Arab Times

Dubai hits lowest level since Jan 2016 on DSI

Saudi loses momentum

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DUBAI, June 25, (RTRS): Dubai stocks slumped on Monday to its lowest since January 2016, led by losses in contractor Drake & Scull, while Saudi stocks slipped after gains ahead of index compiler MSCI’s move to lift Riyadh to its emerging markets benchmark.

Drake & Scull shares fell ten percent to close at 0.9 dirhams on retail selling after it fell below a key support level of one dirham.

Concerns about Drake & Scull’s business outlook and ongoing investigat­ions against its previous management are weighing on the stock, traders said. The stock is down over 60 percent so far this year. The Dubai index fell 2.1 percent to close 2,868 points, a new low for the year and its lowest level since January 2016.

Air Arabia posted fresh losses as investors remained anxious about its exposure to embattled private equity firm Abraaj, which earlier this month had filed for provisiona­l liquidatio­n. The stock closed 1.5 percent lower.

Among blue-chips, Emaar Properties fell 2.7 percent and Dubai Islamic Bank dropped almost 2 percent, giving up some of the recent gains on the back of its successful rights issue.

Saudi stocks ended 0.1 percent lower as investors paused after a strong rally on the back of expectatio­ns that Riyadh will be added to the MSCI emerging market benchmarks.

The Saudi index is up over 15 percent this year, the best performing index in the Gulf region.

Charles-Henry Monchau, chief investment office at Al Mal Capital in Dubai, said overall valuations for Saudi stocks are not very attractive after the recent gains and the market can lose momentum from here onwards.

“Investor focus would now shift back to fundamenta­ls and the second quarter results coming in a couple of weeks, would be a good reality check of underlying trends,” he said.

Qatar stocks failed to sustain themselves above the 9000-point psychologi­cal barrier in early trade and the index closed down 0.8 percent, weighed down by blue-chips such as Industries Qatar which dropped 1.9 percent and Qatar National Bank which fell 1.3 percent.

Kuwait stocks were the only exception in the Gulf market where most stocks were down. The index rose 1.1 percent, led by gains in telecommun­ications company Zain which rose 2.2 percent and Kuwait Finance Hotuse which climbed 1.5 percent. Last week MSCI said it will include the MSCI Kuwait Index in its classifica­tion review next year for a potential move from frontier to emerging markets.

Saudi Arabia

The index dropped 0.1 percent to 8,342 points.

Dubai

The index fell 2.1 pct at 2,868 points.

Abu Dhabi

The index added 0.3 percent to 4,537 points.

Qatar

The index lost 0.8 percent to 8,937 points.

Kuwait

The index rose 1.1 percent to 4,866 points.

Bahrain

The index shed 0.4 percent to 1,302 points.

Oman

The index lost 0.2 percent to 4,583 points.

Egypt

The index gained 0.4 percent to 16,458 points.

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