19/04/2015 00:09 AST

As Saudi Arabia's $500 billion-plus bourse prepares to open its doors to foreigners in June, outside investors appear ready to accept the political and financial risks as they finally get access to a market that rivals Brazil and Russia's.

Worth more than all other Gulf Arab markets combined, it is one of the last major global bourses to allow direct investment from foreigners and the opening is the most anticipated economic reform in the region of recent times.

The move is likely to start the process of incorporating Saudi Arabia into major equity indices by the likes of MSCI, and this could attract as much as $24 billion in foreign capital, according to one estimate.

Foreigners will still not have unfettered access and definitive rules have yet to be published. And yet the prospect of market opening has already helped the Saudi stock index to outperform its Gulf peers over the past 12 months.

Nevertheless, the index is down 2.7 per cent in the period as revenue from the Saudi oil industry, which accounts for more than 90 per cent of government income, has shrivelled.

Saudi involvement in the conflict in neighbouring Yemen has also heightened political risk. Yet even in combination with relatively high stock valuations, this seems to have done little to dispel investors' enthusiasm.

"Everyone wants to have a crack at Saudi Arabia," said Nick Smythie, chief investment strategist at Emerging Global Advisors. "It's the biggest market in the Middle East and a substantial country which offers exposure not just to energy but also to infrastructure, financials and other sectors."

While market capitalisations vary with stock prices and currency rates, the Saudi bourse is currently worth $528 billion compared with $600 billion for Brazil and $491 billion for Russia. It features the world's largest chemicals producer, Saudi Basic Industries Corp, and Saudi Telecom Co , the Gulf's biggest telecoms operator.

At the moment foreigners have access to the market only through swaps and exchange-traded funds, and the opening has been slower than many investors expected.

In August last year, the Capital Markets Authorities (CMA) published draft rules governing the opening of its bourse to so-called qualified foreign investors and started consultations.

These proposed foreign ownership be capped at 10 per cent of the market's total value and 20 per cent of any particular stock. A single foreign investor could own no more than 5 per cent of any listed company.

Final rules will be published on May 4 and the market will open by June 15, the CMA said on Thursday.

"We have been excited about Saudi Arabia for 10 years so we are not holding our breath - they will move at their own speed and requirement," said Smythie.

Some investors had hoped the final rules could be published further ahead of May 12, when index provider MSCI announces semi-annual changes to its benchmarks and could start the process of including Saudi Arabia in its indexes that track stocks in emerging markets or frontier markets - a less developed and higher risk sub-set of emerging economies.

EXPENSIVE VALUATIONS

The process could take a minimum of two years, said Pavlo Taranenko, vice president and senior researcher at MSCI, adding that the company could make announcements at any time.

"We have to make sure that market is sufficiently acceptable in terms of a number of parameters and that our index is investable and replicable," said Taranenko.

MSCI launched a provisional Saudi index based on the draft rules. If this were used as the basis for incorporation into its emerging markets index, Saudi Arabia would have a 1.5-2 per cent weighting, meaning it would at least match Turkey's current weighting and be bigger than Poland and Chile's.


Reuters

Ticker Price Volume
SABIC 114.77 5,915,941
RIBL 13.83 1,519,548
JARIR 177.89 111,251
STC 83.41 257,644
DARALARKAN 13.47 74,648,349

TASI 7,871.67 71.90 (0.92%)

Market
P/E
Price/BookValue
Dividend Yield (%)
Performance
  • 1-Month
  • 3-Month
  • 1-Year
Volume Change
  • 10D Avg Vs 90D Avg
Index vs...
  • 52-w high
  • 50-day moving avg.
  • 200-Day Moving Avg
Ticker Price Change
SABIC 114.77 0.02 (0.01%)
STC 83.41 2.09 (2.57%)
NCB 64.98 0.35 (0.54%)
RJHI 76.03 0.78 (1.03%)
SECO 20.62 0.12 (0.58%)
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