Tuesday, 7 May 2024

Mideast Stocks: Most Gulf markets muted as Mideast tension rises; Egypt gains

Mideast Stocks: Most Gulf markets muted as Mideast tension rises; Egypt gains


Most stock markets in the Gulf were subdued on Tuesday amid rising geopolitical tension in the region, while the Abu Dhabi index advanced on upbeat corporate earnings. Israeli forces seized control of the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt on Tuesday and tanks pushed into the southern Gazan city of Rafah as international mediators struggled to find agreement on a ceasefire between Israel and its Hamas foe.

The Qatari benchmark index slipped 0.2%, with most of its sectors posting losses, led by utilities, communications and finance. Qatar National Bank, the region's largest lender, shed 0.5% and Industries Qatar slid 1%. 

Saudi Arabia's benchmark stock index eased 0.1%, pressured by a 1.1% loss in Saudi Basic Industries and a 0.8% drop in Saudi Telecom, the kingdom's largest telecom operator.

Dubai's benchmark index ended flat with blue-chip developer Emaar Properties adding 0.6% and Mashreqbank gaining 1%. Toll operator Salik Company, however, dropped 1.4%.

In Abu Dhabi, the benchmark index advanced 0.4%, with First Abu Dhabi Bank, the UAE's largest lender, and Alpha Dhabi Holding both climbing 1.6%. The conglomerate Alpha's owner, International Holding Company (IHC), closed 0.1% higher after rising as much as 1.4% in early trading.

IHC, Abu Dhabi's largest listed firm, said on Monday it would buy back up to 5 billion dirhams ($1.36 billion) of its shares as it reported an 88% rise in quarterly net profit. Among other gainers, ADNOC Gas rose 1% after it posted a 21% increase in quarterly net income.

Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index rose for a third straight session and ended 1.2% higher, with most sectors in the green. Commercial International Bank gained 5.1% and Qalaa Holding surged 8.8% after the private equity firm reported a 400% upsurge in its full-year net profit.

#Dubai’s Financial Center (DIFC) Expects ‘Busiest Year’ as Firms Rush In - Bloomberg

Dubai’s Financial Center (DIFC) Expects ‘Busiest Year’ as Firms Rush In - Bloomberg

Dubai’s financial center is expecting a record number of firms to set up in the Middle East business hub this year after attracting hedge fund heavyweights such as Millennium Management and asset managers like State Street.

“This year is going to be our busiest year ever,” Ian Johnston, the chief executive officer of the Dubai Financial Services Authority, said in an interview. The regulator of the Dubai International Financial Center issued 117 new financial services licenses in 2023, and this year “we are already about 50% ahead of where we were this time last year,” he said.

The freezone’s rise in activity mirrors Dubai’s economic resurgence following the Covid pandemic. The city has also attracted a range of newcomers including Russian billionaires, property investors and crypto firms seeking a low-tax environment.

“Of the 29 globally systemically important banks in the world, we have 27 doing business in DIFC,” Johnston said. A fifth Chinese bank is setting up a branch, he said, without identifying the lender. Over 600 financial services firms operate within DIFC, employing more than 40,000 people, state-run WAM news agency reported in February.

Top Crypto Options Desk QCP Gets #AbuDhabi Regulatory Nod - Bloomberg

Top Crypto Options Desk QCP Gets Abu Dhabi Regulatory Nod - Bloomberg

QCP Capital, one of the largest options trading desks for digital assets, won initial approval to operate in Abu Dhabi, becoming the latest crypto firm to expand in the Middle East.

The seven-year-old company received in-principle approval from the Financial Services Regulatory Authority of Abu Dhabi Global Market to conduct regulated activities, according to a statement Tuesday. The firm is the first Singapore-based digital-asset market maker and broker dealer to receive preliminary approval, according to a spokesperson of ADGM.

The United Arab Emirates has been ramping up efforts to attract more crypto companies, luring operations from Binance, OKX and Nomura’s Laser Digital. QCP, which did nearly $60 billion in crypto derivatives trading volume last year, plans to relocate some of its more than 70 employees to Abu Dhabi once it receives a full license.

“Abu Dhabi has got very progressive regulators in that they are thinking about the digital assets as a complete ecosystem with all of traditional finance,” Melvin Deng, chief executive officer of QCP, said in an interview.

The geographical location also played a role in QCP’s decision to expand to the region, said Deng, given crypto’s global nature. The monthly volume of crypto derivatives stood at $1.33 trillion as of September 2023, according to a report by Ernst & Young. Most of the activity in crypto derivatives takes place outside the US.

