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Foreign investors net sold 4,497.4 billion dong during the week, with on-exchange (matched) trading net selling of 1,069.2 billion dong.
The VN-Index closed week 16/2026 at 1,817.17 points, up 67.17 points (+3.84%), extending a four-week rally after the previous correction. Liquidity improved, albeit at a slower pace.
Average daily value of matched trades on HOSE reached 20,988 billion dong per session, up 1.02% from the previous week, but still well below the 5-week average by 8.65%. Across the market, the total average daily trading value stood at 27,385 billion dong, with matched-trade value at 22,719 billion, nearly flat versus the prior week (+0.32%) and still down 10.26% from the 5-week average.
This pattern suggests the recovery trend is being consolidated, though the upside remains driven mainly by leading stocks, including Vin group members VIC, VHM, VPL, VRE, and MWG, VPB. Demand continued to improve but was not yet strong enough to push liquidity higher, reflecting a cautious and selective return of capital as the market gradually rebalances after a period of volatility.
Domestic institutional investors were net buyers of 812.2 billion dong, while for on-exchange trading they sold 682.7 billion.
Top on-exchange net buyers included real estate and basic resources; top net buyers on on-exchange included VIC, HPG, SSI, MWG, MSN, MBB, GMD, LPB, POW, and TCH.
Top on-exchange net sellers were FPT, BID, ACB, VHM, VIX, HCM, SHB, CII, and NVL.
In week 16/2026, the share of money allocated by market-cap groups peaked in Real estate, Construction, and Aviation; with a shift toward Information Technology, Food & Beverage, Retail, Aquaculture & Seafood, and Construction; while decreasing in Banking, Securities, Chemicals, and Oil & Gas.
In valuation terms, VN30’s share rose strongly to 53.7% (from 51.4% in week 15), while VNMID fell to 38.6% and VNSML to 4.8%.
In price movement, VN30 rose 3.11%, while VNMID and VNSML declined by 0.30% and 0.57%, respectively. This indicates gains mainly came from large-cap stocks while downside pressure remained in mid/small caps.
In liquidity, average trading value improved notably for VN30 (+5.6%, or +602.7 billion dong), while VNMID fell by 2.9% (-239.1 billion) and VNSML by 1.2% (-12.2 billion). This suggests funds are refocusing on leading stocks, with participation in other groups waning, reinforcing a blue-chip-led rebound.
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