Gulf News

Saudi retail investors continue selloff

They sold a net 2.18b riyals worth of shares last week through Thursday

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Saudi Arabian retail investors were the biggest sellers of stocks amid rising political risk in the region after a crackdown in the kingdom spooked traders.

They sold a net 2.18 billion riyals ($580 million) worth of shares last week through Thursday, the most since September 2016, according to exchange data compiled by Bloomberg. Saudi individual­s, who include retail and highnet worth investors, were net sellers of 3.5 billion riyals. Individual­s have been net sellers every week since April 2016, in contrast to Saudi institutio­ns, who have been net buyers throughout that period.

They snapped up $1.4 billion last week, with mutual funds accounting for the bulk of the purchases. That helped the Tadawul All Share Index mitigate losses.

“Investors are worried about the uncertaint­y and the kingdom is trying to restore the confidence by buying the selloff,” said Naeem Aslam, chief market analyst at TF Global Markets in London. “The fact is that you will not be comfortabl­e as an investor given the current climate, the practices which we are experienci­ng are unheard of. In other words, this is an uncharted territory and retail investors do not want their hardearned money at risk.”

While the kingdom’s stock index was little changed last week, a sell-off wiped out almost $19 billion from exchanges across the region after Saudi princes and billionair­es were arrested as part of a crackdown against corruption and as officials in Tehran and Riyadh traded barbs. The resignatio­n of Lebanon’s Prime Minister Sa’ad Hariri from Saudi territory also added to geopolitic­al tension.

The Tadawul All Share Index declined 0.7 per cent to 6,882.97 as of 1:07pm in Riyadh, as 111 of its 178 members fell.

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