In view of the loss of trading time, the market duration has been extended by 30 minutes to 5:00pm on Friday, the statement said.
Earlier, traders were unable to access the market during the first trading session due to the fault in PSX’s IT network.
"Trading has yet to start on PSX because of a 'technical fault' in the exchange’s IT network," PSX Deputy Managing Director Haroon Askari told The Express Tribune on Friday at 11:20am.
Pakistan to sell 40% of stock exchange
“There is a technical fault and our IT staff is trying to fix it,” he said.
The first trading session in the regular market begins at 9:17am and ends at noon every Friday. The market remains closed for Friday prayers for two and a half hours and opens again at 2:32pm for the second session which ends at 4:30pm.
However, Askari said trading will not take place for the remainder of the first session as a result of the fault in the exchange’s IT network. “I’m sure the problem will be fixed soon and regular trading will commence with the beginning of the second session,” Askari added.
Meanwhile, he said that PUCARS, which is an automated web-based system for posting real-time announcements of listed companies about their financial status, directors’ meetings, company news and others, is fully operational.
Market watch: Stocks record marginal rise after profit-booking
The stock market saw marginal gains on Thursday on the back of financial and cement stocks despite poor performance by the exploration and production sector that knocked 69 points off the benchmark index.
At close, the Pakistan Stock Exchange’s (PSX) benchmark KSE 100-share Index recorded an increase of 34.01 points (0.09%) to end at 39,468.98. It extended the all-time high record achieved a day earlier.
Elixir Securities analyst Ali Raza said Pakistan equities closed marginally positive after the benchmark index traded volatile in a wide range of 400 points and lost all morning gains on profit-booking.
COMMENTS
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