For Up-gradation Trading System, Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) Signs Agreement with Shenzhen Stock Exchange
Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) and Shenzhen Stock Exchange (SZSE) have signed an agreement to upgrade trading and surveillance systems in Pakistan.
According to details, the said agreement was signed at a ceremony held in Shenzhen, a major city in the Chinese province of Guangdong. General manager of Shenzhen Stock Exchange Wang Jianjun, Chairman of Pakistan Stock Exchange Ltd. Sulaiman S. Mehdi, and General Manager of China Financial Futures Exchange Huo Ruirong attended the signing ceremony.
According to the agreement, SZSE, based on its latest independently-developed trading and surveillance system and the actual development of Pakistan’s capital market, will upgrade the existing PSX trading system and will build a market surveillance system for PSX.
The new system will significantly improve PSX’s safe operation capacity, market operation efficiency, and risk control. It will further enhance the competitiveness and influence of PSX in the region and lay a more solid foundation for the development and expansion of Pakistan’s capital market.
As a breakthrough in technological cooperation between emerging markets, this marks the first instance of Chinese securities system is going global, a victory for SZSE in the fierce international competition with global top suppliers.
The Chinese, which successfully bought a 40 percent strategic stake in PSX in 2016, are set to invest big time in the days to come in Pakistan bourse.
The PSX was formed in January 2016 when the Lahore, Karachi and Islamabad stock exchanges consolidated into one bourse. PSX was included in the emerging market index of the Morgan Stanley Capital International in June last year.
Pakistan’s market reforms have been accelerating in recent years and the country has received backing from global institutions and overseas capital, making PSX more appealing to global investors than before. China’s financial market has been opening up and getting increasingly connected to global markets.
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