Monday, 14 April 2025

#UAE’s Sidara bids £242mn for Wood Group after offering £1.5bn last year

UAE’s Sidara bids £242mn for Wood Group after offering £1.5bn last year

Sidara has made a £242mn offer to buy Wood Group less than a year after walking away from a £1.5bn bid for the crisis-hit UK oil services and engineering business. 

Wood said on Monday that United Arab Emirates-based Sidara had made a “nonbinding conditional proposal” to buy the group for 35p a share, a 40 per cent premium on its 25p closing price last week. 

The offer included a possible injection of $450mn by Sidara into Wood, it said. Wood said its board would be minded to recommend that shareholders accept a firm offer if one was made by Sidara, a privately held network of engineering and design companies run from the UAE and London. 

Sidara would also take on Wood’s outstanding debt of approximately $1.1bn, much of which needs to be refinanced in the coming months. 

The proposed price is about 85 per cent lower than the offer discussed by Sidara last year before it walked away citing “geopolitical risks and financial market uncertainty”. 

Shares in UK-listed Wood have collapsed in recent months as it struggles with high debt levels and questions about its governance. 

Wood said last month that it would need to restate financial results affecting the past three years and that its accounts for the year 2024 would be delayed, meaning its shares were likely to be suspended from trading at the end of April. 

It added that an independent review of its projects division had found “cultural failings”, including information being withheld from auditors. 

Wood said on Monday that Sidara had made “significant progress” on its due diligence, but that any firm offer would depend on Wood publishing its audited accounts for 2024. 

The Financial Times first reported Sidara’s latest takeover talks for Wood in February. 

Wood said on Monday that combining with Sidara “would create a leading global engineering consulting company” while Wood would “operate as a standalone, client-facing brand”. 

Wood’s stock gained more than 14 per cent in early trading on Monday. 

Under UK takeover rules, Sidara has until April 17 to make a firm offer for Wood or walk away.

#Dubai Property Boom Faces Pressure as Oil Falls, Trump Tariffs Test Demand - Bloomberg

Dubai Property Boom Faces Pressure as Oil Falls, Trump Tariffs Test Demand - Bloomberg


Over the last four years, Dubai property prices have surged 70% and outperformed other major cities. That relentless boom now faces its biggest threat since the pandemic as US President Donald Trump’s tariffs roil markets.

The outlook for oil producing Gulf economies has dimmed, with crude plunging below $65 a barrel on the back of the trade tensions and a decision by OPEC+ to boost supply. Meanwhile, the uncertainties that have hit asset prices from India to China and the UK risk deterring the wealthy foreign buyers who’ve been snapping up Dubai real estate.

Property prices in the emirate had already begun moderating in recent months, with last year’s 16% rise less than the 20% of the previous year as buyers started to push back on big increases.

The risks of a bigger real estate slowdown in Dubai are now piling up, analysts say. A regional economic pullback due to crude’s decline would result in fewer jobs for the expats who’ve helped boost the property market, according to Mohammed Ali Yasin, founder and chief executive officer of Oracle Financial Consultancy and Investments.

At the same time, high levels of international investment in Dubai’s real estate market leave it vulnerable to the downturn in global assets, said Taimur Khan, the head of research in Middle East and Africa for real estate services firm JLL.

“There is a question as to whether international groups that might be facing more uncertainty in their home markets could want to follow through with investments here,” Khan said.

The fortunes of the emirate’s property market have long been tied to crude, with prices falling in early 2020 and 2014 in tandem with oil. Average home prices in Dubai fell around 33% between 2014 and 2020 after oil prices collapsed and curtailed state revenues.

Trump has paused most of the tariffs he announced earlier this month. But he’s levied a 145% rate on China, which is the biggest buyer of Middle Eastern oil.

“People are under estimating the impact of slower growth in China and in turn lower demand for oil on our markets,” said Yasin, who’s based in Abu Dhabi. “Government spending and projects would be most impacted if oil prices stay close to $60 per barrel and that will have an impact on jobs and lower economic activity, in the long term,” he said.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. has warned that neighboring Saudi Arabia may see its budget deficit soar to $67 billion this year and cut spending on a multitrillion-dollar plan to transform the economy.

The outlook for Saudi Arabia impacts Dubai because many firms are headquartered in the emirate and use it as a springboard into the kingdom. So cuts to construction projects in Saudi Arabia are likely to impact hiring and jobs in Dubai as well.

Residential values in Dubai jumped 69.8% between November 2020 and December 2024, according to the researcher Knight Frank. The rally was fueled by the government’s handling of the pandemic and its liberal visa policies. Wealthy investors, from Russians seeking to safeguard assets to crypto millionaires, have rushed in.

For now, developers say they are still selling briskly. Muhammad Binghatti, the chairman of the privately-owned developer Binghatti Properties, said the company managed to complete all planned sales during the volatility of the past week.

Also, Louis Harding, the chief executive of Dubai broker Betterhomes, said oil prices may not have the same impact as earlier years because the emirate now has measures like long-term golden visas that encourage expats to stay on even during downturns.

For now, weakness in the greenback is also an advantage to foreign buyers because Gulf currencies are pegged to the US currency. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index tumbled 2.4% last week and the gauge is at the lowest level since October.

Dubai’s biggest developer Emaar Properties PJSC is down more than 10% since the tariffs were announced on April 2, while rival Aldar has lost more than 5% amid the market turmoil. Both stocks remain up around 40% for the past year.

Other pressures could yet come into play. Potential currency devaluations by any countries looking to balance out the tariffs would also put Gulf countries at a potential disadvantage, Khan said.

“There are a lot of known unknowns,” Khan said.

Most Gulf markets gain on US tariff exemptions | Reuters

Most Gulf markets gain on US tariff exemptions | Reuters


Most Gulf stock markets ended higher on Monday, in line with global shares, supported by an easing of trade tensions after the U.S. granted exemptions for smartphones and computers from tariffs.

The move also excluded the specified electronics from Trump's 10% "baseline" tariffs on goods from most countries other than China, easing import costs for semiconductors from Taiwan and Apple iPhones produced in India.

On Wednesday, Trump had announced a reprieve for levies on dozens of countries, while ratcheting up tariffs on Chinese imports effectively to 145%.

Dubai's main share index (.DFMGI), opens new tab advanced 1.8%, led by a 4.7% jump in top lender Emirates NBD (ENBD.DU), opens new tab and a 3.2% rise in sharia-compliant lender Dubai Islamic Bank (DISB.DU), opens new tab.

In Abu Dhabi, the index (.FTFADGI), opens new tab climbed 0.9%.

Oil prices - a catalyst for the Gulf's financial markets - rose more than 1% on the U.S. tariff exclusions and Chinese data showing a sharp rebound in crude imports in March, but gains were capped by concerns that the trade war between the U.S. and China could weaken global economic growth and dent fuel demand.

The Qatari index (.QSI), opens new tab added 0.3%, helped by a 1% rise in the Gulf's biggest lender Qatar National Bank (QNBK.QA), opens new tab.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark index (.TASI), opens new tab, however, finished flat, after two sessions of gains.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries cut its 2025 global oil demand growth forecast on Monday, citing the impact of data received for the first quarter and U.S. tariffs, and also reduced its global economic growth forecasts for this year and next.

Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index (.EGX30), opens new tab ended flat.

Meanwhile, Qatar and Egypt agreed to work towards a package of $7.5 billion in direct Qatari investments, according to a joint statement released by the Egyptian president's office on Monday.

Egypt is pushing ahead with efforts to secure funding from Gulf neighbours and foreign partners as it seeks to tackle heavy foreign debts and a gaping budget deficit.

