ME funds wary of bonds, Qatar stocks
DUBAI — Middle East fund managers have turned negative towards fixed income for the first time since January because of the prospect of US monetary tightening and a flood of bond supply expected from governments in the region, a monthly Reuters poll found.
The poll of 14 leading fund managers, conducted over the past week, found 21 per cent expect to cut back allocations to Middle East fixed income in the next three months while 14 per cent expect to raise them. (Poll findings )
Last month, 21 per cent anticipated reducing their fixed income allocations with 29 per cent increasing them.
One reason for the shift is statements by Federal Reserve officials suggesting an increased chance of a US interest rate hike by the end of this year.
Also, the last couple of months have seen a strong rally in Gulf Cooperation Council debt instruments, in line with emerging market bonds in general. Meanwhile, supply of GCC debt has been surging as governments cover budget deficits caused by low oil prices, with Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Bahrain expected to issue international bonds in coming months.
Mohamed Eljamal, managing director of capital markets at Abu Dhabi’s Waha Capital, said yields of most of regional benchmark names were trading at year-to-date lows, and anticipated supply would weigh on returns.
“For the remainder of the year, a strong pipeline of bond supply from the region — both sovereign and corporate — is anticipated north of $30 billion, which should cap performance until the supply clears.”
Selective on stocks
The poll found 36 per cent of funds expect to increase their allocation to Middle East equities and 14 per cent to reduce them, a lower net positive than last month’s rates of 43 per cent and 14 per cent respectively. Sentiment has on balance turned negative towards Qatar, where 43 per cent now expect to reduce equities allocations and 21 per cent expect to increase them the most bearish balance since April. Last month, 14 per cent anticipated a reduction and 36 per cent an increase.
Qatar’s stock market has been supported in recent weeks by anticipation of index compiler FTSE upgrading the bourse to emerging market status in mid-September. But several fund managers think many Qatari shares are now trading at or above fair value, leaving the market vulnerable to a correction.
Islamic lender Masraf Al Rayan, trading around 38.90 riyals, is at a 33 per cent premium to the mean fair value of 29.19 riyals estimated by six analysts surveyed by Reuters.
Funds have also turned less positive towards Saudi Arabia’s stock market with 29 per cent expecting to increase allocations and 21 per cent to cut them back, compared to last month’s rates of 50 per cent and 14 per cent.