Kuwait Times

GCC markets retreat as stocks go ex-dividend

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KUWAIT:

Large-cap stocks in the GCC went exdividend during March-17 adding to the softer market sentiments in the GCC markets. The decline was also reflected in the MSCI GCC index that declined by 1.3 percent during the month. A total of 43 percent of the companies by market cap have gone ex-dividend by the end of March-17. Bahrain and Saudi Arabia were the only two positive performing market with an index return of 0.5 percent and 0.4 percent, respective­ly. On the other hand, Dubai witnessed the biggest monthly decline of 4.1 percent as large-cap indices, including Bank and Real Estate, declined. Lower oil prices added to the market pressure as crude slid almost 6 percent during the month on the back of rising production in the US, although talks of an extension to the ongoing OPEC production agreement provided interim relief to falling prices.

Trading activity continued to decline for the second consecutiv­e month with total value traded down by 7.4 percent to reach $ 28.4 billion. Qatar and Bahrain were the only markets that recorded higher value traded during the month with increase of 53 percent and 35 percent, respective­ly. On the other hand, Dubai recorded the steepest decline of 39 percent. Volume traded on the GCC exchanges also declined by almost a third to 18.9 billion shares during the month as compared to February-17.

On the economic front, Fitch ratings slashed Saudi Arabia’s credit rating by one notch to A+ with a Stable Outlook. As reasons for the downgrade, the agency highlighte­d continued deteriorat­ion of public and external balance sheets, wider-than-expected fiscal deficit in 2016 with the low oil prices being the key underlying factor. On the regulatory front, the Kingdom took another step towards its efforts to join the MSCI Emerging Market index. The Saudi exchange said it would extend the period for settling trades and introduce short-selling on April 23. In addition, Kuwait also announced similar efforts including introducti­on of T+3 settlement, a reorganiza­tion and a new benchmark by next year.

Boursa Kuwait

Boursa Kuwait retracted during March-17 amid a broader sell-off in the GCC. The Weighted index dropped 2.5 percent during the month but continued to trade above the 400 points support level to close at 413.27 points. Contrastin­gly, the Price Index surged during the month by 3.6 percent indicating demand for small cap stocks in the market as against blue chips. In terms of YTD-17 performanc­e, the Kuwait Price index leads in the GCC with a return of 22.3 percent whereas the Weighted index reported a rise of 8.7 percent, third in the GCC. The monthly performanc­e of the weighted index reflected a decline in most major sectoral indices including Banks and Telecom that declined by 3.5 percent and 3.1 percent, respective­ly. The banking index performanc­e primarily reflected 10.8 percent and 13.1 percent fall in shares of NBK and Kuwait Finance House, respective­ly, while AUB and Burgan Bank were the only banking stocks that reported positive performanc­e during the month. Moreover, 8 out of the 10 banks went ex-dividend during the month which also reflected the poor sector performanc­e. In the Telecom sector, Viva was the only positive performing stock with a return of 10.6 percent, while Zain and Ooredoo dropped 5.2 percent and 4.8 percent, respective­ly. The Technology index recorded the steepest decline of 7.7 percent, while the Healthcare index topped monthly performanc­e with a surge of 8 percent. Trading activity continued to drop for the second consecutiv­e month.

Monthly volumes traded on the exchange declined by almost 20 percent to 7.1 billion shares as compared to 8.6 billion shares during the previous month. Value traded also declined at an even higher pace of 25 percent to KD 653 million as compared to KD 866 million during February-17. In terms of stocks, Alimtiaz topped the monthly value traded chart with KD 58 million worth of shares traded during the month followed by KFH and Zain with KD 44.8 million and KD 41.8 million worth of shares changing hands, respective­ly. The monthly gainers chart primarily included small-cap stocks that was also reflected in the positive performanc­e of the price index. Shares of NCCI and Amwal more than doubled during the month followed by 60 percent gain in shares of REAM and 32 percent gain in shares of Educationa­l Holding.

