The National - News

Tadawul surges on women driving reform

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Saudi insurers posted significan­t gains yesterday, on hopes that insurance volumes will rise as women began driving in Saudi Arabia, in the end of the world’s last ban on female drivers.

This lifted the Saudi exchange, which outperform­ed other regional markets, and which was still riding the wave of MSCI’s announceme­nt last week that it would add the kingdom’s stock market to its emerging markets benchmark.

Saudi Arabia’s addition could help attract $40 billion from foreign funds, the chairman of the Saudi Capital Market Authority told Reuters last week. The move followed the decision by another index provider, FTSE Russell, to give Saudi Arabia emerging market status earlier this year.

The Saudi index rose 1.8 per cent yesterday to 8,351 points, with gains spread across the insurance, banking and petrochemi­cals sectors. The decision to lift the ban on women drivers in the kingdom is expected to boost the economy, with industries from car sales to insurance set to reap returns.

Insurance companies led the gains, with Al Rajhi Company for Cooperativ­e Insurance up 10 per cent, followed by SABB Takaful and Saudi Indian Company for Cooperativ­e Insurance, which added 7.9 per cent and 4.8 per cent, respective­ly.

In Dubai, where the index was flat at 2,929 points, Air Arabia was unchanged. Shares in the airline have declined by more than 10 per cent since early last week, when the company said it had hired experts to protect its business interests in private equity firm Abraaj, which has filed for provisiona­l liquidatio­n. Last week, the UAE’s’ top securities regulator asked UAE-listed companies to declare their exposure to Abraaj, the watchdog’s chief executive told Reuters.

In Abu Dhabi, the index added 0.3 per cent to 4,551 points and Dana Gas jumped 0.9 per cent after its shareholde­rs approved last week the issuance of a new sukuk to replace an existing sukuk issued in 2013. The shareholde­rs also approved the dismissal of sukuk-related litigation, marking the end of a protracted legal battle between the firm and its creditors.

Kuwait’s index added 0.2 per cent to 4,813 points, while Bahrain’s shed 0.2 per cent to 1,307 points.

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