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Business / Qatar Business

Saudi market shines in Gulf; QSE drops 0.09%

Published: 23 Jan 2017 - 11:46 pm | Last Updated: 11 Nov 2021 - 07:20 am
Peninsula

QNA & Reuters

Qatar Stock Exchange (QSE) benchmark index dropped 9.48 points, or 0.09 percent, when the bourse closed trading at 10,950.34 points yesterday.
The volume of shares traded decreased to 7,245,497 from 12,640,132 on Sunday and the value of shares decreased to QR242.42m  from QR310.17m Sunday.
Of the 44 companies listed on QSE, shares of 37 saw trading yesterday. Of these 16 gained and 20 companies closed lower, and one remained unchanged.
Indices of four sectors ended in green and remaining three sectors ended red today.
QSE Total Return Index decreased 0.9 to 17,716.92 points. QSE Al Rayan Islamic Index down -0.08 percent to 4,079.57 points and QSE All Share Index lost 0.09 percent to 2,999.96 points, reports QNA.
While the Qatari bourse witnessed a marginal decline but Doha Bank rose 2.5 percent. The bank reported an 84.8 percent decline in fourth-quarter net profit to QR35m ($9.6m); three analysts polled by Reuters had forecast on average the bank would make a quarterly net profit of QR215.58m. But Doha Bank also said its board was recommending a cash dividend of QR3 per share for 2016, the same level as in 2015.
Saudi Arabia outperformed other Gulf stock markets yesterday as several major stocks bounced after poor earnings earlier this week, while a bull run in Kuwait slowed and Egypt rebounded sharply from a slide triggered by tax fears.
The Saudi index rose 1.7 percent in the highest trading volume since January 2. Food maker Savola, which had dropped 2 percent on Sunday after reporting a shock fourth-quarter loss, jumped 5.4 percent.
The company's earnings were squeezed in part by tough price competition in a slowing Saudi economy, but the stock's rebound suggested many investors were looking forward to a stronger non-oil economy this year as Riyadh delays new austerity steps.
Banks also gained after some dropped this week on disappointing fourth-quarter earnings. Saudi British Bank surged 6.5 percent.
The Kuwaiti index, which rose 15.6 percent between the end of last year and Sunday, added a further 0.6 percent on Monday in the highest trading volume since mid-2013.
National Bank of Kuwait (NBK), the biggest bank, climbed 2.9 percent; it extended its gains in the final minutes of trade after posting a 40 percent rise in fourth-quarter net profit to 75.9 million dinars ($248.9m). EFG Hermes had forecast a profit of 69.2 million dinars.
Logistics giant Agility, which has yet to report quarterly earnings, surged 5.8 percent.
Eight of the 10 most heavily traded Kuwaiti stocks fell and none rose, however, a sign of increasing profit-taking pressure that could conceivably bring the bull run to an end. In Dubai, the index fell 0.3 percent as Shuaa Capital pulled back 9.8 percent after a two-week rally. Trading volume in the stock was the highest since last September.
Abu Dhabi dropped 0.9 percent as banks slipped.  Egypt's share market index rebounded 2.2 percent after dropping 4.6 percent in the two previous days, after Reuters reported authorities were considering temporarily reintroducing a stamp duty charge on stock market transactions. Commercial International Bank, the largest bank, climbed 3.5 percent.