Gulf News

Saudi bourse to open for foreigners in June

The opening up of stock market could boost inflows by up to $40b

- By Staff Reporter

Saudi Arabia will open its over $500 billion (Dh1.83 trillion) stock market for foreign institutio­ns from June 15 this year, the regulator said in a statement yesterday.

Saudi Arabia, which contribute­s to 50 per cent of the GDP (gross domestic product) of Middle East and North Africa (Mena), and 50 per cent of market capitalisa­tion of the region, had announced in July last year of such a move saying it would help them in diversifyi­ng the economy and thereby create more jobs.

The regulator plans to approve and publish final rules on May 4. The rules will be effective from June 1, the regulator said in a statement on its website.

“The opening of Saudi markets will be considered as a milestone in the history of regional equity markets,” Sebastien Henin, head of asset management at The National Investor told Gulf News.

Foreign investors with a minimum of 18.75 billion Saudi riyals of assets under management and at least five years experience in the business will be eligible to trade Saudi stocks, according to draft regulation­s issued last year.

The regulator also proposed a 10 per cent cap on foreign ownership of the market’s value. Among other draft rules, a single foreign investor could own no more than 5 per cent of any listed firm, while all foreign institutio­ns combined could own no more than 20 per cent.

Slow start

“We don’t expect markets to fly and foreigners to invest billions and billions of dollars soon after the start. We should expect some investors despite, it not being in the benchmark index like the MSCI, to allocate some money to start with,” Henin said.

The opening up of stock market could boost inflows by up to $40 billion, industry participan­ts say, giving them access to companies like Saudi Basic Industries and National Commercial Bank.

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