Khaleej Times

Saudi Parallel Market may face challenge of liquidity

- Celine Aswad

dubai — Stocks surged as Saudi Arabia launched a secondary equity market on Sunday, creating a new opportunit­y for smaller and family-run firms but restrictio­ns could make achieving high trading volumes and liquidity difficult.

The new Parallel Market aims to improve companies’ access to capital and expose them to market discipline­s in an economy dominated by small and mid-sized enterprise­s, most of which are family-owned.

Many family firms in the Gulf have been reluctant to cede any kind of control to outsiders; the Parallel Market aims to change that by offering lighter listing rules and disclosure requiremen­ts compared to the main Saudi Stock Exchange.

Companies require fewer shareholde­rs to issue stock and they do not have to list as large a proportion of their shares. Prices on the Parallel Market can swing 20 per cent in either direction daily, versus a 10 per cent band on the main market.

On their first day of trade, all seven Parallel Market stocks soared 20 per cent.

They included restaurant and bakeries operator Raydan Co, the largest company in the group with an initial market capitalisa­tion of 720 million riyals ($192 million) — larger than a quarter of the 176 companies on the main market.

Yazan Abdeen, head of regional capital markets at Jeddah-based Sedco Capital, said the new market would prompt many smaller companies to reconsider listing.

“It is an alternativ­e model of financing for such companies, and will provide many family businesses with an initial step towards governance that would ensure future sustainabi­lity.”

Saudi Stock Exchange Chief Executive Khalid Al Hussan told Al Arabiya television as many as 100 companies had expressed interest in listing on the new market, including some from the five other countries in the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council. Some companies may see it as a way to raise debt with greater ease, said Farid Samji, head of asset management at Dubai-based Daman Investment­s. “Publicly traded companies have the advantage of gaining greater access to debt instrument­s from more creditors and at lower rates, because their valuation is transparen­t and their financials are audited,” Samji said.

Neverthele­ss, the new market will have to demonstrat­e substantia­l trading volumes to make it worthwhile for many issuers and investors. On Sunday, traded volume totalled 7.6 million shares worth 256 million

The challenge is to maintain liquidity without speculator­s

riyals — a far cry from the 190 million shares trading on the main market.

“The challenge is to maintain liquidity without speculator­s,” said Mohammad Al Shammasi, chief executive of Riyadh-based Derayah Financial.

Access to the new market will be restricted to profession­al investors such as institutio­ns and high net worth individual­s, to avoid speculativ­e price swings.

The main market is dominated by local retail investors, who accounted for a little over half of trading value last week. Excluding them could deprive the Parallel Market of a key source of liquidity.

Samji said that he would monitor the market’s performanc­e in terms of trading volume, analyst and news coverage of listed companies, and the quality of informatio­n disclosure before deploying money into it. — Reuters

Mohammad Al Shammasi, chief executive, Derayah Financial

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Traded volume on the new Parallel Market on Sunday totalled 7.6 million shares worth 256 million riyals — a far cry from the 190 million shares trading on the main Saudi market.
— Bloomberg Traded volume on the new Parallel Market on Sunday totalled 7.6 million shares worth 256 million riyals — a far cry from the 190 million shares trading on the main Saudi market.

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