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Bulls, Bubbles & Pakistan’s Stock Exchange Gamble

Published on: October 4, 2025 1:11 AM

October 4, 2025 by Jawad Saleem

Investors love a simple label. When prices rip higher, it’s either a “supercycle” or a “bubble.” Pakistan’s stock market doesn’t fit neatly into either box. The PSX’s surge has been extraordinary-new all-time highs, strong winning streaks, and an index perched near unprecedented levels-but the underlying economics, earnings math, and valuations point to a rerating off a depressed base rather than a classic bubble. The difference matters because it changes how you size risk, what you buy, and when you hedge. The latest tape says momentum is still with the bulls, with the index climbing to new highs on the back of improving fundamentals. That’s not a meme squeeze-it’s a market digesting improved macro, lower rates, and better credit optics.Start with the monetary anchor. The State Bank’s policy rate has fallen to 11%, a dramatic round-trip from the emergency 22%

A bubble typically arrives when market cap balloons far above trend GDP; Pakistan isn’t there.

peak that choked risk appetite in 2023-24. Short-term T-bill cut-offs now sit near 10.8-11.0%, and government bond yields out to 10-15 years have reset to 11-12.4%. Equities discount future cash flows; when the discount rate halves, the same cash flows are worth much more. This isn’t theory-it’s the single most powerful lever behind multiple expansion across banks, cement, E&Ps, and consumption proxies.Inflation, the rate-setter’s compass, has rolled over from crisis levels to mid-single digits. Recent CPI prints came in around 5-6% year-on-year, among the lowest levels in nearly a decade as base effects, tighter fiscal stance, and an IMF-guided policy mix took hold. That combination-lower inflation and credible policy-lets real rates stay mildly positive without strangling growth, a backdrop that historically favours equities over cash.The external account has flipped from chronic bleeding to surplus. Pakistan recently posted a current account surplus of roughly $2 billion, its first in 14 years. That shift reduces tail risk on the currency and sovereign spreads, which in turn lowers the equity risk premium investors demand. It’s not a panacea-the goods deficit remains large-but the direction is finally constructive, supported by remittances normalisation and better external financing visibility.Overlay the IMF scaffolding. Pakistan is under a 37-month Extended Fund Facility with reviews proceeding, plus access to Resilience and Sustainability Facility funding. Reviews passed signal policy continuity, unlock disbursements, and anchor reforms around revenue, energy pricing, and SOE governance. Markets price that institutional discipline; it compresses sovereign risk premia and raises fair value multiples, even if reforms are uneven.Credit optics have improved further with rating upgrades-Fitch moved Pakistan to B-/Stable and S&P followed with its own positive action. Upgrades don’t change cash flows by themselves, but they widen the universe of mandates that can own Pakistan risk and reduce required returns at the margin. You can see it in bonds and, by transmission, in equity multiples for banks and quasi-sovereign proxies. Now, the valuation test-the crux of the bubble question. Classic bubbles exhibit valuations that decouple from earnings and history. Pakistan’s market doesn’t. On MSCI’s fact sheet for the Pakistan Index, trailing P/E sits near the high-7s with a forward P/E just under 7 and a dividend yield around 5.8%-numbers that are not only below many frontier peers but also consistent with an early rerating phase after a deep bear market. Broker strategy updates peg the KSE-100 on forward P/Es of roughly 6.5-6.8x, still below 10-year averages near 8-8.3x. None of that is bubble territory.Market-cap-to-GDP tells a similar story. Depending on the source and cut, Pakistan’s ratio hovers in the teens-roughly 17-20%-well below its own 2007 peak around the mid-30s and a fraction of levels seen in developed markets or even India. Low depth isn’t a badge of honour; it simply shows upside exists if reforms broaden listings, privatisations, and institutional participation. A bubble typically arrives when market cap balloons far above trend GDP; Pakistan isn’t there. Breadth and flows also argue for repricing rather than mania. The 2025 performance has been institutionally led, with domestic mutual funds and banks active buyers on many days and foreign activity turning less negative as index representation improves. Pakistan’s MSCI Frontier weight has risen with new additions, a mechanical tailwind for passive and quasi-passive flows. These are incremental, not speculative spasms.Earnings