Most ME markets fall after Fed rate hike; retail investors boost Saudi

Kuwaiti traders follow the market's movement at the Stock Exchange in Kuwait City on October 6, 2008. Kuwait Stock Exchange, the second largest in the Arab world, shed 3.45 percent today to finish on 11,951.70 points, closing below the 12,000-point mark for the first time in over 15 months. The Saudi stock market, the largest in the Arab world, shed almost 10 percent halfway through trading and shares in other energy-rich Arab states in the Gulf also slumped amid the global financial turmoil. AFP PHOTO/YASSER AL-ZAYYAT  (Photo credit should read YASSER AL-ZAYYAT/AFP/Getty Images)

 

Reuters

Most major Middle Eastern stock markets fell on Thursday after the US central bank raised interest rates but buying by local retail investors lifted Saudi Arabia.
The central banks of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar followed the Fed with their own 0.25 percentage point rate hikes and Oman, which has been raising its repo rate gradually in recent months, is expected to continue doing so.
This was no surprise to Gulf equity investors and banking system liquidity has actually shown signs of improving in parts of the region as oil prices have climbed. Nevertheless, most Gulf bourses followed global markets lower on Thursday.
In Dubai, where is more vulnerable to foreign fund flows than regional peers, the index slid 0.8 percent to 3,554 points. On Wednesday, the index had dropped back below major resistance on its August peak of 3,624 points – a negative technical signal.
Heavyweight Emaar Properties dropped 2.2 percent and its retail affiliate Emaar Malls Group tumbled 4.4 percent. Dubai depends heavily on real estate, retail business and tourism and a stronger US dollar, which is linked to the UAE dirham via a peg, could slow those sectors by diminishing foreign demand.
Qatar’s index lost 1.3 percent. However, United Development added 1.8 percent after it said it had sold Abraj Quartier Tower 2 for 1.25 billion riyals ($343 million). Saudi Arabia outperformed, rising 0.4 percent, although trading volume shrank further to a moderate level and many banks and petrochemicals favoured by institutional investors were sluggish.
Activity focused on smaller stocks favoured by local retail investors including Alhokair Group, which surged 6.1 percent after saying it had signed an agreement with Marriott
International to launch a new hotel in the
city of Khobar.
Egypt’s index was almost flat as Orascom Telecom , the most heavily traded share, rebounded 4.0 percent. It had tumbled 20 percent since its chief executive, billionaire Najuib Sawiris, announced early this month that he would step down in January.

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