#Dubai: Brookfield Has Billions Riding on Middle East Private Equity Revival - Bloomberg

Dubai: Brookfield Has Billions Riding on Middle East Private Equity Revival - Bloomberg

First came the Wall Street banks and then the global hedge funds. Now, a wave of private equity firms led by New York-based Brookfield Asset Management are also setting their sights on the oil-rich Middle East to spur deals and profits.

While this month’s dramatic plunge in crude prices highlights the risks of a region that’s reliant on oil revenues, they’re intent on investing in economies where vast government diversification drives have fueled a financial boom.

Brookfield has become one of the biggest foreign investors in the Middle East by building a private equity portfolio of $8 billion and amassing infrastructure and real estate assets worth $5 billion. It intends to raise at least $2 billion for a Middle East-focused fund — the biggest of its kind — while weighing a string of new investments. Other heavyweights including Warburg Pincus LLC and General Atlantic LP are also expanding in the Gulf.

It’s a region that can be hard to crack. Oil’s recent drop to below $65 a barrel is likely to force some governments to weigh spending cuts. Just a few years ago, fundraising had dried up in the Gulf amid the collapse of the local investment giant Abraaj Group. And more than a decade ago, Carlyle Group Inc. faced challenges in the Middle East amid currency devaluations in some countries.

Still, the lure of the Gulf’s newly-ascendant economies has proven irresistible as high interest rates have hampered leveraged buyouts globally over the past year. More recently, the market turmoil fueled by US President Donald Trump’s tariffs has dashed hopes for a deals resurgence that many private equity firms were counting on to exit long-held investments. All that’s made the Middle East a more important source of liquidity for these asset managers.

“The Middle East means emerging market returns with developed market risk,” Jad Ellawn, who heads Brookfield in the Middle East, said in an interview. “That is the attraction. You don’t find that anywhere else.”

The moves by Brookfield and other private equity firms have already begun driving a resurgence in a regional industry that lay dormant for years after Abraaj collapsed in 2018 as a probe found it had misused investor money.

The number of private equity deals in the Middle East have nearly tripled from a decade ago, and assets under management have nearly doubled, researcher Preqin says. The investments mark a sharp change for a region that foreign firms had mainly seen as a source of funding in earlier years. Increased PE activity has the potential to further fuel deal volumes in the region, where Bain & Co. estimates overall M&A activity already touched $29 billion last year.

The Gulf can be a volatile place to invest in, with sharp boom and bust cycles. As recently as 2019, the region’s economies were in the throes of a slump driven by declining crude prices.

But a big bounce back in the price of oil around 2022 padded state coffers and fueled a sharp turnaround even as other economies were reeling from the pandemic. Progress on bankruptcy laws and immigration rules are now making foreign investors more comfortable. Massive privatization drives and investments by governments to diversify away from crude are offering a new source of private equity deals.

Home-grown companies have begun maturing, making them more attractive for foreign buyers. And an IPO market that has run red hot has opened the door for private equity firms to list companies at a profit.

KKR & Co. recently announced a major investment in a Gulf data center and said it would help spend $5 billion to expand that. CVC Capital Partners Plc, Ardian SAS and others have moved people to the Gulf, spending considerable effort to forge ties with regional entrepreneurs and family conglomerates. They are complemented by a slew of local firms from Gulf Islamic Investments LLC to Saudi Arabia’s Jadwa.

The big shift has been that foreign firms “are actually investing in the region,” as opposed to tapping its vast sovereign wealth, said Huda Al Lawati, founder and chief executive of Aliph Capital, an Abu Dhabi-based mid-market PE firm.

In recent days new challenges have emerged. Fears of further pressure on oil prices have roiled the Gulf’s main stock indices. The risks are particularly high for Saudi Arabia, the region’s largest economy, which needs oil at close to $110 a barrel to balance budgets. Crude’s decline raises the possibility of much tighter outlays by governments and more curbs on investments by sovereign wealth funds that have poured money into local and international deals.

So far, Brookfield has benefited from investing in the Gulf when others were hesitant, entering the market before many of its rivals. In 2015, Chief Executive Officer Bruce Flatt was on one of his regular pilgrimages to the Gulf where the firm was backed by some of the region’s big wealth funds. Anuj Ranjan, who today leads the firm’s sprawling private equity empire, was along for the ride. Before they landed, Flatt had already sent out an internal memo: Brookfield would be establishing an investment office in Dubai.

Bankers say Brookfield is seeing payoffs from being an early mover. Ellawn has steadily amassed a vast network of connections in a region where relationships are the cornerstone of all dealmaking. These days, he nurtures the firm’s relationships with key deal-makers, including executives at Abu Dhabi’s largest bank, sovereign wealth fund Mubadala and asset manager Lunate. Meanwhile, Toronto-based parent Brookfield Corp. has a member of Saudi Arabia’s powerful Olayan business family on its board of directors.

In Dubai, Ellawn can regularly be seen striding between meetings through the financial center, where the Gulf’s economic confidence is on full display. The hub’s tall towers are brimming with Wall Street bankers and lawyers on the prowl for their next deal, and the highest floors offer an unobstructed view of the construction frenzy taking place in the emirate.

Brookfield has had some early successes, and says it focuses on assets that form the backbone of the regional economy. Its ICD Brookfield Place tower, which opened during the pandemic in Dubai, now has almost 100% occupancy as hedge funds landed and global banks expanded in the city.

Meanwhile, the new expats who arrived have driven surging demand for schools. GEMS Education — which Brookfield has invested in — is doing brisk business and preparing to launch one of the world’s most expensive schools charging $56,000 a year.

A cross-border consortium of investors put money into GEMS. It included Gulf Islamic Investments, Marathon Asset Management and the State Oil Fund of Azerbaijan.

“We’ve proven that the ingredients for a successful private equity environment exist,” Ranjan said. “And I do think our peers will show up.”

France’s Ardian opened its Abu Dhabi outpost in 2023. Warburg Pincus is moving a dealmaker to Dubai while Permira Holdings LLP is looking to open an office in the emirate. Top executives from Blackstone Inc., General Atlantic and Carlyle frequently attend the biggest financial conferences in Riyadh and Abu Dhabi.

Beyond oil prices, geopolitics can often weigh on sentiment in the region. Also, while capital markets have been on a tear in recent years, private equity exits through initial public offerings remain rare in the Gulf. Valuations can also swing widely as company owners are reticent to sell.

Governments across the Gulf have been pushing firms to make the region an investment destination on its own merit instead of an easy source of cash to the rest of the world. That’s inherently challenging, though, when the state-backed sovereign wealth funds wield enormous firepower, meaning there’s strong competition when it comes to sourcing local deals.

The experiences of other international firms also show how hard it can be to win in the Middle East. Carlyle raised $500 million for a Middle East fund in 2009, and although that performed well it didn’t go on to start another. There was a shortage of sizable deals at the time as well as currency swings in Turkey and Egypt. There were broad concerns about corporate governance in the region, and it was another choppy period for the Gulf because of lower oil prices.

Carlyle continues to have half a dozen people on the ground in Abu Dhabi, mostly focusing on fundraising while the group also looks opportunistically at deals in the region.

More recently, the outlook for the region has looked vastly different because of economic reforms, and in February the research firm Magnitt predicted that private equity in the region was positioned for a rebound.

“It’s a golden decade,” for the Gulf, Ellawn said.

Sunday, 13 April 2025

Most Gulf markets extend gains on US tariff relief | Reuters

Most Gulf markets extend gains on US tariff relief | Reuters


Most Gulf stock markets ended higher on Sunday, extending gains from the previous session after temporary U.S. tariff relief boosted sentiment, though global trade uncertainty remains a concern.

In a stunning reversal, U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday announced a temporary lowering of hefty duties he had imposed on dozens of countries.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark index (.TASI), opens new tab gained 0.8%, helped by a 3.9% rise in Riyad Bank (1010.SE), opens new tab and a 0.4% increase in Al Rajhi Bank (1120.SE), opens new tab.

The Qatari index (.QSI), opens new tab added 0.2%, with petrochemicals and commodities-focused conglomerate Industries Qatar (IQCD.QA), opens new tab closing with a gain of 0.7%.

Outside of the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index (.EGX30), opens new tab advanced 1.2%. Almost all constituents were in positive territory, including a 3.9% jump for tobacco monopoly Eastern Company (EAST.CA), opens new tab.

Friday, 11 April 2025

Hedge Fund Sculptor Joins Rush of Financial Firms in #AbuDhabi #UAE - Bloomberg

Hedge Fund Sculptor Joins Rush of Financial Firms in Abu Dhabi - Bloomberg

Sculptor Capital Management received regulatory approval to operate in Abu Dhabi, joining a wave of financial firms that have recently set up in the oil-rich emirate.

Adrian Colberg, the hedge fund firm’s executive managing director and global co-head of the client partner group, is one of three directors listed for the unit in ADGM, according to the financial hub’s records. He recently relocated to the United Arab Emirates, and is currently based in Dubai.

Sculptor, which manages about $34 billion in assets, also maintains a representative office in the Dubai International Financial Centre, according to a March filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

Representatives for Sculptor didn’t immediately respond to requests for comments outside of normal working hours.

The firm has a history in the region, having been involved in the restructuring of NMC Healthcare in 2020.

Abu Dhabi — home to three major sovereign wealth funds overseeing nearly $1.7 trillion in assets — is competing with Dubai and Riyadh to position itself as the Middle East’s main business hub. It has recently attracted financial heavyweights including BlackRock Inc. and Seviora, the $54 billion asset management arm of Temasek Holdings Pte.

In the broader Middle East, countries like Kuwait and Qatar too have also stepped up efforts to attract foreign firms.

Brent, WTI prices climb more $1 on possible Iran crude restriction | Reuters

Brent, WTI prices climb more $1 on possible Iran crude restriction | Reuters

Brent and West Texas Intermediate crude climbed more than $1 on Friday after U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright said the United States could end Iran's oil exports as part of an effort to bring the Islamic Republic to terms over its nuclear program.

Brent crude futures settled at $64.76 a barrel, up $1.43, or 2.26%. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude finished at $61.50 a barrel, up $1.43 or 2.38%.

"Strict enforcement of restrictions on Iranian crude exports would reduce global supply," said Andrew Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates. "I suspect China will continue to buy oil from Iran."

Wright's comments provided upward momentum for oil prices, following volatile price swings this week as U.S. President Donald Trump's new tariff regime forced traders to reassess the geopolitical risks facing the crude market.

"The U.S. being a geopolitical risk is new for the market," said John Kilduff, partner with Again Capital. "We'll have this reordering of the chessboard like we did after Russia invaded Ukraine."

China announced on Friday it will impose a 125% tariff on U.S. goods starting on Saturday, up from the previously announced 84%, after Trump raised tariffs against China to 145% on Thursday.

Trump this week paused heavy tariffs against dozens of other trading partners, but a prolonged dispute between the world's two biggest economies is likely to reduce global trade volumes and disrupt trading routes, weighing on global economic growth and reducing demand for oil.

"Although the implementation of some tariffs, excluding those on China, was delayed by 90 days, the market damage had already been inflicted, leaving prices struggling to regain stability," said Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration on Thursday lowered its global economic growth forecasts and warned that tariffs could weigh heavily on oil prices. It reduced its U.S. and global oil demand forecasts for this year and next year.

China's 2025 economic growth is expected to fall relative to last year's pace, a Reuters poll showed, as U.S. tariffs raise pressure on the world's top oil importer.

The impact of tariffs could be "catastrophic" for developing countries, the director of the United Nations' trade agency said.

ANZ Bank analysts forecast oil consumption will decline by 1% if global economic growth falls below 3%, said senior commodity strategist Daniel Hynes.

#Dubai bourse eases amid US-China trade war; #AbuDhabi gains | Reuters

Dubai bourse eases amid US-China trade war; Abu Dhabi gains | Reuters


Dubai's stock market slipped on Friday, weighed down by investor concerns over the rapidly intensifying U.S.-China trade war and its potential economic impact, although the Abu Dhabi index finished higher.

Beijing on Friday increased its tariffs on U.S. imports to 125%, hitting back against U.S. President Donald Trump's decision to hike duties on Chinese goods to 145% and raising the stakes in a trade war that threatens to upend global supply chains.

Dubai's main share index (.DFMGI), opens new tab fell 0.2%, hit by a 2.2% drop in blue-chip developer Emaar Properties (EMAR.DU), opens new tab and a 4.8% slide in Commercial Bank of Dubai (CBD.DU), opens new tab.

However, the Dubai index managed to eke out a weekly gain of 0.3%.

Regionally, markets were significantly impacted this week by ongoing trade tensions between the U.S. and its economic partners, said Ahmed Negm, Head of Market Research MENA at XS.com.

In Abu Dhabi, the index (.FTFADGI), opens new tab added 0.4%, helped by a 1.7% rise in Alpha Dhabi Holding (ALPHADHABI.AD), opens new tab.

Oil prices - a catalyst for the Gulf's financial markets - rose, but still headed for a second straight week in the red on concerns about a prolonged trade war between the United States and China.

According to Negm, persistently low oil prices continue to pose a risk to the market and investor sentiment.

Thursday, 10 April 2025

Foreigners Boost 1Q Trading on #AbuDhabi Exchange to 4-Year High - Bloomberg

Foreigners Boost 1Q Trading on Abu Dhabi Exchange to 4-Year High - Bloomberg

The Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange witnessed a 151% surge in net foreign investment in the first quarter as it rolled out a new corporate structure, technology upgrades and a broader range of product offerings, Group Chief Executive Officer Abdulla Salem Alnuaimi said.

Foreigners bought and sold a total of about 70 billion dirhams ($19 billion) worth of securities listed on the exchange in the quarter, leading to a net flow of 8.54 billion dirhams, data for the January-March period showed. Foreigners accounted for 42% of trade on the bourse, a four-year high.

“We align with the UAE government’s goals to attract foreign investment, diversify the economy, and support a strong financial sector,” Alnuaimi said in an interview. “To increase foreign trading on ADX, we’re connecting with global exchanges and platforms, and promoting dual listings to bring in new investors.”

The $800 billion Abu Dhabi market, one of the two key trading venues along with Dubai in the United Arab Emirates, embraced a group structure at the start of the year. It spun off its post-trading activities into two subsidiaries — for clearance and security-depository businesses.

ADX also introduced an updated technology platform that increased trading speeds and included support for high-frequency and algorithmic trading and a new customer-management system.

“Our upgraded trading system aims to enhance performance by 400%,” Alnuaimi said. “In 2025, we plan to add new trading features, investment products, and services. We also want to welcome new trading participants.”

While the Abu Dhabi exchange’s main equity index made a sluggish start to the year, underperforming peer emerging markets, investor activity continued to strengthen. Trading volumes rose in the first quarter — 39% by number of shares and 41% by number of transactions.

The turbulence also underscored the challenges faced by stock exchanges as US President Donald Trump’s trade policies usher in an era of market chaos and sharp reversals in capital flows. ADX is betting on technology investments and product diversification to keep investor interest alive, all underpinned by economic growth in the emirate, Alnuaimi said.

“The global stock exchange business is constantly changing and highly competitive,” he said. “We’re seeing impacts from globalization, fast technological advancements, varied investor interests, regulatory changes, and the rise of digital platforms.”

Abu Dhabi joined a global selloff in April as money managers’ bets that the UAE would remain isolated from the impact of Trump’s tariffs were tested. Amid the volatility, however, ADX has been working to boost the city’s appeal to global investors as well as local entrepreneurs looking to list their startups.

The exchange’s “growth market” segment, which allows new-age companies in fields like sports and health care to list on the exchange without an initial public offering, expanded 34% last year, according to Alnuaimi. As many as 14 companies are now traded in the segment.

“We have simplified listing processes to help private companies raise capital, gain visibility, and expand their investor base, contributing to Abu Dhabi’s economic diversification,” Alnuaimi said.

Meanwhile, ADX has been expanding its exchange-traded fund business. ETFs on the bourse boosted their market capitalization by 109% to 784 million dirhams in the first quarter, Alnuaimi said. The exchange now has 16 ETFs cover 10 emerging and developed markets, UAE bonds and global sukuks.

Mideast Bankers Count on IPO Boom to Resume After Trade Turmoil - Bloomberg

Mideast Bankers Count on IPO Boom to Resume After Trade Turmoil - Bloomberg

The Middle East, a bright spot for new share sales for four years, faces a significant challenge from the recent volatility in equity markets and a slump in oil prices. Even so, bankers are hopeful that dealflow will resume in coming weeks.

Unlike a raft of companies in Europe and the US, Middle Eastern firms planning to go public later this quarter haven’t yet postponed plans, according to bankers working on the deals. The region is relatively insulated from US tariffs and many of the businesses considering listing are heavily tied to fast expanding local economies, they said.

EFG Hermes, which arranged the most IPOs in the Middle East last year, still expects to bring six to seven more deals to market in 2025 — primarily in Saudi Arabia, in addition to a potential deal in Kuwait, a senior banker said. JPMorgan Chase & Co. also hasn’t yet seen significant changes to its regional pipeline for this year, or to more preliminary discussions with companies looking to list in 2026 or 2027.

“We’re still on track,” said Mostafa Gad, global head of investment banking at EFG. None of Gad’s deals have been postponed or canceled, and internal preparation for new share sales continues.

Those comments come against a backdrop of lingering risks — markets remain volatile and concerns about global growth abound. Global assets from stocks to bonds have seen sharp swings in recent days as US President Donald Trump imposed sweeping global tariffs and then went on to pause most of them.

The oil-exporting Gulf could take an economic hit with crude prices plunging below $65 a barrel after a surprise OPEC+ production hike and concerns that the tariffs could spur a global slowdown.

“If we see bigger pressure below the $60 mark, then you start seeing some alarms,” Gad said. “Then you’ll wait and see how the governments want to react. They will either be very cautious about the deficits and start cutting spending or they say, look it’s temporary, let’s live with a bigger deficit for a little bit of time and then figure it out.”

In Abu Dhabi, flagship carrier Etihad Airways PJSC has been lining up an IPO since last year. Meanwhile, Dubai Holding LLC, a vehicle controlled by the emirate’s ruler, had been weighing a listing of a residential real estate portfolio as early as this month, according to people familiar with the matter. Executives at both firms continue to monitor markets and no decision has been made on the timing of the deals, people familiar with the matter said. Representatives for Etihad and Dubai Holding declined to comment.

JPMorgan’s head of equity capital markets for Central Eastern Europe, Middle East and Africa, Gokul Mani, said his Middle Eastern pipeline hasn’t been affected.

“Transactions that might have been looking to launch this week or next week will probably get delayed to a couple weeks further out, but that’s to be expected given global volatility and disruptions to supply chains,” Mani said.

Still, investors are growing more discerning, and he expects mainly higher quality companies will be able to get their deals done.

A smattering of Saudi Arabian companies had their IPO plans greenlit by the regulator just before the Eid holiday last month, including low-cost carrier Flynas, gym chain operator Sports Club Co., hospital operator Specialized Medical Co., Al Majed Real Estate Company and Marketing Home Group Co. Tech firm Ejada Systems and packaging firm United Carton Industries Co. also have regulatory approvals to list.

Even so, talk of new listings may be too premature for some investors as they focus on navigating the turmoil and finding opportunities. “I think it’s a bit too early to say as volatility is still very high on all the financial parameters that affect any valuation,” said Christian Ghandour, senior portfolio manager at Al Dhabi Capital.

Goldman Warns #SaudiArabia Deficit Could Rise on Oil Crash - Bloomberg

Goldman Warns Saudi Arabia Deficit Could Rise on Oil Crash - Bloomberg


The oil-price crash is set to have far-reaching consequences for Saudi Arabia’s finances and vast economic ambitions.

The kingdom’s budget deficit may soar to $67 billion this year, according to projections shared by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. economist Farouk Soussa in an interview.

That calculation, based on oil averaging $62 a barrel in 2025, is well over double the government’s current forecast and will likely force Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to borrow more on global bond markets and further cut back his multitrillion-dollar plans to transform the economy.

Crude has plunged to its lowest level in about four years after US President Donald Trump unveiled new tariffs on almost all countries on April 2, raising the possibility of a global recession. Within hours of that, OPEC+, an oil cartel headed by Saudi Arabia and Russia, shocked energy traders by saying it would speed up plans to raise output.

Brent crude recovered late on Wednesday after Trump said he’d delay some levies, but fell again on Thursday. At $64 a barrel, it’s still down almost 15% in the past week. And many analysts predict the worst is to come.

Saudi Arabia’s ministry of finance told Bloomberg it’s assessing the recent developments and stands ready to take whatever decisions are needed to keep its fiscal position strong.

“There’s going to have to be some fiscal adjustment,” Soussa, Goldman’s economist for the Middle East and North Africa, said in an interview.

“We’re going to see more borrowing and I do think there’s got to be a more aggressive re-prioritization when it comes to the projects,” he said. “They don’t shy away from these really difficult decisions.”

Even before this month’s rout, oil was too low for the kingdom to balance its budget. The government needed prices to be as high as $93 last year to achieve that, and $108 if the sovereign wealth fund’s spending on the crown prince’s mega projects was included, according to Ziad Daoud, chief emerging markets economist at Bloomberg Economics.

In recent months, the Saudi government delayed some spending. The finance ministry said that was to reprioritize projects and avoid overheating the economy.

“We remain confident that most of our vision targets are either achieved or on track and we will deliver on the key events we are hosting,” a spokesperson said.

While Saudi Arabia doesn’t disclose oil-price assumptions for its budget, it estimated this year’s fiscal deficit would be 2.3% of gross domestic product, but could rise to 3.7% in a low-revenue scenario. Goldman’s figure of $67 billion would mean a gap of more than 6%, the biggest since 2020, during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Oil production increases under OPEC+’s new plans will do little to counter the revenue losses from lower prices, according to Daoud, who has reduced this year’s growth outlook for the $1.1 trillion economy to 2.6% from 3%. He sees the non-oil sector, which the crown prince’s projects are focused on and which employs the vast bulk of Saudis, being affected.

“Despite the label, Saudi Arabia’s non-oil boom rides on oil,” Daoud said. “Lower prices mean spending cutbacks, slowing construction and reducing public-sector hirings.”

More borrowing beckons. That’s even though Saudi Arabia is already the biggest bond issuer in global markets among developing nations, having sold more than $14 billion of dollar and euro debt so far in 2025.

It could raise another $16.5 billion before the year’s out, barring further spending cuts, according to calculations by Tim Callen, a visiting scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington. If so, that would smash the kingdom’s current annual record for international borrowing of $21.5 billion, set in 2017, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Such a task could become more complicated, and expensive, after Saudi Arabia’s credit-default swaps — a gauge of a country’s risk premium — jumped in the last week to the highest since 2020.

