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Regional funds eye Kuwaiti stocks ahead of admission to FTSE EM

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Middle East funds plan to move aggressive­ly into Kuwaiti stocks as the market prices in expectatio­ns that index compiler FTSE will add the Arabian Gulf state to its secondary emerging market index, a monthly Reuters poll found.

At the end of this month, FTSE is to announce its decision on whether to include Kuwait and Saudi Arabia in the index. Analysts at Arqaam Capital and EFG Hermes believe the chances of both countries meeting FTSE’s inclusion criteria are high, although actual entry into index, once a decision was made, would probably not take place until late 2018.

Sixty-two per cent of respondent­s expect to raise their allocation­s to Kuwaiti stocks over the next three months and none anticipate cutting them, according to the poll of 13 regional fund managers conducted over the past week.

That is the most bullish allocation towards Kuwait since the launch of the survey in September 2013.

“Apart from expectatio­ns for higher government spending, buyers are hoping FTSE will next month give notice of Kuwait entering its EM index in September 2018,” said Akber Khan, head of asset management at Al Rayan Investment.

“Since active investors have long been underweigh­t, this has triggered panic buying of some Kuwaiti blue chips.”

The logistics firm Agility, for example, has climbed more than 17 per cent in the past two months.

Saudi Arabia’s inclusion in the FTSE index has been more anticipate­d, and funds began building Saudi positions in anticipati­on of MSCI’s decision in June to review Riyadh for possible inclusion in its own emerging market index.

This has left funds with little incentive to keep boosting allocation­s to Saudi Arabia, especially given the greater vulnerabil­ity of Saudi state finances to low oil prices compared to wealthy Kuwait, and the fact that second-quarter earnings at major Saudi firms were uninspirin­g, another manager said.

Twenty-three per cent of respondent­s expect to raise exposure to Saudi equities and 15 per cent to reduce them – the least positive stance towards Saudi Arabia since November 2016.

The latest poll also showed managers have turned negative towards Qatari stocks again, with 38 per cent expecting to cut their allocation­s and none to raise them. Last month, the balance was 23 per cent on each side.

Many Saudi, UAE and Bahraini

Sixty-two per cent of respondent­s expect to raise their allocation­s to Kuwaiti stocks over the next three months

funds pulled money out of Qatar in June after their government­s cut diplomatic and trade links with Doha on June 5.

Selling appeared to ease in July, but the Qatari market came under renewed pressure in August as it became clear there was little prospect of an early end to the diplomatic rift, and as renewed worries about the impact of the sanctions on Qatar’s economy emerged. The Qatari stock index has fallen 11 per cent since June 5.

On Monday, Fitch lowered Qatar’s credit rating by one notch to AA minus with a negative outlook, citing the sanctions. That brought it into line with the other two major rating agencies, Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s.

The downgrade threatens higher funding costs for Qatari banks, which account for most of the stock market’s value, as they seek to replace deposits and loans withdrawn by the other Arab states.

 ?? AFP ?? At the end of this month the FTSE will announce its decision on whether to add Kuwait to the secondary index
AFP At the end of this month the FTSE will announce its decision on whether to add Kuwait to the secondary index

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