Arab Times

Dubai sheds 0.6 pct on Arabtec dilution worries

Gulf markets mixed; Egypt measure extends losses

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DUBAI, Feb 28, (RTRS): Shares in Dubai’s Arabtec tumbled on Thursday to a six-week low on fears of a significan­t shares dilution after company plans of raising $1.8 billion in capital.

Gulf markets were mixed, while Egypt’s measure extended losses.

Arabtec will issue 3.2 billion shares at 1.5 dirhams per share, a near 50 percent discount to its current market price. The capital hike amounts to a more than 50 percent increase in its market capitalisa­tion.

Its shares slumped 9.8 percent to 2.67 dirhams, its lowest close since Jan 16. Trading was thin as the stock hit its maximum permitted daily decline early in the day — allowing no further sell orders to be processed.

“Potential support of the 200 daily exponentia­l moving average is around 2.63 dirhams, which coordinate­s nicely with the 50 percent retracemen­t at 2.625 of the uptrend begun at the beginning of this year,” said Bruce Powers, a technical analyst and corporate advisor at Orpheus Capital.

“Given the significan­t move down today it wouldn’t be surprising to see Arabtec drop below this potential support zone.”

The contractor also replaced its chief executive as part of a shake-up driven by Abu Dhabi state investment fund Aabar, its largest shareholde­r, that is tightening its grip on the firm.

On Nasdaq Dubai, shares of Depa surged 11.4 percent after Cario-based EFG-Hermes said Arabtec is likely to use funds from the capital hike to take over the interiors contractin­g firm.

Arabtec, which acquired a 23.4 percent stake in Depa in Nov last year, will purchase the remaining 465 million shares in Depa that it does not currently own, analysts Jan Pawel Hasman and Shaza El Kady said in the note.

Dubai’s benchmark shed 0.6 percent, continuing its sideways trading as it struggles to break through the 2,000 key psychologi­cal level.

Elsewhere, Cairo’s measure fell 0.5 percent, down for its fifth consecutiv­e losing session as weak earnings weighed on sentiment already downbeat on political concerns ahead of parliament­ary elections.

Ezz Steel slipped 0.8 percent after the country’s largest steel producer swung to a loss in the third quarter.

Egypt Kuwait Holding fell 4.2 percent, extending declines after the company reported a 47 percent drop in 2012 profit from a year ago.

Meanwhile, Kuwait measure climbed 0.3 percent to its highest close since May 2012.

Kuwait is up 8.9 percent year-todate but recovering from an eight year trough it hit in November last year.

“We continue to be somewhat optimistic for the coming period of time in light of two primary factors — the anticipate­d favorable announceme­nts and financial disclosure­s for many of the listed companies that have not yet announced and more importantl­y for the long over-due government mega projects announceme­nts,” said Fouad Darwish, head of brokerage at Global Investment House.

Hopes of progress on developmen­t spending are driving optimism in the market amid a benign political backdrop. The Kuwaiti opposition boycotted the last elections and so cabinet members are seen as pro-government. Investors have been waiting for developmen­t projects to be announced and a fraction of these are beginning to trickle through.

Kuwait said on Thursday it plans to choose a winning bid in the first quarter of this year for a KD 900 million ($3.2 billion) new airport, a key project in the country’s economic developmen­t plan.

Dubai

The index slipped 0.6 percent to 1,927 points.

Abu Dhabi

The index declined 0.4 percent to 3,045 points.

Egypt

The index retreated 0.5 percent to 5,489 points.

Qatar

The index gained 0.4 percent to 8,529 points.

Kuwait

The index climbed 0.3 percent to 6,463 points.

Oman

The index slipped 0.1 percent to 5,976 points.

Bahrain

The index declined 0.7 percent at 1,090 points.

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