In the Gulf state’s favor, it has a debt-to-GDP ratio of around 30%, far below that of most other emerging markets. S&P Global Ratings upgraded it to the same level as Japan and China last month, saying the government’s efforts to diversify from oil were gaining traction.

Still, the weaker oil market will put the plans of the crown prince, known as MBS, to the test.

There are dozens of mega projects underway, including the ski resort of Trojena, the historical mud city of Diriyah and a cube-shaped skyscraper big enough to fit 20 Empire State Buildings. Those are all going on as the kingdom plans to host the World Expo in 2030 and men’s football world cup in 2034.

“Funding of the investment program was always going to be the key challenge for Vision 2030,” said Monica Malik, chief economist at Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank. “The lower oil price significantly raises the challenge.”

To come up with more cash, Saudi Arabia has been selling stakes in companies. The government raised $12 billion through a follow-on share sale of oil giant Aramco in mid-2024, while the wealth fund raised $1 billion by disposing some of Saudi Telecom Co. in November.

That’s another lever the Saudis may continue to pull to plug the deficit, according to Goldman’s Soussa. Riyadh could also use its $410 billion of foreign-exchange reserves, though would probably avoid that since they’re mainly designed to back the riyal’s peg to the dollar, he added.

“They’re not going to build Trojena or the cube or Diriyah if doing so means that they’re going to go broke or they’re going to de-peg the currency,” Soussa said. “They won’t drive themselves into any of these kinds of economic binds simply to maintain their level of expenditure. That’s just not going to happen.”

#Dubai, #AbuDhabi: #UAE Urges Wealthy Families to Plan Succession - Bloomberg

Dubai, Abu Dhabi: UAE Urges Wealthy Families to Plan Succession - Bloomberg

The United Arab Emirates is stepping up efforts to formalize succession planning among its wealthiest families, moves aimed at avoiding conflicts and economic disruption when control passes on to the next generation.

Officials from the country’s economy ministry recently met with heads of prominent business families to encourage them to establish formal structures around their wealth, according to people familiar with the matter.

The discussions centered around the potential creation of family offices to better manage generational transitions and a renewed effort to encourage local listings, the people said, declining to be identified as the information is confidential.

Family-owned businesses make up about 90% of private companies in the UAE, spanning sectors from supermarket chains to luxury car dealerships. While there are no official estimates, US-based Dash Venture Labs projects that the country’s richest families will control a combined $1 trillion by the end of next year.

“One-in-four estates in the Middle East looks set to transfer without predefined rules or instructions, creating a host of cost and time pressures,” according to a January report from the Dubai International Financial Centre’s Innovation Hub. About $49 billion could go unclaimed in the region before 2030, with another $123 billion held up for over six months in costly probate processes, the report estimated.

Additionally, the clans themselves have evolved in recent years, increasingly deploying capital into private equity and venture capital deals. Since such investments are typically riskier bets, the government is keen to have more formalized internal governance and processes, according to one of the people.

The UAE foreign ministry didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Traditionally, the country’s rulers relied on merchant families, granting them control over certain sectors in exchange for support. However, as the UAE economy starts to open up more, and as many conglomerates face their first generational transitions, that model is showing signs of strain.

The urgency to have structures in place was underscored following the 2021 death of Majid Al Futtaim, who helmed a $16.5 billion shopping and entertainment empire widely seen as an anchor of Dubai’s economy.

The inheritance was left unresolved and a special judicial committee had to be appointed to oversee the transition — a relatively rare occurrence reserved for high-profile cases. Since then, the UAE has unveiled several steps to enhance the governance of family-run companies.

The UAE’s renewed push for succession planning also comes as a growing number of the world’s richest people — from hedge fund titan Ray Dalio to Nigerian billionaire Aliko Dangote — establish family offices in the country. Dubai’s financial hub alone hosts family offices overseeing $1.2 trillion in assets.

Mubadala Energy takes stake in Kimmeridge gas, LNG projects in US | Reuters

Mubadala Energy takes stake in Kimmeridge gas, LNG projects in US | Reuters

Mubadala Energy, an arm of one of Abu Dhabi's sovereign wealth funds, signed a deal on Thursday with energy investor Kimmeridge that will give it stakes in gas assets in the United States, marking its entry into the market as part of its growth plans.

The deal to buy 24.1% of Kimmeridge's SoTex HoldCo will give Mubadala Energy access to Kimmeridge's unconventional gas production in Texas and to a liquefied natural gas export project in Louisiana, which is expected to have a final investment decision later this year and first offtake in 2029, Mubadala Energy said in a statement.

The Louisiana LNG project is developing a 9.3 million metric tons per annum liquefaction and export facility.

Mubadala Energy said U.S. LNG is expected to constitute a third of world supply of the superchilled fuel by 2050, citing Wood Mackenzie data. The investment gives it a foothold in that market, which it said would be supported by strong demand, including for artificial intelligence data centres.

Financial details of the deal were not disclosed.

"As our first major investment in the U.S. this transaction offers a significant platform for future growth in one of the world's most important energy hubs," Mansoor Mohamed Al Hamed, Mubadala Energy's managing director and chief executive, said in a statement.

"The investment also highlights our strong position to accelerate our expansion across the gas value chain and build on our strategic international portfolio."

Kimmeridge Texas Gas has net production of 500 million cubic feet equivalent per day, expected to grow to 1.5 billion cubic feet equivalent per day by 2031, Mubadala Energy said.

Mubadala Energy has assets in 11 countries, mainly in the Middle East and North Africa, Southeast Asia and Russia. Its portfolio, which is about 70% gas, has production of roughly 370,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day.

The deal comes as U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright begins a tour of Gulf Arab countries in the UAE.

#Saudi bourse outshines Gulf peers as Trump pauses tariffs | Reuters

Saudi bourse outshines Gulf peers as Trump pauses tariffs | Reuters


Stock markets in the Gulf ended higher on Thursday led by a strong surge in Saudi Arabia, a day after U.S. President Donald Trump's surprise move to temporarily suspend most of the newly imposed tariffs.

Trump announced a 90-day pause on many of his new duties. He, however, raised the tariff rate for China to 125% effective immediately, from the previously announced 104% that took effect earlier on Wednesday.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark index (.TASI), opens new tab leapt 3.7% - its biggest intraday rise since March 2020 - boosted by a 3.2% rise in Al Rajhi Bank (1120.SE), opens new tab and a 5.5% jump in the country's biggest lender Saudi National Bank (1180.SE), opens new tab.

Saudi Arabia has been hit by the minimum 10% tariff rate, which at present will remain in place.

Among other gainers, Saudi Aramco (2222.SE), opens new tab finished 2.6% higher. The oil giant has discovered 14 oil and natural gas fields and reservoirs in the kingdom's Eastern Region and the Empty Quarter, Reuters reported on Wednesday, citing state news agency SPA, containing small volumes.

The Saudi index - which saw its biggest intraday fall on Sunday in nearly five years - posted its worst weekly decline since October, despite the sharp rise.

Dubai's main share index (.DFMGI), opens new tab advanced 1.7%, led by a 2.1% gain in blue-chip developer Emaar Properties (EMAR.DU), opens new tab and a 3.3% leap in utility firm Dubai Electricity and Water Authority (DEWAA.DU), opens new tab.

In Abu Dhabi, the index (.FTFADGI), opens new tab closed 1.3% higher.

The Qatari index (.QSI), opens new tab was up 1.9%, with the Gulf's biggest lender Qatar National Bank (QNBK.QA), opens new tab climbing 3.2%.

