Arab Times

Gulf markets fall with crude oil

Saudi worst-performer for the week

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DUBAI, April 20, (RTRS): Profittaki­ng and weak first-quarter earnings weighed on Gulf stock markets on Thursday, with Saudi Arabia’s index pulled lower by petrochemi­cal shares after oil prices fell sharply, but Dubai’s Union Properties and Abu Dhabi’s TAQA bucked the trend.

Dubai’s index lost 1.0 percent as financiall­y troubled builder Arabtec, which had jumped almost 11 percent on Wednesday after shareholde­rs approved its capital restructur­ing plan, retreated 4.4 percent.

Union Properties, however, leapt 5.8 percent to close at 1.03 dirhams in its heaviest trade since Jan. 23 and accounted for almost half of trading volume on the exchange. It ended off its intra-day high of 1.12 dirhams, failing to conclusive­ly break chart resistance at the end-February peak of 1.07.

Fund managers and traders said the reason for the jump was not clear but it could be related to positive corporate news that had not yet been disclosed.

“Shares of UPP moved against the grain, and if it was just market participan­ts taking a contrarian view on the stock, it would happen gradually. The volume spike in today’s session suggests it’s a company-specific event,” one fund manager said.

Elsewhere, Abu Dhabi National Energy Co surged 7.1 percent in very heavy trade after its chief operating officer told Reuters it might sell some oil and gas interests in North America to raise capital for core businesses.

Profit-taking in other shares, however, pulled the Abu Dhabi index down 0.2 percent. First Abu Dhabi Bank fell 0.5 percent after trading as much as 1.4 percent higher earlier in the day.

The lender, which was formed on April 1 by the merger of National Bank of Abu Dhabi and First Gulf Bank, announced a 12.4 percent rise in combined “pro-forma” first quarter net profit to 2.93 billion dirhams ($798 million).

That was aided by a 145.5 percent jump in “other non-interest” income while loan impairment charges slipped 3.9 percent.

The Saudi index lost 0.7 percent as almost two-thirds of listed petrochemi­cal shares fell, with heavyweigh­t Saudi Basic Industries dropping 1.3 percent.

Most Saudi banking shares also fell, with Saudi Investment Bank the worst performer, down 1.6 percent. All Saudi banks have now reported first-quarter earnings; while results were mixed, most beat analysts’ expectatio­ns.

The Saudi index was the worst performer in the Gulf for the week, down 2.5 percent.

In Doha, Gulf Internatio­nal Services dropped 5.0 percent after it reported an 81 percent slide in first-quarter profit to 15 million riyals ($4.1 million), far below QNB Financial’s forecast of 452 million riyals and Alphamena’s estimate of 378 million riyals.

The Qatari stock index fell 0.5 percent and was down 2.0 percent for the week.

In Egypt, the index edged up 0.1 percent in very low volume as Orascom Constructi­on jumped 5.1 percent on news a major US nitrogen fertiliser plant which it built had started operations.

Declining shares, however, outnumbere­d advancing ones by 124 to 46.

Saudi Arabia

The index lost 0.7 percent to 6,899 points.

Dubai

The index fell 1.0 percent to 3,470 points.

Abu Dhabi

The index edged down 0.2 percent at 4,522 points.

Qatar

The index lost 0.5 percent to 10,242 points.

Egypt

The index edged up 0.1 percent to 12,906 points.

Kuwait

The index added 0.4 percent to 6,814 points.

Oman

The index slipped 0.7 percent to 5,474 points.

Bahrain

The index was down 0.4 percent at 1,334 points.

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