Pakistan stocks soar over 7,000 points amid easing geopolitical, domestic tensions

Pakistan stocks soar over 7,000 points amid easing geopolitical, domestic tensions
A stockbroker monitors share prices on computers during a trading session at the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) in Karachi on October 2, 2025. (EPA/File)
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Updated 14 October 2025
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Pakistan stocks soar over 7,000 points amid easing geopolitical, domestic tensions

Pakistan stocks soar over 7,000 points amid easing geopolitical, domestic tensions
  • KSE-100 index jumps 7,032.60 points, or 4.44 percent, to close at 165,476.02 on Tuesday
  • Stocks rebound as investors cheer improved Pak-US ties, progress on Gaza ceasefire

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s benchmark share index jumped over 7,000 points on Tuesday, with analysts attributing the spike to easing geopolitical and domestic tensions, which lifted investor sentiment.

The KSE-100 index surged by 7,032.60 points, or 4.44 percent, to close at 165,476.02, compared to the previous close of 158,443.42.

Sana Tawfik, the Head of Research at Arif Habib Limited, said the index surged past the 165,000 level, marking one of the largest point gains in the history of the index.

“The rally was fueled by easing geopolitical and domestic political tensions, coupled with renewed investor interest as the results season commenced,” she told Arab News over the phone.

The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) fell sharply on Monday as cross-border hostilities between Pakistan and Afghanistan prompted broad-based selling across key sectors.

The two neighbors exchanged heavy cross-border fire over the weekend, leaving 23 Pakistani soldiers and over 200 Afghan Taliban fighters dead, according to the Pakistan military.

The country also witnessed clashes between the government and a religio-political party striving to march on Islamabad in the last few days before their movement was halted on the outskirts of eastern Lahore.

Meanwhile, Ahsan Mehanti, Chief Executive Officer of Arif Habib Commodities, said stocks showed a strong recovery as investors welcomed improving Pakistan-US relations, progress on the Gaza ceasefire deal and easing tensions with Afghanistan.

“Renewed hopes for a positive Pakistan-International Monetary Fund and World Bank review meeting for the release of an IMF tranche next month played a catalytic role in record bullish activity at the PSX,” he said.

Pakistan’s Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb arrived in Washington on Sunday to attend the IMF and World Bank annual meetings and hold talks on investment, taxation and economic reforms.


Pakistan urges stronger OIC trade liberalization, digital integration at Istanbul conference

Pakistan urges stronger OIC trade liberalization, digital integration at Istanbul conference
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Pakistan urges stronger OIC trade liberalization, digital integration at Istanbul conference

Pakistan urges stronger OIC trade liberalization, digital integration at Istanbul conference
  • Country’s commerce minister calls for harmonized trade rules, digital cooperation across OIC states
  • He proposes OIC Green Finance Mechanism, knowledge-sharing center for agriculture, manufacturing

KARACHI: Pakistan has urged Muslim nations to deepen economic and digital integration, according to an official statement on Tuesday, calling for the removal of trade barriers and joint investment in green and technology-driven growth across the Islamic world.

Addressing the 41st session of the Standing Committee for Economic and Commercial Cooperation (COMCEC) of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), Commerce Minister Jam Kamal Khan said stronger intra-OIC cooperation was essential to face global economic, political and environmental challenges.

“For us in the Islamic world, economic cooperation is not merely about trade: it is about forging stronger bonds of partnership and mutual benefit,” he told delegates.

Khan said intra-OIC trade remained below potential due to regulatory barriers, limited connectivity and infrastructure gaps while calling for cutting non-tariff barriers, streamlining customs and harmonizing trade regulations to enable freer movement of goods and services.

“Pakistan believes the OIC Trade Agreement should become a real tool for trade liberalization and cross-border facilitation,” he said, urging more private-sector engagement and public-private partnerships to spur investment and job creation.

The minister highlighted the need to prioritize digital integration in areas such as e-commerce, fintech and digital infrastructure to create new opportunities for youth and entrepreneurs.

“By promoting digital integration, we can enhance market access and create new prospects for innovation and growth,” he said.

He also proposed the creation of an OIC Green Finance Mechanism to fund climate-resilient and renewable-energy projects, stressing that economic progress must align with environmental stewardship.

Khan suggested establishing an OIC Center of Excellence for knowledge sharing and capacity building in sectors such as agriculture, manufacturing and clean energy.

Speaking on behalf of the Asia Group of OIC member states, he pointed out that while digital technologies were reshaping trade and finance, significant disparities persisted in broadband coverage, data governance and cross-border payments.

“The Muslim Ummah must act decisively to ensure that no member state is left behind in this digital transformation,” he said, urging investment in secure and inclusive digital infrastructure and Shariah-compliant financial tools for small and medium enterprises.