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Regional equity markets

A look at Arab-world indices in November

by Executive Staff

Beirut SE: Blom  (1 month)

Current Year High: 1,934.21  Current Year Low: 1,187.86

The Beirut Stock Exchange in the occupied Central District of the Lebanese capital saw trade volumes melt to new lows. The BSE entered the Christmas holidays 9.68% lower than the index had been at the start of the year and at a, yes, new low for the year with 1,182.69 points. While under siege of what politically correct locals call “political disturbances”, the BSE management put on a good face and announced a number of plans for service improvements in 2007. These plans include remote trading facilitation for brokers (operating in a test phase from the last week of 2006), as well as creation of a new BSE website that will finally provide live tracking of traded securities. Not to forget that the bourse will set up auxiliary premises at a location outside the Beirut Central District – for “disaster recovery” in case of emergencies.

Amman SE  (1 month)

Current Year High: 9,015.94  Current Year Low: 5,267.27

The Amman Stock Exchange, not to be left out of the regional contraction crowd, reached its new index low for 2006 a few days after GCC peers at 5,267.27 points on December 17. The ASE index ended the third week of the month at 5,357.11 points, 328.4 points lower than its November 26 close. The ASE said it will introduce a system for electronic initial public offerings in the first quarter of 2007. Royal Jordanian Airlines said it expects to be partly privatized by end of 2007. In a curious December tale, a hitherto unknown holding company held a press conference announcing plans to operate with $4.23 billion in capital and establish 10 new companies over the next two years, including a $2.82 billion real estate company in Jordan.

Abu Dhabi SM  (1 month)

Current Year High: 5,253.99  Current Year Low: 2,936.40

Trading on the Abu Dhabi Securities Market was unexciting in terms of volume and after a 64-point dip below the 3,000 point level in the first week of December the index kept around 3,000 points through the middle of the month before sliding into another minor downtrend in the week ended December 21, which it closed at 2,968.52 points. The ADSM management announced a plan to enforce stricter rules aiming to thwart insider trading, including new disclosure requirements for listed companies to publish the names of shareholders with stakes of more than 3% and an extension of off-limits periods during which company officers may not buy or sell shares in their companies in reporting seasons. After signing a cross-listing agreement with the Muscat Securities Market in early December, the ADSM is set to also enter a cross-listing agreement with the Lahore Stock Exchange.

Dubai FM  (1 month)

Current Year High: 8,013.99  Current Year Low: 3,997.29

After establishing a new year-low of 3997.29 points on December 4, the Dubai Financial Market went on a 350-point hike upwards, but weakened again in the week ended December 21. The new Dubai Financial Market General Index, which was launched in early December, closed the week down by 2.57% at 4,153 points. There was no indication that the market has settled and could not go down any further. The DFM added Bayan Investment and Markets Complex companies, both Kuwaiti, to its traded equities. Bourse officials said that trading in the shares of the DFM, which undertook the region’s first flotation of a stock market, will commence in January. The DFM management denied that the IPO was the reason for the slump in the market’s liquidity this month.  

Kuwait SE  (1 month)

Current Year High: 12,054.70            Current Year Low: 9,164.30

Trading activity on the Kuwait Stock Exchange was more solid than that on some other GCC bourses and the index ended the third week at 9,892.90 points, but not before the KSE recorded a new year-low of 9,164.30 points earlier in the month. The KSE supervisors took measures to temporarily ban shareholders in 13 companies, among them three banks, from voting in stockholder meetings on account of disclosure violations. Government decisions to stop ongoing contracts with some companies, most prominent among them the recently renamed logistics firm Agility (previously known as Public Warehousing Company) resulted in critical reviews of government announcement practices as Agility shares suffered an exaggerated drop upon the cancellation news found in a newspaper.

Saudi Arabia SE  (1 month)

Current Year High: 20,634.86            Current Year Low: 7,665.73

The Tadawul index rebounded early in the month from a drop to 7665.73 points, another new low for the year. But, after reaching nearly 8,250 points it did not succeed in staying above the 8,000 points level at the end of the third week in December, with the TASI down 53% in the year to date. Industrial group Al Abdullatif said its initial public offering on the SSE was oversubscribed 162% with $352 million in subscription amounts. Retailer Al Hokair debuted on the SSE after formalities were resolved which had delayed the start of trading. The Capital Market Authority found an investor guilty of fraudulent behavior, ordering him to pay a fine of $640,000 and pay back $24 million in illegal gains.

