimantha Mathew, Research Manager at First Capital Equities.
“With the month-end settlements, big caps came down. With very low foreign participation, markets will continue to come down for the next few weeks until we see steady foreign inflows.”
Sri Lanka’s consumer prices in November rose to 10-month high of 3.1% from a year earlier, the Department of Census and Statistics said on Monday.
Rating agency Fitch said on Tuesday that Sri Lanka’s 2016 Budget provides no clear plan for fiscal consolidation over the medium term and the absence of such a framework will put more pressure on the fiscal deficit.
“Fitch believes there are risks to Government being able to meet its fiscal deficit target, especially considering the trend in revenues in recent years,” the rating agency said.
The Government on 20 November announced a raft of steps, including the removal of a 0.3% share transaction levy, to stimulate trading in the share market and increase liquidity.
Shares of conglomerate John Keells Holdings fell 2.55%, while the country’s biggest listed lender, Commercial Bank of Ceylon, dropped 3.24 percent and Nestle Lanka Plc declined 1.63 percent.
Turnover was Rs. 754.4 million ($5.27 million), lower than this year’s daily average of Rs. 1.1 billion.
Foreign investors, who have been net sellers of Rs. 3.77 billion worth of shares so far this year, bought a net Rs. 34.27 million worth of equities on Monday.