Khaleej Times

Best stock market

Ingredient­s for a bull run are in place, writes Matein Khalid

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Saudi equities have become the world’s second best-performing stock market in 2018 after Egypt. The Saudi equity index fund is up 18% at a time when the MSCI emerging markets is down 7%.

Ihad written an article entitled “Six reasons to be bullish Saudi equities in 2018”, published in Khaleej Times on January 28. Yet I was surprised to see Saudi equities become the world’s second bestperfor­ming stock market in 2018 after Egypt.

The Saudi equity index fund I recommende­d in my column is up 18 per cent at a time when the MSCI emerging markets is down 7 per cent and small GCC stock exchanges remain mired in vicious bear market downtrends. The reasons I was so bullish on Saudi equities late last year was my conviction that the kingdom’s liquidity and credit cycle had bottomed. Bull markets are born in despair and die in greed — and all the ingredient­s of a bull market in Saudi equities seemed in place to me.

The spectacula­r rise of Brent crude from below $30 a barrel in February 2016 to $74 now is a testament to the kingdom’s policy Uturn it resumed the role of the Opec’s swing producer and brokered an output cut pact with Russia that has removed 1.8 million barrels a day of crude oil from the wet-barrel market a time of tightening global inventorie­s, robust Asian demand and geopolitic­al risk/supply shocks in Venezuela, Libya, Nigeria, Iran and Yemen. As the world’s largest oil producer, Saudi Arabia is the ultimate beneficiar­y of $74 Brent, a price both the House of Saud and the Kremlin needed to ensure in 2018.

Saudi Arabia is one of the most underlever­aged economies in the Arab world, with a public debt/ GDP ratio of only 17 per cent, in contrast to above 100 per cent for regional states as diverse as Libya, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco. While the kingdom has borrowed heavily on the Saudi money markets, it can easily float sovereign debt on the internatio­nal debt market to ease its domestic credit crunch. This is exactly what has happened in 2018.

I was amazed at the scale of the 2018 state budget announced by the Royal Court in Riyadh. The $261 billion in spending makes it the most expansiona­ry fiscal budget in the modern history of the Saudi kingdom. Fiscal stimulus at a time of sharply higher oil prices argued for an embryonic bull market in Saudi equities. The planned privatisat­ion IPO of Aramco (and even the Tadawul index itself) is a gamechange­r for the Saudi capital markets. This prospect was simply not priced into Saudi equities in January, particular­ly since the MSCI and FTSE decision to upgrade Saudi Arabia from frontier to emerging guaranteed at least $35 billion in index “tracker” money earmarked to buy Saudi equities.

Financials are 40 per cent of the Tadawul index and the economic reforms envisaged by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has led to a valuation rerating of Saudi bank shares. The petrochemi­cal/materials sector, 32 per cent of the index, benefits from the white hot world commoditie­s market. The $20 billion joint venture between Saudi Aramco and Dow Chemical or the $9 billion deal with Total signed in the Élysée Palace during the Crown Prince’s last state visit to France are only the tip

Fiscal stimulus at a time of sharply higher oil prices argued for an embryonic bull market in Saudi equities

of the iceberg in the kingdom’s pipeline of transforma­tional economic initiative­s in technology, finance and even entertainm­ent.

Saudi Arabia is the economic superpower of the Middle East but foreign direct investment has been a miniscule 1 per cent of the kingdom’s GDP, far below major emerging markets norms. The Saudi private sector also needs to dramatical­ly increase its share of national output.

The Vision 2030 economic reform agenda aims to boost both FDI and entreprene­urship, while the anti-corruption crackdown, the new bankruptcy law and cuts in petrol/electricit­y subsidies will consolidat­e state power, marginalis­e minor rent-seeking elites and control wasteful extravagan­ce in resource consumptio­n.

Since I expect oil prices to rise and MSCI to include Saudi Arabia in its indices next month, I expect the bull run in Saudi equities has room to run, though valuations are no longer cheap at 18 times earnings. Geopolitic­s is another risk factor in Saudi Arabia. Tensions in parts of the region or Argentina/Turkey’s currency crises could also threaten the kingdom’s bull market.

 ?? AFP ?? Financials are 40 per cent of the Tadawul index and the economic reforms has led to a valuation rerating of Saudi bank shares. —
AFP Financials are 40 per cent of the Tadawul index and the economic reforms has led to a valuation rerating of Saudi bank shares. —

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