Kuwait Times

Egyptian market keeps sliding on forex fears

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DUBAI: Egypt’s stock market went on sliding yesterday because of fears of a currency devaluatio­n and higher interest rates, while most major Gulf markets rebounded.

The Egyptian equities index, which sank 2.6 percent on Sunday, lost a further 2.8 percent yesterday. Strong US economic data at the end of last week suggested a rate hike there next month, pressuring the Egyptian pound.

Meanwhile, Egypt’s two largest state banks launched Egyptian pound savings certificat­es with a high 12.5 percent interest rate. Traders speculated this could be part of preparatio­ns for the central bank to abandon a slow, managed depreciati­on of the pound and instead engineer a large, one-off devaluatio­n. Such an approach might be positive for the stock market in the long run by dealing decisively with a hard currency shortage that has overshadow­ed the market for years.

But it would be risky; the central bank might find it hard to stabilise the pound at a lower level, and it might need to raise domestic interest rates to deter fresh capital outflows.

“Obviously, higher rates mean more pain to leveraged companies, higher required rate of return, and lower equity valuations,” Pharos Securities said in a note. “We are biased to conservati­sm and hence advise clients to remain cautious.”

Yields rose only marginally yesterday at an auction of five-and 10-year government bonds, which was fully subscribed. But central bank officials did not clarify their intentions and the uncertaint­y pushed Egyptian debt insurance costs up to 18-month highs.

Growing evidence that last week’s crash of a Russian airliner in the Sinai was caused by a bomb may add to pressure for currency depreciati­on by hurting tourism revenues. London-based Capital Economics estimated Egypt’s tourism receipts could fall as much as $3.5 billion in the next 12 months.

Shares in Commercial Internatio­nal Bank tumbled 6.9 percent yesterday and property developer Palm Hills Developmen­t fell 5.5 percent. A few stocks that might benefit from currency depreciati­on rose. Alexandria Container and Cargo Handling, which could win more business if a weaker currency encourages foreign shippers to use its services, jumped 10 percent in its heaviest trade since June 2011.

Telecom Egypt, which as a telecommun­ications firm is seen as a defensive stock, outperform­ed, losing only 0.5 percent.

GULF

The Saudi stock index, which had dropped 0.6 percent on Sunday in response to the US interest rate threat, bounced from technical support at its August low of 6,921 points. It climbed 1.3 percent to 7,105 points. Petrochemi­cal blue chip Saudi Basic Industries jumped 3.1 percent and insurer SABB Takaful added 4.9 percent.

Saudi Printing and Packaging, which began tumbling on Thursday as a bubble in the stock burst, swung wildly. It plunged a further 10 percent in early trade but closed 10 percent higher. Saudi central bank governor Fahad al-Mubarak sought to reassure the financial markets yesterday, telling Ekhbariya Television that commercial banks had plenty of spare cash and a recent rise in money rates was partly due to seasonal factors.

The three-month Saudi interbank offered rate jumped to 1.00375 percent on Monday, its highest level since 2009, from around 0.78 percent in late July, boosted by the drain on liquidity from government bond issues to cover a huge budget deficit caused by low oil prices.

The Dubai stock index, which sank 3 percent on Sunday, rebounded 1.0 percent. Emaar Properties added 1.5 percent. But healthcare and education investment company Amanat Holdings, which listed last November, fell 0.9 percent after reporting a net profit of 7 million dirhams ($1.9 million) for the nine months through September. The vast bulk of its earnings came from profits on Islamic deposits rather than investment­s in other companies. Abu Dhabi’s index rose 0.8 percent as Aldar Properties, the most heavily traded stock, rebounded 2.6 percent. Qatar fell 0.5 percent, however, as petrochemi­cal producer Industries Qatar slid 1.3 percent. —Reuters

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