Saudi, Egypt outperform in weak region

Saudi, Egypt outperform in weak region copy

DUBAI / Reuters

Saudi Arabia’s stock market edged up on the back of modest gains in the banking sector on Sunday while Egypt imitated world markets’ strong finish at the end of last week. Most other Middle Eastern bourses fell.
The Riyadh index added 0.1 percent, remaining near a six-week low, as Samba Financial Group jumped 3.4 percent after its board recommended a cash dividend of 0.75 riyal for the first half of the year. The proposed cash outlay is two-thirds more than Samba’s interim payout
in 2016.
Gulf General Cooperative Insurance jumped 4.6 percent after reporting a slight dip in second -quarter earnings, while Allianz Saudi Fransi Cooperative Insurance rose 0.7 percent after announcing a 24 percent jump in net income.
Emaar the Economic City dropped 3.1 percent after it reported an 85.4 percent drop in second-quarter net profit, citing lower residential sales and higher financial charges. Al Andalus Property fell 1.2 percent.
It reported second-quarter net profit of 27.6 million riyals, up
11 percent from the same period last year.
Qatar’s index dropped 0.6 percent with 15 of the 20 largest companies falling. Telecommunications operator Ooredoo was
the biggest loser, falling 3.0 percent. In the United Arab Emirates, Dana Gas lost 1.5 percent, help-ing drag Abu Dhabi’s index
0.2 percent lower.
Dubai’s index fell 0.3 percent, snapping five straight sessions of modest gains. Union Properties, the most heavily traded stock, lost 1.3 percent and Emaar broke a new high, closing at AED8.42 with Arabtec following suit to reach AED3.57, a 2.6 percent growth over the last traded price as the company set a date for its H1 financial disclosure, a move which ratcheted deals over its share to AED56 million.
In Egypt, private equity firm Qalaa Holdings added 2.7 percent; the stock has risen 10.7 percent in the past four days after a Kenyan court ended the company’s troubled Rift Valley Railways’ concession and ordered that assets and employees be handed over to Kenya Railways.
The company said its investment have been amortised so the transfer wouldn’t affect its consolidated earnings. Some investors believe terminating the investment could reduce a financial drain on Qalaa and help it focus management attention on more profitable areas. Most other Egyptian shares were also strong, taking their cue from the positive mood in global equities. The index rose 1.1 percent.

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