Saudi budget is balm for austerity-weary investors
dubai — For investors who watched austerity measures pummel growth over the past two years, Saudi Arabia’s 2018 budget is a relief.
The world’s biggest oil exporter will boost spending to 1.1 trillion riyals ($293 billion) to revive an economy that has languished as the nation copes with lower oil prices. Ashmore Group says it’s a sign Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s reforms are going ahead.
The spending plan exceeded expectations, said Jaap Meijer, the head of equity research at Arqaam Capital in Dubai. “Oil prices are up, which means there is fiscal space to support non-oil gross domestic product. That’s pretty relevant given the anticorruption drive, which could have ramifications for GDP growth.”
The kingdom has gradually relaxed restrictions for foreign investors as part of Prince Mohammed’s plan to overhaul the economy. But cuts to bonuses and subsidies over the past two years have weighed on investors.
Stocks swing
The Tadawul All Share Index fluctuated between gains and losses in the first hour of trading. It rose 0.1 per cent as of 10.45am in Riyadh.
The gauge has missed out on a rally that put emerging-market stocks on course for their best year since 2009, and the proportion of stocks owned by foreigners has lingered below five per cent since the kingdom first allowed overseas investors to trade Saudi shares directly in 2015. Saudi individuals have been net sellers of stocks every week since April 2016. Still,
We’re looking at a country that seems to be opening up more and more for investors and liberalising Jan Dehn, head of research at Ashmore Group
“the gradual rolling back of the state and the liberalisation of prices are good things,” said Londonbased Jan Dehn, the head of research at Ashmore Group, which manages $65 billion of emergingmarket assets, including Saudi dollar debt. “We’re looking at a country that seems to be opening up more and more for investors and liberalising.”
The economy will expand 2.7 per cent next year after contracting 0.5 per cent in 2017, while inflation will accelerate to 5.7 per cent from less than zero as of the end of 2017, according to government forecasts. The kingdom pushed back its goal of achieving fiscal balance to 2023 from an initial target of 2019.
Saudi Arabia is also extending its timeline to cut energy subsidies as the government seeks to offset the impact of austerity measures, according to the finance ministry. It’s the first time the government provided a detailed timeline for lifting energy prices, which have long been heavily subsidised.
Now that “there’s a better indication on when feedstock prices are going to change, there’s an opportunity for repricing,” said Simon Kitchen, the head of strategy at Cairo-based investment bank EFG-Hermes. “There’s a clear investment push, so building materials shares should firm up. To a certain extent, they priced that in.”
The Tadawul Materials Industry gauge rose to a 10-month high after the government announced a 72 billion-riyal programme to bolster private-sector growth, with money to support housing as well as fee waivers for small businesses. It was little changed on Wednesday.
“Saudi is still not a massively cheap market,” Kitchen said. “You got a strong stimulus, but you also had a rocket over Riyadh” on Tuesday, he said, referring to a ballistic missile fired by Yemen rebels the Saudis intercepted. —