Exchange | Status | Index | Change | ||||
TASI (Saudi Stock Market) | 6140.79 | 0.04% | |||||
DFM (Dubai Financial Market) | 1473.46 | -0.48% | |||||
ADX (Abudhabi Securities Exchange) | 2594.01 | -0.22% | |||||
KSE (Kuwait Stock Exchange) | 5980.2 | 0.30% | |||||
BSE (Bahrain Stock Exchange) | 1270.87 | -0.04% | |||||
MSM (Muscat Securities Market) | 5712.57 | -0.42% | |||||
QE (Qatar Exchange) | 8376.64 | 0.12% | |||||
LSE (Beirut Stock Exchange) | 1271.3 | -0.87% | |||||
EGX 30 (Egypt Exchange) | 4695.67 | -1.24% | |||||
ASE (Amman Stock Exchange) | 2044.14 | -0.39% | |||||
TUNINDEX (Tunisia Stock Exchange) | 4537.35 | 0.05% | |||||
CB (Casablanca Stock Exchange) | 11534.8 | -1.30% | |||||
PSE (Palestine Securities Exchange) | 485.84 | -0.66% |
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Sunday 11 September 2011
MENA stock markets close - September 11, 2011
Egypt, Israel Stocks Lead Mideast Decline on Embassy Attack, Global Slump - Bloomberg
Orascom Construction Industries (OCIC), Egypt’s biggest publicly traded builder, lost 1.6 percent. In Tel Aviv, Ampal-American Israel (AMPL) Corp., which has a stake in the company that supplies gas from Egypt to Israel, fell to the lowest level on record. The EGX 30 Index (EGX30) declined 1.1 percent, the most since Aug. 21, to 4,703.54 at 1:11 p.m. in Cairo. The TA-25 Index dropped 3.1 percent, the biggest intraday decline since Sept. 6. In the Persian Gulf, the Bloomberg GCC 200 Index (BGCC200) declined 0.2 percent.
“Spontaneous street violence over the weekend is a cause for concern and is undoubtedly weighing on the EGX,” said Julian Bruce, equity sales head at EFG-Hermes Holding SAE in Dubai. “Broader implications regarding future relations with Israel also have to be considered and in no way can that be construed positively.”
Saudi index ends near flat; UAE falls as property drags - ArabianBusiness.com
Zain Saudi rose for a second-day, up 0.8 percent, after Kingdom Holding said it would complete due diligence on its joint $950m bid to buy a quarter-stake in telecoms operator by the end of September. Kingdom gained 0.7 percent, also up for a second day.
The benchmark ended higher for a third session, up 0.04 percent to close at 6,141 points, trimming its 2011 losses to 7.2 percent.
Dubai Shares Decline to Lowest in a Week Low on Europe Debt Crisis Concern - Bloomberg
Emaar Properties PJSC (EMAAR), developer of the world’s tallest tower, slipped as much as 0.7 percent. Dubai Financial Market PJSC, the only Gulf Arab stock market to sell stock to the public, fell the most in almost a week. The DFM General Index (DFMGI) lost 0.4 percent to 1,475.4, the lowest intraday level since Sept. 6, at 11:05 a.m. in Dubai. The Bloomberg GCC 200 Index (BGCC200) of the region’s stocks dropped less than 0.1 percent.
“Equities in the Middle East continue to track global markets and the current backdrop does not provide any buying conviction,” said Julian Bruce, equity sales head at EFG-Hermes Holding SAE in Dubai. “Gulf Cooperation Council markets are drifting lower due to an absence of domestic drivers.”
UAE July credit growth slows to 2.6 pct y/y | Reuters
Brokerage firms in the red: Debt soars to Dh1.5bn in H1 2011
About 35 companies were forced to shut down their activities, some partly, since 2009. This reflects the challenges faced by majority of such firms, it said and added that integration is the only solution for smaller firms.
Brokers said most banks reduced the size of the credit facilities granted to them or apologised for providing new facilities. They noted even banks are afraid of liquidity issues, suffered in the past, when it comes to offering services to customers. This is only adding to the miseries of brokerage firms, said some brokers.
