UAE markets: Frustration in Dubai, while Abu Dhabi optimistic
Last week the Dubai Financial Market General Index (DFMGI) dropped by 34.05 or 1.20 per cent to end at 2,791.71. Market breadth was skewed towards the downside, with 23 declining issues and 16 advancing, while volume exceeded the prior week and was the third highest of the past 13 weeks.
There has been no clear bullish reversal signal yet and the index remains in a long-term downtrend. Last week’s high of 2,854.49 was an attempt to break above the most recent swing high of 2,853.76, which would have been the next short-term bullish signal, but the DFMGI failed to maintain the advance. Instead it sold off after hitting the high and ended weak, in the lower quarter of the week’s range.
Nevertheless, the past three weeks have created a series of higher weekly highs and higher weekly lows. This short-term bullish pattern can be used to tell us when the index is getting stronger or weaker, which could then lead to further moves in the respective direction.
A drop below last week’s low of 2,776.21 indicates a change in the pattern of the two-week advance and sets up the index for further weakness or sideways consolidation. If triggered the two-week low of 2,744.61 can then be watched for support followed by the three-week low of 2,727.83. That lower price level is the lowest price hit by the DFMGI since January 2016.
Last week’s short-term move above the most recent swing high and subsequent failure is why a daily close above or below a key price level for confirmation of a direction is more reliable as to whether a continuation in the respective direction will likely occur. Therefore, a daily close above last week’s high provides a bullish continuation of the two-week uptrend and confidence that the swing high has been cleared to the upside. An important target will be obtained if the index can close above the 2,986.36 as that will be the first true bullish reversal signal as it will violate the core structure of the downtrend’s series of lower swing highs and lower swing lows.
Abu Dhabi
The Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange General Index (ADI) advanced by 59.20 or 1.20 per cent last week to close at 5,007.12. That’s the highest weekly close since October 2014. There were 18 advancing issues and 14 declining, while volume reached an 18-week high.
High volume could be telling in this case as it is occurring within a six week consolidation pattern at the top of a bullish trend. A notable increase in relative volume inside consolidation can sometimes be a leading indicator for a coming breakout of consolidation. In this case a breakout is triggered on a decisive move above the trend high of 5,039.83.
The current long-term uptrend began off the January 2016 bottom. It has advanced as much as 35.06 per cent so far as of the most recent trend high. Price by itself provides a target around the 2014 swing highs of 5,241 to 5,255.
A measured move looks at the price appreciation of the first leg up of the uptrend off the 2016 low, and then measures that price advance from the most recent significant swing low to find a potential target. For support, last week’s low of 4,929.74 is important, followed by the bottom of the current consolidation around 4,859.21.
Stocks to watch
Is it possible that the devastating performance seen in Drake & Scull International over the past several years could be coming to an end? Not necessarily right away, but there are a developments that puts this stock on the watch list.
Drake & Scull is the worst performer in the Dubai market on several time frames, year-to-date, one-year, and three years. But last week it was top in Dubai, up 0.05 or 14.8 per cent to close at 0.41.
In addition to the strong performance, the week ended above the high of the prior week. This is a change in the weekly pattern of the past 20 weeks and it could be the beginning of further change. There’s no pattern or set-up yet that can be used to justify getting involved but the stock deserves to be watched.