Khaleej Times

Saudi gain is loss for Qatar reeling from a $13B slump

- Ahmed A. Namatalla

cairo — Add Saudi Arabia’s government changes to the reasons why investors should steer clear of Qatar.

The diplomatic standoff that’s erased $13 billion from Qatari stocks and pressured the country’s 16-year dollar peg isn’t likely to ease any time soon after Mohammed bin Salman was elevated to crown prince, making him first in line to the Saudi throne. Prince Mohammed is seen as the main driver of the nation’s political and economic policies since his father became king in 2015.

Qatar’s benchmark equities gauge sank into a bear market on June 6 after Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt severed diplomatic ties with the government in Doha and imposed a travel blockade. The Qatari currency extended a slide that left it at its weakest level in almost 30 years. Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index is up 8.4 per cent, and is set to post the biggest two-day gain after Prince Mohammed’s appointmen­t.

Qatar’s stock market lacks “good opportunit­ies in the short term,” said Rami Sidani, the Dubai-based head of frontier investment­s at Schroders Plc. It will “probably be pressured further because valuations remain elevated,” he said.

The QE Index rebounded from a 17-month low on Thursday, paring its quarterly decline to 14 per cent, the most in almost eight years. It still trades at 12.8 times forecast earnings of its members, among the most expensive in the Middle East. The gauge’s 30-day volatility has soared to the highest in 16 months. Gulf institutio­nal investors have reduced their holdings of Qatari shares by more than $200 million, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. While the exodus has trimmed valuations, they’re still not low enough to tempt back buyers, according to EFG-Hermes Holding, the Middle East’s biggest publicly traded investment bank.

“The selloff hasn’t led to strong buying flows because the crisis has created an additional overhang on the market,” said Simon Kitchen, an equity strategist at the Cairo-based company. “The current crisis means a higher cost of equity for Qatari stocks, and so lower target prices.”

Analyst estimates for company earnings and share prices in Qatar, which is pouring billions of dollars into constructi­on in preparatio­n for hosting the 2022 soccer World Cup, have tumbled by about 15 per cent each this year. — Bloomberg

 ?? — Reuters ?? Traders look at share prices on their monitors at the Doha Stock Exchange. Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index is up 8.4 per cent, and is set to post the biggest two-day gain.
— Reuters Traders look at share prices on their monitors at the Doha Stock Exchange. Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index is up 8.4 per cent, and is set to post the biggest two-day gain.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates