Al Rajhi Bank, Ma’aden boost Saudi; Dubai stocks outperform

DUBAI / Reuters

Saudi Arabia’s stock market rose on Tuesday on the back of gains by Al Rajhi Bank and mining firm Ma’aden, while Dubai also outperformed most Gulf bourses although trading was thin.
The Saudi stock index climbed 0.4 percent with Al Rajhi up 2.2 percent to 65.80 riyals, bringing its gains over the last five days to 4.9 percent. Of 14 analysts covering the stock, seven rate it a “buy” or “strong buy” and six rate it a “hold”, according to Thomson Reuters data; their median target price is 70.90 riyals.
Ma’aden rose 1.8 percent after international base metal prices surged to multi-year highs overnight. Maather REIT Fund jumped its 10 percent daily limit from its initial public offer price to 11.0 riyals upon listing in Riyadh to become Saudi Arabia’s fifth listed REIT.
Its subscription in the IPO had been covered 15.2 times and analysts at NCB Capital had estimated that based on its subscription price of 10 riyals per share, its dividend yield for 2017 would be 7.2 percent. Three other REITs were among the 10 most actively traded stocks and swung widely, although they closed lower. Al Jazira Mawten REIT fell 2.2 percent.
International index compiler FTSE is due to decide towards the end of September whether to upgrade Saudi Arabia and Kuwait to secondary emerging market status, which could bring them billion of dollars of fresh passive and active fund inflows.
Some investors have begun positioning for the decisions, and Arqaam Capital said in a report on Tuesday that positive decisions appeared likely in both cases, although actual inclusion would probably only occur in two phases in September 2018 and March 2019.
However, Tarek Fadlallah, chief executive of Nomura Asset Management Middle East, wrote in a report that macroeconomic indicators suggested a subdued outlook for Gulf Cooperation Council countries, and that while profits at listed regional companies had stabilised, valuations were not particularly cheap against international peers or their own historical averages.

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