BUSINESS

Saudi stocks soft despite SABIC cadence

October 31, 2017

JEDDAH/DUBAI — Saudi Arabia's stock market was soft on Monday despite strong earnings at Saudi Basic Industries Corp (SABIC), while Emaar Properties dragged down Dubai's index.

The Saudi stock benchmark Tadawul All Share Index edged down 0.2 percent to 6,945 points. SABIC, the biggest petrochemical producer, gained 0.6 percent after reporting a 10.7 percent rise in third-quarter net profit to S5.79 billion ($1.54 billion); analysts had on average forecast SR4.27 billion.

SABIC cited higher average selling prices and higher sales quantities, but this - and Brent crude oil's rise above $60 a barrel at the end of last week for the first time since 2015 - failed to boost the petrochemical sector as a whole.

PetroRabigh fell 0.5 percent, Petrochem lost 1.3 percent and Saudi Kayan dropped 2.2 percent in unusually heavy trade. But Arabian Pipes , a supplier to the oil and refining industries, jumped 6.4 percent.

Most Saudi cement makers fell in heavy trade with Northern Cement losing 2.9 percent and Najran Cement falling 2.0 percent.

Insurers and banks were the most active stocks in Riyadh. Alinmaa Bank lost 1.1 percent while National Commercial Bank , the kingdom's largest lender, was almost flat.

Malath Cooperative insurance jumped 5.7 percent after reporting third-quarter earnings rose from a low base.

The Dubai index edged down 0.3 percent as real estate giant Emaar Properties lost 1.4 percent. This offset gains by several other stocks such as GFH Financial , which rose 1.2 percent after saying it may list its shares in Saudi Arabia.

Emirates NBD also gained 1.2 percent. The bank, Dubai's largest lender, posted a 2.28 billion dirham ($620.8 million) net profit for its third quarter, up from 1.66 billion dirhams a year ago; EFG Hermes had predicted 1.85 billion dirhams and SICO Bahrain 1.89 billion.

Qatar's index rose 0.8 percent as Qatar Islamic Bank gained 1.6 percent and telecommunications firm Ooredoo jumped 3.0 percent despite missing analysts' estimates.

The company reported a net profit attributable to shareholders of 462 million riyals ($127 million) in the third quarter, below SICO Bahrain's projection of 517.7 million riyals and EFG Hermes at 533.7 million.

But Qatar First Bank rebounded 0.2 percent after losing 3.3 percent on Sunday in response to a big nine-month net loss.

In Kuwait, telecommunications firm Zain fell a further 2.6 percent on Monday. On Sunday, it had lost 3.3 percent after reporting net income fell 7 percent in the third quarter, in line with analysts' forecasts.

The Kuwaiti stock index slipped 0.7 percent. After the close, Kuwait's ruling emir accepted the resignation of the prime minister and his cabinet, asking them to continue important duties until a new cabinet could be sworn in.

In Egypt, the index surged 1.2 percent as Orascom Telecom jumped 7.6 percent in heavy trade. Egyptian Chemical Industries surged 6.2 percent after its quarterly net profit more than doubled from a year earlier. — SG/Reuters


October 31, 2017
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