The National - News

Tadawul gains on citizen handouts

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Saudi Arabia’s stock market rose yesterday after King Salman announced a package of handouts for Saudi citizens to compensate for rising living costs, while Qatar was the strongest market in the region ahead of dividend announceme­nts.

The Saudi index gained 0.6 per cent. Shares in most retail sector firms, which could benefit from the package’s boost to consumer spending power, rose with major retailer Jarir up 2.6 per cent to its highest since early October.

The informatio­n minister was quoted by the Al Sharq Al Awsat newspaper as saying the cost of this year’s handouts, which include bonuses for state employees and the government paying value added tax on some items such as purchases of first homes, would total about 50 billion riyals.

That is about 1.9 per cent of this year’s projected gross domestic product. An additional 30bn riyals would be spent this year on a previously announced aid programme for low- and middle-income Saudis.

The steps are unlikely to trigger a consumer boom. Private economists have estimated the government will raise about 40bn riyals in 2018 by introducin­g VAT, while gasoline price hikes that took effect this month are expected to cost consumers tens of billions of riyals.

But the handouts are a sign that Saudi authoritie­s are keen to limit damage to domestic demand from this year’s austerity measures, and that rising oil prices are giving them the means to do so.

Shares in Saudi petrochemi­cal producer PetroRabig­h climbed 2 per cent after the company said that of 12 units in its Phase II expansion, 10 had achieved production in line with specificat­ions and the remaining two would start up in the current quarter.

Qatar’s index rose 1.4 per cent on the back of stocks including Barwa Real Estate, which gained 2.9 per cent, and major Islamic bank Masraf Al Rayan, up 4.3 per cent..

Markets in the UAE were sluggish despite strength in global equities. Indexes in Dubai and Abu Dhabi both edged up 0.2 per cent although Dubai builder Arabtec, which had been trading near six-year lows, jumped 6.5 per cent in its heaviest trade since July after saying one of its units had won a Dh250 million contract for work from blue chip Emaar Properties.

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