
VN-Index tumbles more than 50 points as panic selling grips market, defying regional gains
Vietnam’s stock market staged a brutal “Black Friday” sell-off on December 12, wiping out more than 3% of market value in a single session and sharply diverging from largely resilient Asian peers. The VN-Index plunged 52 points to below 1,650, marking the steepest decline across Asia that day and underscoring how fragile investor sentiment has become after a failed attempt to break recent highs.
Red dominated trading screens as selling spread across nearly the entire market. More than 600 stocks closed lower, many down between 3% and 4%, while several large-cap names hit their daily limit. Fewer than 200 stocks managed to advance. The rout marked the index’s fourth straight decline, yet conspicuously absent was meaningful bargain-hunting. Liquidity remained subdued, with HoSE turnover hovering around VND 22 trillion, signaling that sidelined capital is still reluctant to step in.
Foreign investors added to the pressure, selling nearly VND 600 billion on the HoSE for a sixth consecutive session, though the pace of outflows has moderated compared with earlier weeks. The combination of persistent selling, thin liquidity and a lack of bottom-fishing amplified the downside, pushing Vietnam sharply out of sync with broader Asian market trends.
The timing of the sell-off—coinciding with global “12.12” shopping discounts—prompted an ironic comparison highlighted by Dragon Capital in a recent report: consumers eagerly chase a 50% discount on clothing, yet panic-sell stocks after a 5% decline. Behavioral finance offers an explanation. While price cuts in retail trigger excitement, financial losses activate the brain’s pain centers, prompting a primal “fight or flight” response that often leads investors to dump assets to escape short-term discomfort.
History suggests such reactions are familiar territory for Vietnam’s market. Over the past five years, the VN-Index has weathered repeated sell-offs driven by global shocks, policy shifts and geopolitical stress. Yet each major drawdown has eventually been followed by a recovery to prior levels, whether quickly or over time. The current correction, while sharp, fits that pattern.
Still, near-term pressures are real. SGI Capital recently pointed to year-end bond maturities, heavy equity issuance and a wave of IPOs—potentially exceeding the record levels of 2021—as key drags on liquidity. At the same time, rising interest rates have limited buying appetite, while profit-taking in stocks that rallied aggressively earlier this year has intensified volatility. Even blue-chip shares that have already corrected deeply are still struggling to find a clear equilibrium.
Beyond the immediate turbulence, long-term fundamentals remain intact. Dragon Capital argues that Vietnam’s earnings outlook continues to surprise on the upside, with profits among its tracked companies rising 22.4% in the first nine months of the year, well above earlier forecasts. Full-year earnings growth is projected at over 21% for 2025 and to remain robust in 2026. Valuations also look compelling, with forward P/E ratios of roughly 12.5–13 times for 2025 and about 11 times for 2026—cheap by regional standards given Vietnam’s growth profile.
The final, and potentially transformative, catalyst lies ahead. Vietnam’s expected upgrade from frontier to emerging market status could trigger a powerful re-rating as large pools of international capital gain access to the market. For now, the Black Friday crash serves as a reminder of how quickly sentiment can turn—but also of why periods of fear have historically laid the groundwork for the next leg of Vietnam’s equity story.
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Source: Vietnam Insider

