Equities trading resumed in Saudi Arabia after a technical glitch shuttered the Middle East’s biggest stock exchange for two hours.
“The technical issue has been resolved and trading services are now functioning normally,” the Saudi Exchange said in a statement. Shares were trading 0.6% higher when trading restarted on Wednesday.
The bourse is home to over 200 listed securities with a total market capitalization of about $2.6 trillion, including the world’s biggest energy company Saudi Aramco.
The benchmark Tadawul All Share Index was up as much as 0.8% before trading stopped. An average of 312 million shares were traded per day over the past year on the index, with the average daily value traded in the bourse near $3 billion.
The outage will not have a significant impact on the IPO, if it’s a one-time event, Al Dhabi Capital Ltd. Chief Strategy Officer Mohammed Ali Yasin said in an email. “If it happens again, then it will raise questions on the reasons behind it, and may affect the upcoming IPO, probably on the valuation front.”
Trading in several exchanges around the world has been disrupted recently. Euronext NV, the Mexican Bourse and the Tokyo Stock Exchange were all hit by outages last year, while New Zealand’s stock exchange struggled to restore services after cyber attacks shuttered the market for three straight days.
Before that, Deutsche Boerse AG’s electronic trading system was down for hours after a technical glitch affected trading in Germany, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Austria, Croatia and Slovenia.
No comments:
Post a Comment