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Last week (13–17 Apr), although no additional disclosed trades were reported, activity by investment funds indicates that buying pressure has not weakened.
VinaCapital said members of the group bought more than 3.8 million shares of Dat Xanh Group Joint Stock Company (DXG) on 9 Apr to restructure the portfolio.
After the transaction, the group’s total holding rose from over 65.4 million shares (5.8%) to nearly 69.3 million shares, equivalent to more than 6.2% of capital.
At a closing price of 15,200 dong per share on 9 Apr—down more than 11% from the start of the year—it is estimated the fund group spent about 59 billion dong on the deal.
In contrast, a member of Dragon Capital sold 200,000 shares of PetroVietnam Drilling & Well Services Joint Stock Company (PVD) on 10 Apr.
Following the sale, the group’s ownership fell to 4.97% (over 27.6 million shares), meaning it no longer remained a major shareholder.
With PVD closing at 32,850 dong per share on 10 Apr, the transaction is estimated to have generated about 6.6 billion dong.
On HOSE, PVD previously peaked at 45,000 dong per share, supported by geopolitical tensions that pushed oil prices higher and improved expectations for rig owners and operators such as PVD.
However, the rally did not hold as the Middle East conflict continued to escalate amid ongoing uncertainties.
By the close on 17 Apr, PVD was at 33,300 dong per share, down about 26% from the peak.
Source: VietstockFinance

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