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Stocks Rise, Foreigners Stay Cautious: Reading Too Much Into a Market Bounce

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The Colombo Stock Exchange has registered modest gains, largely driven by domestic buying. Analysts have framed this as a revival of investor confidence. The reality is subtler: domestic participants are filling a vacuum left by cautious foreign investors.

Local investors face limited alternatives. With low real returns on bank deposits, constrained capital flows, and intermittent credit availability, equities become a default option rather than a conviction- based choice. Foreign investors, sensitive to currency volatility, repatriation risk, and policy unpredictability, remain hesitant.

The gains are narrow and concentrated in a handful of sectors. Liquidity remains shallow, and turnover low. A rising index, in this context, reflects constrained behaviour more than economic fundamentals. Technical charts can move; confidence is measured by policy clarity, regulatory consistency, and market access — none of which have fundamentally changed.

The apparent rally obscures underlying fragility. Market optimism cannot substitute for structural reforms, fiscal transparency, and predictable monetary policy. Without these, equity gains remain fragile and susceptible to sudden reversals.


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