are the hinge. On aggregate, financials have benefited from high nominal rates on assets with a repricing lag on deposits, while cyclicals are pricing in volume recovery as rates fall and public capex re-ramps. Sector research points to strong profit growth in select areas-autos off a very low base, cements on demand and pricing discipline, select banks on spreads and fee income-while oil & gas earnings are more volatile with global prices and domestic circular-debt dynamics. Forward market P/Es in the mid-6s only make sense if earnings deliver; that’s the soft underbelly to watch.None of this denies that prices have moved fast-too fast in pockets. Momentum bursts around policy headlines, Saudi-Pakistan defence and investment signals, or U.S.-Pakistan thaw headlines can overshoot fair value in the short run. The index’s latest leg higher, catalysed in part by geopolitical optics, clearly stretched near-term RSI-type measures, and the market has a history of sharp pullbacks after euphoric weeks. But speed alone doesn’t define a bubble; sustainability does, and sustainability rests on valuations, earnings visibility, funding conditions, and policy credibility.Where are the real risks that could puncture this rerating? First, external financing remains tight and lumpy; rollover risk on bilateral and commercial lines keeps the sovereign risk premium elevated and makes the rally vulnerable to any hiccup in IMF reviews. Second, fiscal consolidation fatigue could resurface; revenue mobilisation has improved but remains below structural needs. Third, energy-sector arrears and tariff pass-throughs can squeeze margins for energy-intensive industries and cap disposable income, denting earnings growth. Fourth, any renewed inflation flare-up-via commodity prices or currency-would force the SBP to pause or even reverse easing, compressing multiples again. Fifth, geopolitics is not a tail risk in this neighbourhood; it’s a baseline scenario that can gap-widen risk premia overnight. These are not abstract warnings; ratings commentary and fund flows keep emphasising precisely these points.What should sophisticated investors do with this mix? Treat PSX 2025 as a cyclical bull market entering a fundamental rerating phase, not a terminal bubble. That implies three practical moves. One, upgrade quality within beta-banks with balance-sheet strength and fee engines over marginal lenders; cements with cost advantages and efficient kilns; cash-rich E&Ps with clearer receivable cycles; exporters with pricing power. Two, respect duration and cash-yield math-at a double-digit risk-free and a 6-7% equity yield, total-return targets should be built on earnings plus yield rather than blue-sky multiple spikes. Three, keep a hedge budget-USD bonds or cash, or simple downside collars on index ETFs and liquid large-caps-because path-dependence in this market is brutal and reversals are fast.A word on the “this time is different” temptation. The 2024 budget rally showed how sensitive prices are to tax headline risk; keeping the capital gains regime stable mattered for sentiment and liquidity. But one budget or one review doesn’t de-risk the structural agenda. The bull case requires continued IMF compliance, privatisation and listings to deepen the market, credible energy reform to defuse the circular-debt mine, and predictable tax policy. Without that, you get a strong cyclical bounce that stalls at the first big shock. With it, you get a multi-year rerating supported by earnings and depth. The difference shows up in whether the P/E moves from 6-7x toward 8-9x with earnings compounding, rather than spiking to double-digits without EPS follow-through.So is the PSX a bubble? The weight of evidence says no-at least not yet. Prices have rerated because the denominator in the valuation fraction (rates, risk premia) fell and the numerator (earnings) is bottoming with a credible macro scaffold: policy rate at 11%, inflation tamed for now, the first current-account surplus in years, IMF reviews on track, rating upgrades back to B-, greater MSCI representation, and market-wide P/Es still below long-term averages. Those are not bubble ingredients; they’re recovery ingredients. Recognise, however, that the bull case is conditional and brittle. If financing or reform momentum snaps, the market’s new altitude will amplify the fall. For now, the smarter frame is “repricing to reality,” not “irrational exuberance,” with a strict respect for risk and a playbook that assumes volatility will be a feature, not a bug, of the next leg.

The writer is a financial expert and can be reached at jawadsaleem.1982@ gmail.com. He tweets @JawadSaleem1982

Filed Under: Op-Ed Tagged With: Bulls, Gamble, stock exchange

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