EU Banks vs Gulf Banks - Financial Services - Zawya
Their strength is in sharp contrast to the banks of the OECD, especially the European banks which are facing a calamitous future especially if the sovereign debt from Greece and other EU states blows up in their faces.
GCC bourses inefficient for poor financial media
Ziad Dabbas, an investment and financial advisor at the government-controlled National Bank of Abu Dhabi, said stock markets in the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) are not classified as “efficient markets”.
He defined an “efficient market” as the market in which the flow of relevant information regarding investment options is easily accessed and reliable and where information is available to all participants at the same time.
Qatar GDP per capita reaches $109,000 in 2012
Qatar became the richest country in the world in 2010 with the highest per capita income at $88,559 having overtaken Luxembourg,
Rising gas-related exports and high energy prices have been the main drivers of nominal GDP growth, according to the report.
UAE set to launch landmark credit firm - Emirates 24/7
The ministry of finance has completed the organizational structure of the company and provide Dh120 for its capital, which could be raised later to Dh200 million, said its undersecretary Yunus Khoury said.
“It will be a government establishment with a task to help banks in determining the credit status of clients…the company will have a paid up capital of Dh120 million and authorised capital of Dh200 million,” Khoury told 'Al Ittihad' daily.
gulfnews : Index rankings show room for improvement
- Image Credit: Reuters
- Doha's skyline is seen at night.
The recently released Global Competitiveness Report 2011-2012 confirms continued success of at least some Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) economies in sustaining progress of competitiveness of their global rankings. Qatar and Saudi Arabia made headway in the rankingsof their economies. Bahrain maintained its earlier ranking. However, the UAE, Oman and Kuwait saw their rankings plummet among the 142 economies ranked in the latest report.
The World Economic Forum (WEF) publishes the annual which ranks reviewed economies on the basis of their performance on the Global Competitiveness Index (GCI). In reality, GCI is noted for taking a comprehensive look into reviewed economies by relying on a set of variables.
More specifically, the index ranks economies on the basis of their achievement on three broad categories, namely basic requirements, efficiency enhancers and innovation and sophistication factors. In turn, the basic requirements category is subdivided into institutions, infrastructure, macroeconomic stability, health and primary education. Still, the efficiency enhancers category comprises higher education and training, goods and market efficiency, labour market efficiency, financial market sophistication, technological readiness and market size. Yet the innovation and sophistication factors category is made up of business sophistication and innovation.
UAE markets to look to US for cues - The National
There was no post-Ramadan bounce in the UAE this year. The value of stocks traded on the Dubai Financial Market in the first week of business after Eid Al Fitr was less than one quarter of the value of trading during the same period last year, while the value of trading in Abu Dhabi was just 12.9 per cent of the value in the same period last year.
Other Gulf markets including Saudi Arabia and Qatar registered large increases in traded volume, even though stocks in those countries were battered by convulsions on world equity markets last month.
Saudi Shares Advance for Second Day, Led by Al Rajhi Bank, Tasnee, Yansab - Bloomberg
Al Rajhi Bank (RJHI), the kingdom’s largest publicly traded lender by market value, advanced the most in two weeks. National Industrialization Co. (NIC), the petrochemicals company known as Tasnee, and Yanbu National Petrochemicals Co. (YANSAB), gained more than 1 percent.
The Tadawul All Share Index (SASEIDX) strengthened 0.2 percent to 6,138.06, the highest level since Sept. 4, at the 3:30 p.m. close in Riyadh, extending its monthly gains to 2.7 percent. The 148-company gauge dropped as much as 1.2 percent at 11:55 a.m.
Abu Dhabi to back Virgin Money in bid for 632 Lloyds branches - Telegraph
The online bank, which is part of Sir Richard Branson's Virgin empire, did not to make a formal first-round bid for the branches.
The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) is one of five investors backing Virgin Money following a detailed search for new financing by financial advisers, Greenhill.
Lost Political Decade? - Zawya
In many ways, Bahrain is the odd one out in the GCC bloc. The smallest state in the Gulf with the smallest economy and geographic area, Bahrain is also weak on natural resources, unlike its other fellow GCC members. Its Sunni rulers also find themselves in the minority and in the tough position of running a Shia-dominated population - other Gulf states don't have that acute problem.
And these issues appear to be undoing much of Bahrain's economic progress of the past few decades.