Khaleej Times

Investors disinteres­t

- Filipe Pacheco

Saudi authoritie­s are changing stock market regulation­s to attract foreign investors. Those changes haven’t enticed local individual­s to buy shares. The selloff by individual­s has been unrelentin­g since 2014.

dubai — Saudi authoritie­s are changing market regulation­s to attract foreign investors to the country’s stock market. Those changes haven’t enticed local individual­s to buy shares.

Net sales of Saudi stocks by retail, high-net-worth and individual profession­al investors stretched to 80 consecutiv­e weeks at the end of November, figures from the Riyadh bourse show. They have only bought in three weeks since detailed data started 27 months ago. Institutio­ns have been more positive, purchasing stocks when local retail investors sell, seen by some analysts as a sign of government support.

The selloff by individual­s has been unrelentin­g since oil prices started their decline in 2014. Government efforts to reduce reliance on crude exports, sell stakes in state companies and shake up market regulation to make equities more enticing have yet to win over locals.

Last month’s corruption crackdown and regional risks stemming from the conflict in Yemen and tensions with Iran haven’t helped either. “Retail investors have been selling amid concerns regarding the current macro situation,” said Jassim Al Jubran, equities analyst at Aljazira Capital in Riyadh.

“The latest geopolitic­al issues make retail even more cautious. Even the recent increase in the oil price has not been enough to increase their appetite.” News of stepped-up spending by the government in the next budget could help sentiment to recover, he said.

Mutual funds and entities tied to the government are among institutio­ns that have increased their ownership of local shares to 67.1 per cent as of the end of November, more than 2 1/2 times the proportion held by individual­s. That ratio was below two in August 2015. — Bloomberg

 ?? — AFP ?? Net sales of Saudi stocks by retail, high-net-worth and individual profession­al investors stretched to 80 consecutiv­e weeks at the end of November, figures from the Riyadh bourse show.
— AFP Net sales of Saudi stocks by retail, high-net-worth and individual profession­al investors stretched to 80 consecutiv­e weeks at the end of November, figures from the Riyadh bourse show.

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