A day earlier, the lender reported a net profit of 4.26 billion riyals ($1.17 billion) for the first quarter, exceeding analysts' expectations.

Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index (.EGX30), opens new tab concluded 2.4% higher, as most of its constituents were in positive territory.

Egypt will offer stakes in military-owned companies through its sovereign wealth fund, the cabinet said on Wednesday, seeking to meet the requirements of the International Monetary Fund to expand the private sector's role in the economy.

Wednesday, 9 April 2025

Peter Thiel’s Valar, #SaudiArabia’s Sanabil Back B2B Commerce Firm SILQ - Bloomberg

Peter Thiel’s Valar, Saudi Arabia’s Sanabil Back B2B Commerce Firm SILQ - Bloomberg

The venture capital arm of Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund and Peter Thiel’s Valar Ventures are jointly leading a $110 million funding round in SILQ Group, a newly formed commerce platform.

Sanabil Investments, a wholly owned subsidiary of the $925 billion Public Investment Fund, and Valar are joining a group of investors that includes Qatar Development Bank, according to a statement.

SILQ was created through the merger of ShopUp, Bangladesh’s largest business-to-business commerce platform, and Sary, one of the Gulf’s leading marketplaces. The combined entity will target markets across the Gulf and emerging Asia.

The deal also marks Sanabil’s first investment in South Asia, the latest example of the Middle East’s growing trade ties with that region.

The merged entity is aiming for an initial public offering in 2027, according to its top executives. “We think the Gulf market is very exciting when it comes to IPOs — especially the Saudi market,” said SILQ Group’s Chief Executive Officer Afeef Zaman.

Over the next six months, the firm will focus on achieving profitability at a group level, said Mohammed Aldossary, CEO of SILQ Financial, its financing arm.

Aldossary also said that wide-ranging tariffs championed by US President Donald Trump will create opportunities for SILQ, as exporters seek new markets.

SILQ’s other backers include Saudi Arabia’s STV, Flourish Ventures, VSQ, MSA Capital, Rocketship VC, Wafra Investment, Peak XV, Prosus, Tiger Global, Endeavor Catalyst and Raed Ventures.

Collectively, ShopUp and Sary have processed over $5 billion of transactions and facilitated more than 100 million shipments to date.

#Qatar National Bank posts 3% rise in Q1 net profit, beats estimate

Qatar National Bank posts 3% rise in Q1 net profit, beats estimate

Qatar National Bank (QNB), the Gulf's biggest bank by assets, on Wednesday reported 3% year-on-year (YoY) increase in Q1 2025 net profit to 4.3 billion Qatari riyals ($1.18. billion).

The result easily beat analysts’ mean estimate of QAR3.85 billion, according to LSEG data,

Total assets reached QAR1.32 trillion, up 7% from the year-ago period.

Loans and advances increased by 9% from March 2024 to QAR947 billion.

Customer deposits increased by 6% to QAR930 billion.

Most Gulf markets retreat as global trade war escalates | Reuters

Most Gulf markets retreat as global trade war escalates | Reuters


Most stock markets in the Gulf ended lower on Wednesday, tracking a global selloff triggered by the latest U.S.-China trade war escalation.

U.S. President Donald Trump's eye-watering 104% tariffs on China came into effect on Wednesday, prompting a swift retaliation from Beijing in the form of duties of 84% on U.S. imports.

Trump's punishing tariffs — which he says aim to end U.S. trade deficits with many countries — have upended a global trading order in place for decades, raising fears of recession and wiping trillions of dollars off the market value of major firms.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark index (.TASI), opens new tab declined 1.8%, ending two sessions of gains, dragged down by a 1.8% slide in Al Rajhi Bank (1120.SE), opens new tab and a 3.4% decrease in ACWA Power Company (2082.SE), opens new tab.
Elsewhere, oil giant Saudi Aramco (2222.SE), opens new tab fell 0.2%.

Oil prices — a catalyst for the Gulf's financial markets — plunged to four-year lows after China's fresh retaliatory tariffs.

Dubai's main share index (.DFMGI), opens new tab edged 0.1% higher, supported by a 2.3% rise in sharia-compliant lender Dubai Islamic Bank (DISB.DU), opens new tab.

In Abu Dhabi, the index (.FTFADGI), opens new tab advanced 0.9%, led by a 3.9% jump in Borouge (BOROUGE.AD), opens new tab, after the petrochemicals firm announced an increase in dividend to 16.2 fils per share ahead of the launch of Borouge Group International, expected in the first quarter of 2026.

The Qatari index (.QSI), opens new tab closed 0.1% higher, with Qatar National Bank (QNBK.QA), opens new tab, the Gulf's biggest lender, gaining 0.8%.

Post trading hours, the lender reported a net profit of 4.26 billion riyals ($1.17 billion) for the first quarter, exceeding analysts' expectations.

Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index (.EGX30), opens new tab declined 1.9%, as most of its constituents were in negative territory including EFG Holding (HRHO.CA), opens new tab, which retreated 4.1%.

Tuesday, 8 April 2025

Trump Tariffs: ‘Ghost of Jakarta’ Haunts a Fragile Oil Market - Bloomberg

Trump Tariffs: ‘Ghost of Jakarta’ Haunts a Fragile Oil Market - Bloomberg


History doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes — take Saudi Arabia pushing OPEC to boost production, seemingly to humble cartel cheaters.

If it sounds familiar, it’s just coincidence. I’m not talking about last week, but rather 1997, when an OPEC meeting in the Indonesian capital of Jakarta hiked output just as the Asian financial crisis was gaining momentum (and the week Indonesia’s rupiah cratered). Few anticipated how ugly the combination of extra production and slowing economies would be. A year later, oil prices had plunged below $10 a barrel, and the policy mistake lives forever in OPEC’s memory as the “Ghost of Jakarta.”

Today, we are only sowing the seeds of a global economic disruption. But there are many parallels, including the fact that the oil market was weaker than many wanted to believe. If history is any guide, we are far from the oil market’s bottom.

The situation is fluid and much depends on the next steps taken by the White House and the OPEC+ alliance. Still, we can draw a few tentative conclusions.

1) So far, both the White House and, crucially, Saudi Arabia appear to be happy with a more than 10% plunge in crude prices since Donald Trump announced the tariffs. So don’t bet either will step in. Trump needs lower oil prices to offset the inflationary impact of the trade war. And make no mistake, the will and intent of the Saudis last week was to push oil prices lower. Period. That’s why they scheduled an impromptu meeting to announce the production hike hours before Trump launched his trade war, knowing it would maximize the bearish message. Whether the Saudis wanted to teach a lesson to OPEC+ cheaters like Kazakhstan, Iraq and the United Arab Emirates, or they had Trump in mind is unclear. Based on conversations with OPEC+ officials, I believe both factors played a role.

2) It would be a mistake to read 2025 throughout the very same lens of the last oil price war, fought in 2020 between Saudi Arabia and Russia. That price war, combined with the Covid-19 pandemic, sent oil prices below zero. For now, Riyadh isn’t replicating the same bullying tactics it deployed then. If in 2020 the kingdom launched the oil equivalent of a nuclear first strike, this time the military analogy would look more like a commando raid1.

And yet, the 2020-style price war makes more sense than what Riyadh is so far doing. The Saudi intention back then was to create as much financial pain as possible in the shortest possible time to get everyone around the negotiating table — quickly. The Saudis got what they wanted: the war lasted 35 days. This time, they risk the opposite. The financial pain of currently low prices is real, but not acute enough to force OPEC+ cheaters to negotiate. The opposite is true: those already cheating would be tempted to double down, pumping even more to offset some of the lost revenue.

