28/03/2015 06:04 AST

Economies and markets in the Gulf oil exporters barely blinked when rebels overran parts of neighbouring Iraq last year, and they look likely to ride out escalating conflict in Yemen with similar ease.

A war would probably dent the confidence of international investors in the entire Gulf. It could pose a domestic security challenge for Saudi Arabia. As a result, majority of stock markets in the six-member Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) slid on Thursday.

But other market indicators showed little worry.

Gulf bonds barely moved and credit default swaps, used to hedge against sovereign defaults, rose only marginally; five-year Saudi CDs are up just 4 basis points in the past week.

That is because the GCC states have shown over the last few years that they're able to insulate their economies from geopolitical threats, such as the turmoil in Iraq and the Arab Spring uprisings of 2011, fund managers and analysts said.

Sergey Dergachev, senior portfolio manager for emerging market debt at Union Investment Privatfonds in Germany, which has about €10 billion ($11 billion) of emerging market debt under management, said he did not expect Yemen to prompt any large-scale reassessment of investments in the GCC.

"The impact on key GCC countries like Qatar or UAE will be miniscule in terms of their credit profile," he said, adding that any selling of bonds by foreign investors would be offset by local institutions buying in at cheaper levels.

Saleem Khokhar, managing $3 billion of assets as head of equities at National Bank of Abu Dhabi, said the Yemen conflict was a political concern but would not have a dramatic impact on economies in the region.

Local investors

"I don't think it'll derail economic prospects as a whole for the GCC," he said. "Weakness in the stock market is to be short-lived — the market should then begin to stabilise, settle and recover."

The GCC has almost zero economic exposure to Yemen, analysts said — even less than it does to Iraq, where some GCC energy and telecommunications firms have big operations that have suffered over the past six months.

In fact, as past geopolitical crises have shown, GCC economies may actually benefit from the Yemen conflict if it pushes up oil prices, increasing export revenues. Yemen has been selling about 1.4-1.5 million barrels of oil per month; if that dries up, Saudi Arabia may fill much of the gap.

So the risk for the GCC is any expansion of the conflict beyond Yemen's borders, said Abdul Kadir Hussain, who oversees about $1.2 billion in assets as chief executive at Mashreq Capital, the investment unit of Dubai's Mashreq bank.

"I think the probability of such an event is very low, but clearly the impact of something like that would be very high."

Dergachev said he was concerned about the potential role of Yemeni workers in Saudi Arabia, who have been estimated to number around 1 million or more. Other risks include regional terrorism and the mass movement of refugees across borders.

There is no clear sign that any of these risks will materialise, however, and the GCC has resisted such threats for years. Saudi Arabia expelled all Yemeni workers in 1990 after Iraq invaded Kuwait, and expelled tens of thousands in 2013 and 2014 during a crackdown on illegal foreign labour.

Many analysts attributed this week's slide of the Saudi and other Gulf stock markets as much to profit-taking and concern about upcoming first-quarter earnings as to geopolitics. "If the situation remains contained and does not spread out, the markets will stabilise or even rebound," said Shakeel Sarwar, head of asset management at Securities & Investment Co in Bahrain.


Times of Oman

Ticker Price Volume
SABIC 114.77 5,915,941
Saudi Public Investment Fund signs agreement with Six Flags to create amusement park in Riyadh

05/04/2018

Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund (PIF) has signed an agreement with Six Flags to develop and design an amusement park in Riyadh. Six Flags, the world’s leading international amusement park compa

Arab News

Green energy drive will boost KSA employment: Saudi Arabia’s renewable energy chief

05/04/2018

In an exclusive interview with Arab News, Turki Mohammed Al-Shehri explains how an expanding renewables industry will boost employment as well as pave the way for a greener future.

A massiv

Arab News

Dubai house prices, rents drop in first quarter of 2018

05/04/2018

Dubai’s residential property market continued to soften in the first three months of this year, in line with analysts’ forecasts, with rental values recording a more pronounced fall than sales prices

The National

Saudi Arabia lifts GCC index buoyed by strong oil prices

05/04/2018

Buoyed by a strong oil price of $70 per barrel, Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul shot up by over 6 per cent in March 2018, according to Kuwait Financial Centre’s (Markaz’s) recently released Monthly Markets Re

Times of Oman

Banks’ real estate credit at QR147.7bn

05/04/2018

Qatar banks’ combined credit facilities to real estate sector rose by QR17bn to QR147.7bn in 2017. The banks’ credit to various sectors stood at QR911bn at the end of 2017, up from QR839bn recorded i

The Peninsula