#AbuDhabi developer Aldar picks banks for 10-year green sukuk | Reuters

Abu Dhabi developer Aldar picks banks for 10-year green sukuk | Reuters

Abu Dhabi's largest real estate developer Aldar Properties (ALDAR.AD), opens new tab has hired banks for its 10-year green sukuk offering, an arranging bank document showed on Tuesday.

The developer has picked HSBC and Standard Chartered Bank as joint global coordinators, while ADCB, ADIB, Dubai Islamic Bank, Emirates NBD Capital, FAB, Mashreq and Morgan Stanley are working on the deal as joint lead managers and joint bookrunners, the document said.

The mandated banks will hold global investor meetings on May 7 ahead of a benchmark-sized, U.S. dollar denominated 10-year green unsecured sukuk sale under Aldar Investment Properties' $2 billion trust certificates programme, benchmark in size is typically understood to be at least $500 million.

The developer also launched a tender purchase offer for its $500 million outstanding trust certificates maturing in Sept. 2025, the document added.

Proceeds from the sale of green Islamic debt will be allocated by AIP to finance, refinance and invest in certain green projects.

Aldar is 25%-owned by sovereign wealth fund Mubadala and 26%-owned by International Holding Company, which is part of a business empire overseen by Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed al-Nahyan, the UAE's national security adviser and brother to the president.

#Saudi Aramco maintains $31 bln dividend despite lower Q1 net income | Reuters

Saudi Aramco maintains $31 bln dividend despite lower Q1 net income | Reuters

Saudi Arabian state-owned oil giant Aramco (2222.SE), opens new tab expects to pay $31 billion in dividends to the Saudi government and its shareholders despite reporting lower earnings for the first quarter on Tuesday, hit by lower oil prices and volumes sold.

The Saudi government, which directly holds about 82.2% of Aramco, relies heavily on the company's payouts, which also include royalties and taxes.

The kingdom, the world's biggest oil exporter, is spending billions of dollars to diversify its economy away from crude.

Aramco reported a 14% decline in first-quarter net income to $27.3 billion in the three months to March 31, in line with analyst estimates and down from $31.9 billion a year earlier, according to a company earnings statement.

The company declared base dividend payouts for the first quarter totalling $20.3 billion and a performance-linked dividend distribution of $10.8 billion to be paid in the second quarter.

Gulf bourses mixed in early trade; IHC lifts #AbuDhabi | Reuters

Gulf bourses mixed in early trade; IHC lifts Abu Dhabi | Reuters

Stock markets in the Gulf were mixed in early trading on Tuesday amid rising geopolitical tension in the region, while the Abu Dhabi index advanced on upbeat corporate earnings.

The Israeli military took control of the vital Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt on Tuesday, pushing into the southern Gazan town after a night of air strikes and as prospects for a ceasefire deal hung in the balance.

Dubai's benchmark stock index (.DFMGI), opens new tab was down 0.2%, dragged down by losses in almost all sectors with blue-chip developer Emaar Properties (EMAR.DU), opens new tab dropping 0.4% and Commercial Bank of Dubai (CBD.DU), opens new tab sliding 2.1%.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark stock index (.TASI), opens new tab fell 0.4%, weighed by industry, real estate and finance.

Company For Cooperative Insurance (8010.SE), opens new tab slipped 3.5% and Saudi Awwal Bank (1060.SE), opens new tab dropped 1.2%.

However, Saudi Aramco (2222.SE), opens new tab inched up 0.2% after the oil major said it expected to pay $31 billion in dividends to shareholders despite reporting lower earnings for the first quarter.

In Abu Dhabi, the benchmark stock index (.FTFADGI), opens new tab advanced 1% in early trade, lifted by strong corporate earnings.

International Holding Company surged 1%, after Abu Dhabi's largest listed conglomerate IHC said on Monday it would buy back up to 5 billion dirhams ($1.36 billion) of its shares as it reported an 88% rise in quarterly net profit.

ADNOC Gas (ADNOCGAS.AD), opens new tab, the state-owned energy giant ADNOC's unit, climbed 1% after it posted a 21% increase in quarterly net income.

The Qatari benchmark index (.QSI), opens new tab edged up 0.1%, supported by a 1.4% rise in Qatar Navigation (QNNC.QA), opens new tab and a 0.4% gain in Qatar National Bank(QNBK.QA), opens new tab, the region's largest lender.