3) Oil demand forecasts are way too high at an annual growth of more than 1 million barrels a day for 2025. My guess is that they will be cut by between a third and a half. History is a guide: In 1998, after the outbreak of the Asian crisis, oil demand grew by just 400,000 barrels a day, less than half the pre-crisis run rate. The crisis affected several fast-growing economies that are today the very same targeted with the highest tariffs (think Thailand, Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia, China). Those nations are important because they are the engine of global oil demand growth, so an economic slowdown there has an outsize impact on petroleum demand.

4) With Saudi Arabia pumping more and global consumption growth weakening, supply-and-demand will need to rebalance the hard way via a slowdown in non-OPEC+ output growth. But that’s a process measured in quarters, rather than weeks or months. Some of the 2025 and 2026 growth is already baked in: Brazilian, Guyanese and Norwegian new oilfields would come on stream no matter what. So will new developments in the Gulf of Mexico.

Most of the rebalancing will fall on US shale companies. It’s been less than a week since the crash started, but my industry soundings indicate that not only are most shale companies already planning spending cuts, but a handful were warned over the weekend by their lenders that they need to reduce drilling immediately to avoid breaching loan covenants.

When the US Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas asked last month US shale companies what West Texas Intermediate oil price they needed to “profitably drill a new well,” the average response was $65 a barrel. On Monday, WTI for immediate delivery fell to just under $60 a barrel, and the 2026 average price, key for shale companies’ hedging, plunged to $58 a barrel. The impact of low prices on shale growth will probably be felt from June-August onwards. That’s quick compared to the two years that it took the non-OPEC supply growth to react to the 1997 crisis. But still, it leaves several months of unbridgeable supply and demand imbalance that require lower prices.

5) Finally, don’t forget psychology. The institutional memory of oil trading desks is firmly anchored in two oil price wars that brought ultra-low prices: The one the Saudis launched in late 2014 against the US shale industry, and the one in 2020 pitting the Saudis against the Russians. The first saw WTI dropping to less than $30 a barrel; the second saw it plunging to an all-time low of minus $40 a barrel. Unsurprisingly, everyone is today trying to hedge downside risk via put options, whose trading volume has exploded. With that historical background in mind, I don’t think many will try to catch a falling knife.

In 2020, the Saudis boosted output by nearly 2 million barrels a day; this time, they are increasing by less than 200,000 barrels a day. 1 View in article

Gold rebounds above $3,000/oz over trade war fears, weak dollar | Reuters

Gold rebounds above $3,000/oz over trade war fears, weak dollar | Reuters

Gold prices rose back above $3,000 per ounce on Tuesday as a weaker U.S. dollar and escalating trade tensions between the world's two largest economies lifted demand for the safe-haven asset.

Spot gold was up 0.8% at $3,007.69 an ounce by 10:58 a.m. ET (1458 GMT), moving away from a more than three-week low touched on Monday in a pullback from last week's record high of $3,167.57. U.S. gold futures gained 1.6% to $3,021.90.



"Despite falling for three consecutive sessions, gold remains bullish with trade tensions and the prospect of lower U.S. interest rates boosting its allure," said Lukman Otunuga, senior research analyst at FXTM.

"A solid breakout above $3,055 may open the doors back toward $3,100 and $3,130. Sustained weakness below $3,000 could see gold slip toward $2,950 and $2,930."

Concerns over a global trade war since U.S. President Donald Trump's announcement of reciprocal tariffs on April 2 have raised fears of a recession and prompted investors to take refuge in the safe-haven assets like gold.

China has refused to bow to what it called "blackmail" from the U.S. as a global trade war ignited by Trump's sweeping tariffs showed little sign of abating.

Gold, often used as a safe store of value during times of political and financial uncertainty, has risen 15% so far this year.

Further helping gold, the dollar index .DXY fell against its rivals, making bullion less expensive for other currency holders.

Investors are now looking forward to minutes from the U.S. Federal Reserve's latest policy meeting due on Wednesday for more clues on the path of rate cuts.

Traders are pricing in about 40% chance of a Fed cut in May. Zero-yield bullion tends to thrive in a low interest rate environment.

"The significant rise in rate cut expectations in recent days suggest that the gold price will soon rise again," Commerzbank said in a note.

Elsewhere, spot silver gained 0.1% to $30.15 an ounce, platinum rose 0.2% to $915.25 and palladium eased 1.23% to $907.43.

Gulf bourses rebound in line with global shares | Reuters

Gulf bourses rebound in line with global shares | Reuters


Stock markets in the Gulf ended higher on Tuesday, rebounding from a global selloff on hopes that the U.S. might be willing to negotiate some of its heavy import tariffs.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark index (.TASI), opens new tab advanced 1%, extending gains from the previous session, led by a 1.9% rise in Al Rajhi Bank (1120.SE), opens new tab and a 4.7% jump in Elm Company (7203.SE), opens new tab.

On Sunday, the Saudi index had fallen 6.8%, its biggest one-day slide since the early days of the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic.

The Saudi bourse recovered for the second consecutive day after finding support levels, said Milad Azar, a market analyst at XTB MENA.

"However, a sustained general recovery would require fundamental changes, particularly regarding tariff risks and their potential economic impact."

Dubai's main share index (.DFMGI), opens new tab climbed 1.9%, buoyed by a 1.3% gain in blue-chip developer Emaar Properties (EMAR.DU), opens new tab and a 2.2% leap in sharia-compliant lender Dubai Islamic Bank (DISB.DU), opens new tab.

In Abu Dhabi, the index (.FTFADGI), opens new tab added 0.5%.

Oil prices — catalyst for the Gulf's financial markets — steadied but remained near four-year lows as a recovery in equity markets was outweighed by recession fears exacerbated by trade conflicts.

The Qatari index (.QSI), opens new tab rose 1.3%; Qatar Islamic Bank (QISB.QA), opens new tab gained 2.5% and petrochemical maker Industries Qatar (IQCD.QA), opens new tab was up 2.3%.

Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index (.EGX30), opens new tab rose 0.6%, supported by a 7.1% jump in tobacco monopoly Eastern Company (EAST.CA), opens new tab.

Egypt and France have signed a 7 billion euro ($7.66 billion) agreement to develop finance and operate a green hydrogen production facility, Egypt's transportation ministry said.

Monday, 7 April 2025

Trump Tariffs, Crude Oil Slump Add to #SaudiArabia’s Challenges; UAE Stocks Drop - Bloomberg

Trump Tariffs, Crude Oil Slump Add to Saudi Arabia’s Challenges; UAE Stocks Drop - Bloomberg


For much of the Middle East, Sunday was the first full day of trading since the one-two punch of US President Donald Trump’s “chart of death” tariff onslaught and a shock decision by OPEC+ to triple a planned output hike. Regional equities slumped at the open, mirroring a drop in global stocks and a steep fall in the price of oil.

In just the last three days, Brent crude has fallen 15% to about $64 a barrel. That has significant implications for the biggest Middle Eastern economy, Saudi Arabia, which needs oil at close to $110 to balance its budget, once domestic investments by the Public Investment Fund are taken into account.

Apart from the trillion-dollar Vision 2030 agenda, the kingdom’s spending over the next few years will also cover outlays for events like the FIFA World Cup in 2034. Lower energy prices will pose a significant challenge for Riyadh, which has already started re-prioritizing projects even as government-related entities step up efforts to raise cash. The decline in crude prices could potentially push the kingdom to make deeper spending cuts than those outlined in its latest budget or further ramp up debt sales. It could also complicate a pledge by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to engage in $600 billion worth of trade and investment with the US over the next four years.