On the regulatory front, Kuwait completed the long awaited sovereign internatio­nal bond sale during the month achieving a pricing that was better than that of Qatar, Abu Dhabi and Saudi Arabia. According to reports, the government sold $ 3.5 billion in 5-year notes at 75 bps over correspond­ing US Treasuries and $ 4.5 billion in 10-year bonds at a 100 bps spread after receiving bids worth $ 29 billion, more than three times the total issuance size. On the regulatory front, the CMA Kuwait announced key reforms in its bid to qualify as an emerging market. The regulator said it would extend trade settlement cycle to 3 days by the end of April from the current 2 days for foreigners, whereas local traders trades would be settled the same day. The CMA also plans to introduce short-selling and derivative products allowing tradable rights issues and ETFs next year. The exchange would also group companies in segregated markets based on market cap and volumes.

Saudi Arabia (Tadawul)

After two consecutiv­e months of decline, TASI recorded marginal gains of 0.4 percent during March-17 as the positive performanc­e of banks and telecom stocks were partially offset by a decline in energy stocks. The benchmark mostly traded below the 7,000 mark during the month only to surge 0.8 percent and regain this key support level on the last trading session to close at 7,001.63 points. Food, Healthcare and Retail were the best performing sectors during the month in addition to 2.8 percent return for the Telecom index and 1 percent for the Banks index. On the decliners side, Insurance and Utilities indices recorded the steepest monthly decline of 4.2 percent each, while the Energy index declined by 3.1 percent as oil prices were under significan­t pressure during the month led higher production in the US. Monthly trading activity declined in line with the rest of the GCC markets. Monthly volume declined by 12.6 percent to 3.6 billion shares as compared to 4.2 billion shares during the previous month.

Monthly value traded also declined but at a significan­tly lower pace of 3.6 percent to reach SAR 72.5 billion in March-17 as compared to SAR 75.2 billion during the previous month. Alinma Bank topped the monthly value traded chart recording trades worth SAR 8.2 billion during the month followed by SABIC and Al-Tayyar Travel recording trades worth SAR 6.8 billion and SAR 3.3 billion, respective­ly.

Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange

ADX followed broad GCC market cues and retraced lower in March-17 after closing mostly flat in the first two months of the year. The index was down 2.4 percent m-o-m and closed at 4,443.53 points, as most major sectoral indices closed lower. Investment & Financial Services was the worst performing index as it plunged by 12.1 percent m-o-m, followed by Energy & Real Estate indices, that declined by 7.7 percent and 7.3 percent, respective­ly. Waha Capital largely led the decline of the Investment & Financial Services index as it went down by 12.2 percent m-o-m, while large-cap Aldar Properties declined by 5.8 percent and pulled the Real Estate index down. In terms of gainers, the Telecom index led all indices with a monthly gain of 2.6 percent, as Etisalat was up by 2.6 percent m-o-m. The Insurance index followed and moved up 1.8 percent m-o-m.

In prominent earnings, Etisalat reported FY 2016 revenues of AED 52.4 billion, a 2 percent y-o-y increase from 2015, despite a 1 percent decline in subscriber base to 162 million. Consolidat­ed EBITDA came in at AED 26.3 billion, a 1 percent y-o-y decline in 2016 driven mainly by unfavorabl­e FX in Egypt, competitiv­eness pressure in Morocco and non-telecom operations. Net Income came in at AED 8.4 million which increased by 2 percent y-o-y.

Dubai Financial Market

DFM continued its declining trends from February-17 into March-17, and was the worst performing market for the month that passed. For March-17, DFM was down by 4.1 percent and closed at 3480.43 points. Sectoral trends were mixed, but was skewed towards losers. The Financials pack plunged as Banks were down by 6.3 percent m-o-m, Insurance was down by 6.2 percent m-o-m, while Investment & Financial Services dropped by 5.3 percent. The Consumer Staples & Discretion­ary sector index also declined by 6.2 percent m-o-m, mostly due to DXB Entertainm­ents losing ground by 5.6 percent. The Real Estate & Constructi­on continued to slip in March-17 similar to February-17, as it fell by 2.5 percent m-o-m. Indices, which witnessed higher levels, were led by Industrial­s, which was up 6.9 percent m-o-m, single-handedly due to National Cement Company, which was up by 6.9 percent as well. Telecom also moved higher by 1.3 percent, driven by DU (+1.3 percent).

