Dubai - Arab Today
Petrochemical and banking shares boosted Saudi Arabia’s bourse on Sunday after oil prices firmed at the end of last week.
The Tadawul All Share Index (TASI) added 0.8 percent with nearly three-quarters of the 14 listed Saudi petrochemical shares advancing, after Brent oil futures LCOc1 closed 1.9 percent higher at $56.70 a barrel on Friday. Saudi Industrial Investment was the top gainer in the sector, jumping 5.5 percent.
The positive mood spilled into other sectors, with banking shares also advancing. Saudi British Bank climbed 3.8 percent.
Prince Alwaleed bin Talal’s Kingdom Holding rose 2.2 percent after it traded 90 percent of its shares in Euro Disney into Walt Disney Co. stock, gaining a net profit of $61 million in the deal.
Dubai’s main index added 0.5 percent on the back of an 8.6 percent jump in Dubai Financial Market (DFM). Last week, DFM reported its fourth-quarter net profit had jumped five times from the prior-year period.
GFH Financial Group climbed 5.3 percent after the Bahrain-based company announced that one of its subsidiaries had raised $50 million for one of its funds and the financial impact was expected to be reflected in first-quarter results.
Dubai Investment added 1.6 percent after a subsidiary acquired a shopping center in Ventura, California. The value of the acquisition was not disclosed.
But shares in builder Arabtec lost 2.2 percent ahead of quarterly results expected to be announced on Monday.
After the market closed on Sunday Reuters reported, quoting unnamed sources, that Arabtec was working with boutique investment bank Moelis to study options for the company’s capital structure. A mandate for restructuring advisory firm AlixPartners to reduce overheads for the loss-making builder was completed at the end of last year.
In Abu Dhabi, RAK Properties gained 1.3 percent after its full-year net profit rose 9.2 percent and revenue in 2016 came in 6 percent higher.
But the Abu Dhabi index closed near flat as blue-chip banks capped gains. National Bank of Abu Dhabi (NBAD) fell 1.4 percent.
Kuwait’s index rebounded 0.8 percent in heavy volume, recovering most of Thursday’s losses. Jazeera Airways rose 1.5 percent after the board recommended a cash dividend of 35 fils per share. The airline reported a drop of 29.9 percent in 2016 full-year net profit.
National Real Estate, however, lost 5.3 percent after it signed to obtain a $101.5 million, five-year convertible loan from a subsidiary of Agility. The loan has the option of conversion into NREC shares before maturity. Agility slumped 7.1 percent.
In Egypt, the main index retreated 1.5 percent to 12,922 points, pulling away from resistance on its record high of 13,544 points, hit last month.
Analysts at Cairo’s Naeem Brokerage said the company might see some pricing pressure in the first quarter of 2017 but the longer-term demand outlook for cement remained healthy.
Source: Arab News