Fears of further pressure on oil prices in the days to come slammed the kingdom’s main exchange on Sunday, with stocks falling as much as 6% and Aramco alone shedding about $90 billion from its market value. That pushed the 14-day relative strength index for the Tadawul All Share Index below 30, indicating it's oversold. The benchmark inched up on Monday, making Saudi among the few markets that managed to eke out gains.

Dubai and Abu Dhabi were open on Friday and seemed to have weathered the storm better than most, but those bourses dropped about 3% Monday. In the weeks leading up to Trump’s tariff announcement, a handful of investors made the case for buying UAE stocks.

Ninety One’s emerging-markets equity team, which manages $11 billion in assets, favored the UAE as it seeks out “uncorrelated markets” to US tariffs, Jorgelina do Rosario and Selcuk Gokoluk reported at the time. Cheyne Capital’s hedge fund, too, has been betting on the country, citing the UAE’s currency peg to the dollar as a key reason.

But it’s perhaps not as clear cut as that, as traders across the Middle East found when they returned to their screens.

“In the short term, regional stock markets in the Gulf Cooperation Council are not immune to global sentiment,” said Fadi Arbid, founding partner and chief investment officer at Amwal Capital Partners. “We have seen it many times in the past like the global financial crisis, Covid, etc. The correlation is there.”

#Oman's Sohar International signals merger intent with Ahli Bank | Reuters

Oman's Sohar International signals merger intent with Ahli Bank | Reuters

Oman's Sohar International Bank (BKSB.OM), opens new tab said on Monday it plans to explore a merger with smaller rival Ahli Bank SAOG (ABOB.OM), opens new tab, in a potential deal that would create a lender with around 11.1 billion Omani rials ($28.84 billion) in assets.

Sohar International’s board has resolved to send a letter of intent to Ahli’s board to explore a potential merger between the two banks, the lender said in a statement.

Ahli did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the matter.

The proposed deal comes amid a wave of consolidation in the Gulf’s banking sector, as lenders seek to boost scale, cut costs, and remain competitive in a crowded market.

In Oman, several smaller banks have explored tie-ups in recent years to navigate tighter margins, rising compliance costs, and economic shifts linked to energy transition efforts.

Last year, Sohar International completed a merger with HSBC Bank Oman. Ahli Bank also fielded interest from domestic rival Bank Dhofar for a possible merger in 2023.

"Shareholders of Ahli Bank will receive a share consideration in Sohar International," it said in the letter, adding that the bank will take over all assets and liabilities of Ahli Bank after the merger closes.

Sohar International held total assets worth 7.36 billion Omani rials ($19.12 billion) as of Dec. 31, while Ahli Bank reported assets of more than 3.7 billion Omani rials.

Most Gulf markets slide as trade war stokes fears of global recession | Reuters

Most Gulf markets slide as trade war stokes fears of global recession | Reuters


Most stock markets in the Gulf ended lower on Monday, as equities across the world tanked on fears of a global recession caused by U.S. President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs and the escalating trade war.

China on Friday had announced retaliatory measures, with additional levies of 34% on American goods, confirming investor fears that a global trade war was underway.

When asked about selloff across markets, Trump on Sunday said that investors must endure the consequences and that he would refrain from negotiating with China until the U.S. trade deficit is addressed.

Dubai's main share index (.DFMGI), opens new tab declined 3.1%, recovering from the more-than-6% slump earlier in the session. The index was weighed by a 5.7% slide in sharia-compliant lender Dubai Islamic Bank (DISB.DU), opens new tab.

In Abu Dhabi, the index (.FTFADGI), opens new tab finished 2.6% lower, with energy firm ADNOC Gas (ADNOCGAS.AD), opens new tab retreating 5%.

Oil prices - a catalyst for the Gulf's financial markets - extended losses, falling 3% on concerns that a potential recession fuelled by the trade war could reduce demand for crude, even as OPEC+ readies a supply increase.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark index (.TASI), opens new tab reversed early losses to rebound 1.1%, led by a 6.8% jump in ACWA Power (2082.SE), opens new tab and a 4.8% increase in Saudi Arabian Mining Company (1211.SE), opens new tab.

In the previous session, the index fell 6.8%, its biggest one-day slide since the early days of the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic.

The Saudi market outlook could remain negative as long as the general market sentiment maintains its risk-off mood and oil prices continue to fall, said Hassan Fawaz, chairman and founder of broker GivTrade.

The kingdom's non-oil private sector activity grew rapidly in March, with new orders boosted by lower prices and improved economic conditions, although the rate of growth slowed from January's near 14-year high, a survey showed on Monday.

The Qatari index (.QSI), opens new tab lost 0.4%, with the Gulf's biggest lender Qatar National Bank (QNBK.QA), opens new tab losing 2.3%.

Investors also bet the mounting risk of recession could see the U.S. Federal Reserve cutting interest rates as early as May. The Fed's decisions impact monetary policy in the Gulf, where most currencies, including the riyals, are pegged to the U.S. dollar.

Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index (.EGX30), opens new tab lost 0.6%.

Sunday, 6 April 2025

Mideast Stocks, Aramco Sink on Twin Threat From Tariffs, Oil - Bloomberg

Mideast Stocks, Aramco Sink on Twin Threat From Tariffs, Oil - Bloomberg


Main equity benchmarks in Middle East countries including Saudi Arabia sank the most since 2020 on Sunday as investors reacted to the risks of a fresh global trade war and depressed oil prices.

Stocks on the kingdom’s main exchange fell as much as 6.1%, while gauges in Qatar and Kuwait dropped more than 5.5%. Equities in Tel Aviv dropped the most since October 2023, when Hamas launched the deadly attack on Israel that sparked the start of the war in Gaza. All four stock markets were closed on Friday.

Saudi Aramco — the world’s biggest oil exporter — was one of the biggest losers in the region. The company at one point erased more than $90 billion from its market capitalization.

Regional losses mounted following the global market rout that began last week after US President Donald Trump rolled out the highest tariffs in over a century on its trading partners. Investor anxiety and the threat of further declines across asset classes remain high after China retaliated with its own tariffs on Friday.

That adds to risks of a broader trade war and tit-for-tat measures that may roil supply chains and slow economic growth.

“In the short term, regional stock markets in the GCC are not immune to global sentiment,” said Fadi Arbid, founding partner and chief investment officer at Amwal Capital Partners Limited. “We have seen it many times in the past like the global financial crisis, Covid, etc. The correlation is there.”

Further threatening stocks in the Middle East is the potential for a sustained period of lower oil prices. Brent crude tumbled 13% on Thursday and Friday as OPEC+ added to market chaos with a plan to boost supply by triple what was originally intended in May.

The surprise boost, combined with demand pressure from US tariffs and trade wars, points to growing oversupply and increasing downside risk to prices, according to Bloomberg Intelligence analysts Salih Yilmaz and Will Hares.

Depressed crude markets put Middle East finances at risk as many countries require elevated prices to back spending and investment on their economic diversification strategies. Saudi Arabia, for instance, needs oil above $90 a barrel, according to the International Monetary Fund. Iraq also needs prices above $90 a barrel, while Kazakhstan would need it to be more than $115 a barrel, the IMF estimates.

Lower oil prices have already been squeezing Saudi finances in recent years, resulting in budget deficits and adjustments to spending on projects related to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s diversification agenda.

A renewed decline in oil revenues across the GCC risks slowing regional economic transformation plans and spending on mega projects, especially in the kingdom, according to Amwal’s Arbid.

He doesn’t expect any direct impact from the 10% tariff imposed by the US on GCC countries, noting the level is “low” and that political alignment with the US is “very strong.”

Trump is due to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday in Washington to discuss the possibility of a better tariff deal for the country. The US president is also expected to visit Saudi Arabia in the near future, in what would be his first international trip since returning to the White House in January.