Kuwait Times

Kuwait outperform­s as Saudi stalls, Dubai slips

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Stock markets in the Gulf diverged yesterday with Saudi Arabia stalling near a six-week low and Dubai retreating on profit-taking, while Kuwait continued to outperform. Kuwait’s stock market gained 1.9 percent with the largest logistics firm in the Gulf, Agility, and National Bank of Kuwait each climbing 3.0 percent.

Kuwait’s index is up 8.2 percent since Jan. 1, outperform­ing the region after a long period of sluggish performanc­e. “Sentiment is very positive in the market but no change in fundamenta­ls,” said Bader Al-Gahnim, head of regional asset management at Kuwait-based Global Investment House. “From an economic perspectiv­e the country is well positioned due to prudent fiscal management and a lower fiscal break-even oil price.”

Saudi Arabia’s index added 0.1 percent. Nine of the top 10 performers were from the insurance segment with Wafa Insurance in the lead, jumping 9.1 percent. Interest in the sector has risen partly because of local media reports late last year that Saudi Arabia was looking at the possibilit­y of including haj and umra pilgrims in a compulsory health insurance scheme.

Almarai rose 0.4 percent after the Gulf’s largest dairy company reported a 1 percent increase in fourth-quarter net profit to 488.5 million riyals ($130 million), roughly in line with analysts’ forecasts. Sales rose marginally and the cost of sales fell. Analysts at NCB Capital said that despite the relatively flat earnings and revenue growth, strong margin expansion from lower operating expenditur­e and improving sales in Almarai’s poultry segment were important positives.

The company, one of the few in Saudi Arabia that give forward guidance, said it would “continue to focus on costs control, efficiency gains and cashflow preservati­on while maintainin­g its strategic direction of profitable growth”. However the results revealed the dairy and juice segment had suffered its first year-on-year decline in sales, according to NCB Capital. This sent some other food producers lower, with Saudia Dairy and Foodstuff dropping 3.4 percent.

Bank Aljazira, the first bank to report earnings in the kingdom, reported a 4.4 percent drop in fourth-quarter net profit to 152 million riyals. Aljazira cited higher impairment charges for credit losses.

The bank’s stock closed 0.4 percent higher after trading lower for most of the session. However, some other banks were knocked lower, with Saudi British Bank dropping 1.4 percent. Egypt’s main index rose to yet another record close in healthy trading volume. The index has risen 56 percent since the currency was floated on Nov 3. Arabian Cement jumped its 10 percent daily limit for a third consecutiv­e session to 9.91 Egyptian pounds. — Reuters

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