Retail Investors Suffer Near 400 Billion VND Loss in May 13 Trading Session, Which Stocks Were in the Spotlight?
CafeF • 05/13/2026
Negative
Summary
The core idea of the story, in a faster reading layer.
Individual investors on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange (HOSE) sold a net 3,790 billion VND (approximately 160 million USD) worth of shares in the last trading week.
AI quick analysis
A short investor-focused read on transmission channels, sectors, and near-term watchpoints.
Analysis Scope
- The Vietnamese stock market, particularly the HOSE market.
Background
- Brokerage firms sold a net 379 billion VND on May 13.
2) Mechanism of Impact
Cause-and-Effect Chain
- Brokerage firms sold net → reduced liquidity → affected stock prices.
Level of Surprise
- This signal can be considered a warning sign about the financial situation of brokerage firms, but the level of surprise is not high as the information has already been disclosed.
- 3) Benefiting or Pressured Groups by Industry/Code:
- Benefiting:
- Stocks related to other brokerage firms, such as VCI, SSI, MBS, HCM, VND.
- Impacted:
- Stocks related to industries that may be affected by the decline of brokerage firms, such as banks, securities, and finance.
4) Risks to Monitor
- Risk of the financial situation of brokerage firms.
- Risk of impact on stock prices and liquidity.
- 5) Short-Term Framework:
- In the short term, monitor the financial situation of brokerage firms and the impact on stock prices.
- Reconsider investment strategies if the financial situation of brokerage firms continues to deteriorate.
AI-assisted synthesis only. Not investment advice.
Potentially affected tickers
Heuristic mapping from the story and reference listed-market data.
CTCKNegative
Price: updating
Directly mentioned in the story; current tone is negative.
Explicitly mentioned in the storySource excerpt
Stored source excerpt from the original article, without rewriting the publication's voice.
Institutional investors sold a net 3,790 billion VND on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange (HOSE).