Arab Times

Boursa Kuwait outperform­s GCC peers

Kuwait’s All Share Index gains 4.88 pct in July

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By NBK Capital

KUWAIT CITY, Aug 6: In the GCC the picture was mostly positive with the exception of the Saudi market. The S&P GCC Composite Index edged up during the month advancing by 0.62% despite the strong performanc­e of key markets such as Kuwait, Dubai and Abu Dhabi. The performanc­e of the GCC index was dragged down by a 1.01% decline in the Tadawul All Share Index after a string performanc­e in June. In the UAE, Dubai was the top GCC performer for July adding 9.77%, followed by Abu Dhabi with 6.79% mainly buoyed by strong bank earnings. It was followed closed by Bahrain with a gain of 5.21% and Kuwait with 4.88% for the Boursa Kuwait All Share Index. In Kuwait, the Boursa Kuwait Premier Market Index continued to outperform the main market recording a gain of 5.76% for July bringing its total performanc­e for the year to 28%, by far leading the GCC markets with Bahrain and Dubai distant seconds with 15.74% and 15.36% respective­ly. In the broader MENA region Egypt continues to be volatile with a loss of 5.0% in July following a 2.4% in June.

The performanc­e of Emerging markets was generally negative with the MSCI EM and the MSCI Asia ex-Japan down 1.69% and 2.17% respective­ly. The declines were led by significan­t drops in Mexico and India as the Mexico Stock Exchange Index and the Indian Nifty 50 retreated by 5.32% and 5.69%, while the Shanghai Composite was down 1.56%. Turkey’s Borsa Istanbul 100 Index, on the other hand, built on its previous month’s gains and added 5.80% during the month of July.

Markets moved mostly sideways during the month awaiting the outcomes of the highly anticipate­d policy meetings of the US Federal Reserve and the ECB at the end of July and the US-China trade negotiatio­ns. The MSCI AC World Index remained practicall­y flat adding 0.17% during the month, while the MSCI EM Index declined by 1.69%. The last week of July was the most eventful in terms of policy moves. On July 25, the ECB kept key interest rates unchanged but hinted that a rate cut could be on the horizon along with more monetary easing. The ECB president Mario Draghi said that he expects rates to remain “at their present or lower levels” at least through the first half of 2020.

The Federal Reserve, as was widely expected, lowered its target rate by 25bps to a range of 2.0-2.25% which marks the first interest rate cut since the financial crisis. The immediate market reaction was largely negative as Chairman Powell hinted that this might be a one-off by saying that “We are thinking of it as a mid-cycle adjustment to policy”. He later clarified that the Fed could cut rates again soon, but the cycle of cuts wouldn’t last for long. The markets had been expecting another cut before the end of the year. Shortly after the month-end President Trump said that he would impose another 10% tariff on an additional $300 billion worth of Chinese imports in the middle of trade talks then China threatened to retaliate. Stock markets and oil tanked while treasury bonds rallied sending yields to 3-year lows.

The S&P 500 had traded for most of the month above the 3,000 level but broke down after the Fed decision losing 1.09% during the last day of July to close up 1.31% for the month at 2,980.38. Similarly, the Nasdaq climbed steadily to new highs in July to close the month up 2.11% after losing 1.19% on the last trading day.

US economic growth remains a potential concern in the face of global and domestic headwinds. Manufactur­ing activity surprised on the downside; the ISM manufactur­ing PMI, which was expected to grow to 52.0, dropped to 51.2 in July from 51.7 the previous month. Inflation continued to weaken as the Personal Consumptio­n Expenditur­es (PCE) recorded 1.4% in June undershoot­ing expectatio­ns of 1.7%, while the Core PCE recorded 1.6% versus an expected 1.7%. Preliminar­y GDP figures for Q2 showed a decline to 2.1% from 3.1% for the first quarter of 2019.

In Europe, the markets picture was mixed but indices generally followed the same pattern with mostly sideways movement during the month then tanking after the escalation of trade tensions. The Stoxx Europe 600 added 0.23% in July after a solid performanc­e for the previous month. The German DAX declined by 1.69% while the French CAC40 retreated by 0.36% in July after recording gains of 5.73% and 6.36% in June. European GDP declined marginally to 1.1% in Q2 according to preliminar­y estimates down from 1.2% in Q1 but came in better than expectatio­ns of 1.0%. Manufactur­ing activity remained weak with the Markit Manufactur­ing PMI declining to 46.4 in July down from 47.6. The President of the ECB acknowledg­ed the weakness and said that “a significan­t degree of monetary stimulus continues to be necessary to ensure that financial conditions remain very favorable and support the euro expansion”. Mr. Draghi also said that the ECB is examining additional options to support the Eurozone economy including studying “options for the size and compositio­n of potential new net asset purchases”. Draghi hinted to a possible rate cut at a time where the market is expecting two cuts of 10 basis points each in September and December.

In the UK, the FTSE 100 Index added 2.17% during July at time when the new Prime Minister seems to be taking a hard stance on the Brexit negotiatio­ns with the EU. Manufactur­ing activity seems to have stabilized in July after having trended downwards since the end of 2017. The July Markit Manufactur­ing PMI recorded 48.0, at par with the previous month and marginally better than expectatio­ns of 47.7.

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