Meanwhile, reports that Pakistan failed to reach conclusion with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) during the seventh review regarding the next loan tranche dented investors' sentiments and capped some of the gains at the bourse.
Moreover, the market players avoided assuming fresh positions due to constant rupee depreciation and ongoing political turmoil.
At the close, the KSE-100 index gained 318.76 points, or 0.74%, to settle at 43,522.55 points.
A report from Arif Habib Limited noted that a volatile session was observed today due to an uptick in the auction result of Market Treasury Bills (T-Bills).
“The cut-off yields on 3-12 months T-bills stood higher compared to the longer-tenure papers like 3-10 years Pakistan Investment Bonds (PIBs),” the brokerage house noted.
It further noted that the market opened in the green zone but battled between the bulls and bears throughout the day.
Meanwhile, the mainboard activity remained dull. On the flip-side, activity continued to remain side-ways as the market witnessed hefty volumes in the third-tier stocks. In the last trading hour, value buying was witnessed which led the index to close in the green zone.
Sectors contributing to the performance included cement (+73.7 points), technology (+53.1 points), commercial banks (+36.2 points), and fertiliser (+33.5 points).
Shares of 334 companies were traded during the session. At the close of trading, 178 scrips closed in the green, 132 in the red, and 24 remained unchanged.
Overall trading volumes rose to 149.78 million shares compared with Tuesday’s tally of 138.28 million. The value of shares traded during the day was Rs5.6 billion.
Treet Corporation was the volume leader with 20.76 million shares traded, gaining Rs0.83 to close at Rs30.90. It was followed by TRG Pakistan with 10.20 million shares traded, gaining Rs3.98 to close at Rs76.38, and Telecard Limited with 9.40 million shares traded, gaining Rs0.29 to close at Rs10.39.
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