Muscat SM  (1 month)

Current Year High: 5,799.77  Current Year Low: 4,657.16

The Muscat Securities Market remained undisputed as best performing GCC bourse in 2006 in terms of index development, closing the third week of the month almost 15% higher year-to-date. The market, which had drifted slightly lower in the first half of December, climbed rather nicely to 5,659.31 points on December 21 in a 260-point rally over 10 days. A new brokerage, Al Amana Securities, received its license from the Sultanate’s Capital Market Authority. The brokerage, owned by Oman National Investment Corporation, brings to 20 the number of financial intermediary and asset management companies registered with the MSM. In a step to enhance trading activity on the bourse, which Omani regulators said has grown organically this year but could benefit from increasing volumes, the MSM entered a cross-listing agreement with the Abu Dhabi Securities Market. 

Bahrain SE  (1 month)

Current Year High: 2,347.01  Current Year Low: 1,996.68

The Bahrain Stock Exchange ends 2006 with low volumes, moving sideways from 2,152.62 points on November 27 to 2,160.95 points on December 21. Fluctuations of 35 points up and 45 points down early in the month marked the exciting points in the market that stayed true to its reputation as being disassociated from trends on larger GCC markets. Value buying, institutional buying, bargain buying were the buzzwords for the month whose third trading week was shorter than usual due to the national holiday. The BSE reported that corporate results of listed Bahraini companies improved year-on-year by 29.9% in the first nine months of 2006 and reached $1.26 billion. Ithmaar Bank stock was moved to the regular market after trading for six months on the BSE’s IPO market. 

Doha SM: Qatar  (1 month)

Current Year High: 11,279.98            Current Year Low: 5,825.80

The Doha Securities Market was in step with several GCC peers and weakened to a new year-low in early December at 5,825.80 points. In the third week of the month, however, the DSM sped ahead and climbed to 6,536.99 points on December 21 – still about 40% down year-to-date but 711 points better than its low. Doha Bank successfully completed its first subordinated bond issue, a $340 million issue under the bank’s $1 billion Euro Medium Term Note Program and the first such bond by a Qatari bank. Gulf Commercial Bank, another DSM banking mainstay stock, launched a new $275 million mutual fund with two investment classes for domestic and foreign subscribers. Gulf Commercial Bank said it will offer 120 million shares in a $275 million IPO in the first quarter of next year.

Tunis SE  (1 month)

Current Year High: 2,339.55  Current Year Low: 1,597.73

The Tunisian Stock Exchange kept on rolling in December, and although trading sideways during the month, its almost uninterrupted rise over the past five months made the TSE the region’s only bourse to approach the yearend with a new 12-month high. The Tunindex’s December 21 close of 2, 343.38 put the TSE 16.58 points up compared with November 27 and 45.09% up year-to-date. Over the past four years, the number of TSE-listed companies almost tripled. The bourse’s index committee announced the composition of the Tunindex for 2007, which includes 32 stocks that were traded during more than 60% of the TSE’s trading days in 2006. In FDI news, Dutch drinks manufacturer Heineken bought just under 50% of unlisted Tunisian beverages firm SPDB for $35.3 million and wants to build a new brewery in the country.

Casablanca SE All Shares  (1 month)

Current Year High: 9,109.55  Current Year Low: 5,337.53

The Casablanca Stock Exchange climbed to a peak above 10,000 points in December, with the Casa All Shares index reporting in at 10,132.61 points on the 13th of the month. However, the index dropped back to 9,583.96 points on December 21 in the market’s first slight weakening in a while. The Moroccan bourse went into the Christmas season still more than 500 points better than its position had been on November 28 but market watchers started to say that it may be time for an adjustment in the bourse’s path. Valuations have been driven up to a price to earnings ratio estimation of 19.5 times for 2006, placing Morocco now above PE ratios of GCC markets, although the Casablanca rally has so far not ventured into valuation territories as excessive as those scaled by the Gulf bourses last year.   

Cairo SE: Hermes  (1 month)

Current Year High: 68,994.73            Current Year Low: 41,965.37

In the lead-up to the 2006 Christmas season, the regional investor tip is go north – North Africa that is, not Santa’s HQ at the pole – and see where shares are moving north too. The Hermes index of the Cairo and Alexandria Stock Exchanges didn’t quite make it back to the 60,000 points before Christmas but nonetheless came close with 59,800.23 points, and stood 2,322 points higher than on November 29. Deutsche Bank issued a Buy recommendation on the shares of Orascom Telecom, giving the stock a 10% upside potential. The MobiNil phone operator, in which Orascom Telecom is a major stakeholder, meanwhile announced a 46.2% cash dividend to be paid before year’s end. Government officials in Cairo said Egypt Air will be going for a 20% initial public offering, presumably in 2007, to obtain cash for its expansion.

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Executive Staff


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