Cement, urea and oil stocks lift Pakistan market to new peak above 168,000

A stockbroker walks past share prices on a financial market board during a trading session at the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) in Karachi on April 9, 2025. (AFP/File)
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Updated 03 October 2025
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Cement, urea and oil stocks lift Pakistan market to new peak above 168,000

  • KSE-100 index shot up by 0.3 percent, or 500.45 points, to close at 168,995.74
  • Pakistan’s cement sector posted a 16.2 percent increase in the third quarter of 2025

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) breached the 168,000 mark on Friday, hitting a record high, with analysts attributing the gains to cement, urea and oil stocks driving the market rally.

The benchmark KSE-100 index rose by 0.3 percent, or 500.45 points, to close at 168,995.74 points as compared to the previous close of 168,489.62 points, according to the PSX data.

Ahsan Mehanti, chief executive officer of Arif Habib Commodities, said stocks hit an all-time high on speculation ahead of major earnings announcements expected next week.

“Reports of a surge in cement sales by 16 percent, urea sales by 18 percent and oil sales by six percent year on year for September 2025 [affected the market sentiment],” he told Arab News. “Repayments to Pakistan State Oil for power sector circular debt dues and rupee stability also played a catalytic role in record bullish activity at PSX.”

Pakistan’s cement sector posted a 16.2 percent increase in the third quarter of 2025 by touching 12.1 million tons, recording an increase of 1.7 million tons from the same period last year.

Domestic sales, according to All Pakistan Cement Manufacturers Association, rose by 15 percent to 9.5 million tons compared to 8.3 million tons last year while cement exports grew by 21 percent to 2.5 million tons.

Urea sales in Pakistan also rose to 816,000 tons in August, up 46 percent year-on-year and 34 percent month-on-month, according to Pakistan’s National Fertilizer Development Center.

Meanwhile, Muhammad Saad Ali, Head of Research at Lucky Investments, said strong liquidity and positive news on the geopolitical and foreign policy fronts boosted market optimism.

“But I think more recently banks have stretched the rally and today there was optimism around refinery policy and refinery sector,” he added.

“Generally, the market mood is positive, every week they pick a sector and rally that, banks have done quite well, and refineries are also in the limelight.”

Pakistan’s stock market has outperformed all other asset classes this year, repeatedly breaking record highs as strong corporate earnings, robust liquidity and improving investor sentiment drive gains.


Pakistan telecom authority approves PTCL’s $400 million deal to acquire Telenor

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Pakistan telecom authority approves PTCL’s $400 million deal to acquire Telenor

  • Deal will see PTCL’s mobile arm Ufone merge with Telenor Pakistan to create second-largest mobile operator
  • Regulator says will closely monitor transaction, urges both companies to ensure continuity, quality of services 

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) announced this week it has granted a no objection certificate to the Pakistan Telecommunication Company Limited (PTCL) to push ahead with its $400 million deal to acquire Telenor Pakistan. 

The major acquisition, which was announced earlier this year, will merge PTCL’s mobile arm Ufone with Telenor Pakistan to create the country’s second-largest mobile operator.

The development takes place as Pakistan’s telecom industry faces rising costs and regulatory pressures.

 “PTA evaluated the transaction’s impact on market competition and consumer interests, and consulted relevant government bodies to ensure full compliance with statutory requirements,” the authority said in a statement issued late Saturday. 

The PTA said both companies must ensure continuity and quality of services to consumers, urging them to uphold all license obligations during the transaction. 

“PTA will closely monitor the process to safeguard consumer rights and maintain a competitive and forward-looking telecom sector,” it added. 

PTCL had earlier said the acquisition will improve customer experience, enhance network quality and coverage, while enabling the whole sector to achieve greater efficiency, build resilient infrastructure and create a more competitive landscape. 

The deal is expected to reshape Pakistan’s telecom landscape, which has four major operators but remains under pressure from thin margins, high spectrum fees and heavy capital expenditure needs.