Gulf mostly down as Emaar hits Dubai, ex-dividends hurt Qatar

An Emaar Properties sign sits near the Burj Khalifa in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, on Tuesday, April 27, 2010. Emaar Properties PJSC, which today opened its first hotel with fashion designer Giorgio Armani in Dubai, plans to build a second one in Milan, Chairman Mohamed Alabbar said. Photographer: Gabriela Maj/Bloomberg

 

DUBAI / Reuters

Most Gulf stock markets fell on Tuesday as blue chip Emaar Properties pulled down Dubai and stocks going ex-dividend hit Qatar, although Saudi Arabia closed marginally higher.
Dubai’s index slipped 1.5 percent as Emaar lost 3.8 percent after it proposed a cash dividend of 15 percent for 2016, unchanged from the previous year despite a 28 percent rise in annual net profit.
Loss-making construction firm Arabtec dropped 2.1 percent, partially erasing Monday’s 6.4 percent jump. But courier Aramex surged 2.7 percent.
Qatar’s index fell 1.9 percent to 10,417 points, falling below major technical support at around 10,500 points, where the February lows coincide with the December peaks.
Doha Bank fell by its 10 percent daily limit as it resumed trading after being suspended on Monday, and after shareholders approved a 20 percent capital increase through the issue of new shares. Qatar Electricity & Water lost 6 percent; both stocks went ex-dividend on Tuesday.
Saudi Arabia edged up 0.2 percent. Much activity in Riyadh focused on second or third tier stocks favoured by local retail investors, with Solidarity Takaful, an Islamic insurer, rising 6.5 percent in unusually heavy trade.
Atheeb Telecommunications gained 4.2 percent after the Capital Market Authority approved its proposal to reduce its capital, while Saudi German Hospital climbed 3.5 percent. In Bahrain, Aluminium Bahrain rose 2.6 percent after its board recommended a cash dividend of 21 fils per share for 2016; earlier this month, the board had said it decided not to distribute a dividend.
Egypt’s index rose 0.4 percent. Investment bank EFG Hermes gained 1.2 percent.
Alexandria Cement jumped 7.9 percent after it reported a consolidated net loss of 51 million Egyptian pounds ($2.9 million) compared with a net loss of 214.3 million pounds in the previous year.

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