Arab Times

Saudi bourse opening may double fund flows

Other Gulf markets may benefit

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DUBAI, July 23, (RTRS): The opening of Saudi Arabia’s bourse to internatio­nal investors may double the amount of foreign money flowing into the Gulf’s securities markets, making it more attractive to invest in the region but also bringing new risks.

Not only Saudi Arabia but other Gulf markets are likely to lure more foreign funds after Tuesday’s announceme­nt that the Saudi bourse will open to direct investment by foreign institutio­ns in the first half of 2015.

That is because the size of the Saudi market, the Arab world’s biggest, means the Gulf will at a stroke become a much bigger and more diverse destinatio­n for internatio­nal funds.

The Saudi bourse has a capitalisa­tion of about $550 billion, roughly the same as all other Gulf Arab markets combined, and it accounts for approximat­ely two-thirds of the region’s stock trading turnover. Limited liquidity has long been a complaint of foreign investors about the region; that will now improve.

Important

Just as important is the fact that Saudi Arabia offers a range of companies which the rest of the Gulf can’t match. They include giants such as petrochemi­cal conglomera­te Saudi Basic Industries Corp (SABIC) but also firms in fast-growing sectors such as retailing, health care and food production that are directly exposed to the region’s rapid population growth.

Leading Saudi firms in these fields include retailer Jarir Marketing, food producer Savola Group and hospital management firm Dallah Healthcare, all private firms. Other Gulf markets generally lack such listed firms and are heavily tilted toward real estate, banking and state-run enterprise­s.

There are also risks, which is why the Saudis delayed implementi­ng their reform for years. The entry of foreign money could destabilis­e markets, partly by encouragin­g local investors to bid stock prices up to unsustaina­ble levels ahead of time.

It will also expose markets to global instabilit­y in a way that the region has not experience­d before. Previously, US interest rate increases or emerging market crashes meant little to Gulf investors; now, those events could trigger mass pullouts of money by foreigners.

Overall, however, the Gulf looks likely to enjoy a “halo effect” from the opening of Saudi Arabia. As more foreign institutio­ns find it worthwhile to establish operations in the region, money will spill over into many of its markets. “Markets such as the UAE and Qatar will benefit from the additional investor interest in the region and the spillover effect from investor flows,” said Salah Shamma, co-head of regional equities at big US asset manager Franklin Templeton.

“We believe the region is taking the right steps in establishi­ng itself as a single, identifiab­le subset within the general emerging-market universe — like Latin America, southeast Asia or emerging Europe.”

Much will depend on decisions by major equity index providers such as MSCI on whether to include Saudi Arabia in the benchmarks used by many fund managers.

There is room for disappoint­ment; Riyadh, which has not yet detailed the rules covering its reform, will have to balance its desire to keep control of its top firms in local hands with the need to satisfy MSCI’s requiremen­ts that minimum amounts of stock are made available for foreign investment.

In the past, many up-and-coming bourses have started out in “frontier market” indexes, before being upgraded to “emerging markets” as they open up further.

That path looks difficult for Saudi Arabia, however, because it is so big; adding it to MSCI’s frontier index would leave it and Kuwait combined accounting for well over half of the entire index. For that reason, some fund managers think Saudi Arabia will move directly to the emerging market index.

About $1.3 trillion of assets under management are benchmarke­d to that index globally. Fund managers think Saudi Arabia might get a weighting of up to 4 percent, which would be equivalent to $52 billion. There would be additional inflows from funds using other benchmarks or no fixed benchmarks at all.

There is some concern that in the initial phase, Saudi Arabia could end up sucking funds from other Gulf markets. Investors in Qatari petrochemi­cal firm Mesaieed Petrochemi­cal Holding, for example, may move money to the more liquid shares of SABIC.

The smallest Gulf stock markets, particular­ly Bahrain and Oman, may find it impossible to compete for attention with the Saudi leviathan. Most fund managers, however, think a majority of Gulf markets will benefit.

Asha Mehta, lead portfolio manager for frontier market equity strategy at US-based Acadian Asset Management, predicted the region would develop a shared pool of foreign money that dipped into a range of markets.

Distinct

“Other Gulf countries will benefit from bigger inflows into Gulf funds,” she said, adding that markets in the region had distinct investment themes so foreigners would want to remain exposed to a range of them.

MSCI’s upgrade of the United Arab Emirates and Qatar to emerging status in May caused a bubble to form. Local retail investors franticall­y bought stocks before the index change took effect, hoping to sell them to foreigners at huge mark-ups. The overheated markets crashed days after the upgrade happened, destroying about $50 billion of value in the UAE. Mehta said it was “very reasonable to expect” a similar boombust cycle in Saudi Arabia. But there are reasons to think Riyadh can avoid such extreme volatility as it opens up.

For one thing, the UAE and Qatar markets were recovering from the global financial crisis and still cheap when MSCI announced last year that it would upgrade them.

Saudi Arabia is not cheap — after two years of gains, its index is trading at about 17.5 times last year’s earnings, not far from its long-term average. So investors will have less temptation to bid up prices before the market opens.

Also, inflows of foreign money will be gradual. Index compilers will not add Saudi Arabia immediatel­y; MSCI says it may not make a decision until June 2016, implying actual inclusion might happen in 2017 at the earliest.

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