In prominent earnings, Arabtec reported revenues of AED 8.2 billion for FY 2016, up 7.1 percent y-o-y from FY 2015. The company announced that order backlog stands at AED 18 billion, which is more than two years of book-to-bill based on current year revenues.

Qatar Exchange

The QE 20 index reversed its positive trends exhibited in the first two months of the year to decline in March-17, as the index receded by 2.9 percent m-o-m, and closed at 10390.60 points. The Qatar All Share index dropped by a lower 1.4 percent for the third month of 2017, while sectoral trends were mixed. Indices such as Transporta­tion, Telecoms and Insurance were among the main laggards for the month of March-17. Transporta­tion index was the index, which receded the most as all stocks in the index declined, witnessing an average drop of 9.7 percent. Ooredoo was responsibl­e for the decline in the Telecoms index as the stock declined by over 8.8 percent m-o-m. Amongst the indices which gained during the month was the Real Estate index which gained by 1.0 percent m-o-m for the month as Ezdan (+3.8 percent m-o-m) was able to negate the declines in Union Developmen­t and Barwa (10.3 percent m-o-m). In corporate ratings related action Capital Intelligen­ce Ratings announced that it has affirmed Doha Bank’s Financial Strength Rating (FSR) at ‘A’. Key drivers supporting the rating were the Bank’s good capital base, currently being further augmented by a rights issue and good overall asset quality.

Bahrain Bourse

Bahrain All Share Index continued as one of the best performing markets YTD -2017, and was the best performing market in the GCC in March-17. The index rose, albeit marginally and closed 0.5 percent higher on a m-o-m basis. . The index closed at 1355.99 points at the end of the month. Sectoral performanc­e was mixed as there were indices which gained and receded.

Market breadth for the index was positive, as 9 stocks gained ground, while 7 stocks witnessed declines in their share prices. Industrial­s was the main sector which drove the index up as the sector was up 37.8 percent for the month, singlehand­edly pushed up by Aluminum Bahrain which was the best performing index in the overall index.

The Hotels & Tourism sector went up as well by 3.6 percent, followed by Insurance names which went up by 1.6 percent m-o-m in March 17. Services stocks and Commercial Banks were the two sectors which were key laggards for the index as it went down by 3.0 percent and 2.3 percent respective­ly for the current month. In earning releases, Al Ahlia Insurance reported a net profit of BHD 31,808 for FY 2016 as compared to a net loss of BD 622,699 for FY 2015.

Muscat Securities Market

After minimal volatility since the start of the year with the index being flat at the end of the first two months of the year, the MSM30 index recorded the second highest monthly decline of 4 percent during March-17. The decline was broad-based as seen in declines in all the three sectoral indices with Services sector falling by 4.1 percent followed by 4.0 percent decline in Financial index and 1.3 percent decline in the industrial index.

Al Anwar Holding was the only Financial stock in the regular market that closed with a gain of 5.7 percent during the month. Banks in particular had a weak month with Bank Muscat, the largest stock on the exchange, recorded a decline of 19.7 percent, the second-highest fall during the month. The stock going ex-dividend added to the already weak trends in the sector. Shares of NBO also declined by 8.9 percent due to the cash dividends announced during the month.

Banks in the Sultanate continue to face tight liquidity conditions, in line with most of the other GCC countries. According to the latest monthly report from the Central Bank of Oman (CBO), the prevailing liquidity conditions has led to an increase in average interest rates with lending rate rising by as much as 34 bps year-on-year in January-17 and deposit rates increasing by 63 bps. However, the funds raised in the internatio­nal market has alleviated some pressure from the domestic banking system.

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