12/12/2014 06:24 AST

Gulf stock markets fell sharply yesterday as panic selling spread across the region after oil dropped to a fresh five-year low; Dubai’s main index sank 7.4%, its biggest daily loss in six years.

Brent crude tumbled on Wednesday to $63.56 per barrel on comments by Saudi Arabia’s oil minister again implying that Riyadh would make no output cut to support prices. It ticked up early yesterday but was still trading below $65 when most markets in the region closed. Dubai’s index slid to 3,595 points, breaking major technical support at 3,731 points, the July trough, and hitting its lowest level since January. There is no major chart support left in the vicinity.

Many economists and fund managers think cheap oil will not hurt the big Gulf economies much, since governments have built up huge fiscal reserves which they can use to keep spending high for many years even if they run budget deficits.

In contrast to Gulf markets’ 2008 crash, there are few signs of stress on the overall financial system. Credit default swaps are still low, bond yields have not surged, and forwards do not suggest serious pressure on the region’s currency pegs to the US dollar. Real estate markets in Dubai and elsewhere are not plunging, and banks are in good shape around the region.

Nevertheless, the sudden slide in oil is prompting the retail investors who dominate local stock markets to dump shares in an effort to preserve profits. In Dubai, the selling has been magnified by margin calls and the need to raise money to repay bank loans that were taken out to buy shares on the way up.

“What we see is panic selling - people sell whatever they can irrespective of valuations,” said Shakeel Sarwar, head of asset management at Securities & Investment Co in Bahrain. “I don’t see any reason for this to stop unless oil price uncertainty is removed.”

Dubai’s two most traded stocks, developer Emaar Properties and builder Arabtec Holding, tumbled 9.1% and 7.8% respectively while all sectors were deep in the red.

The market’s year-to-date gains, which reached 59.5% on May 6, have now dwindled to 6.7%. The market has lost $28.3bn of value in the same period, excluding newly listed stocks. The main index in Abu Dhabi tumbled 4.7% yesterday, its worst daily performance in five years, in an equally broad sell-off. Developer Aldar Properties dominated turnover and sank its daily 10% limit.

Regulators or other authorities in the UAE and elsewhere are not expected to intervene to try to halt the drop of markets. A possible exception is Kuwait, which in the past has used a state fund to support blue chips during sharp market downturns.

Other Gulf markets also posted heavy losses yesterday. Oman’s bourse lost 4.2% to 5,808 points, its lowest level since February 2013.

Oman and Bahrain are two Gulf nations most vulnerable to the plunge in oil because of their relatively weak state finances. The Muscat government has already announced plans to cut gas subsidies for industrial consumers in order to raise money.

Gulf Investment Services, a firm with interests in the hospitality sector, tumbled its daily 10% limit, extending losses after Oman’s advisory council voted to ban alcohol, a move which if approved by the government could hurt the tourism industry.

Saudi Arabia’s stock market, which closes later than others in the Gulf, recovered most of its intra-day losses as oil briefly rebounded to $65. The benchmark, which had dropped 2.5% in the previous session and erased all its year-to-date gains, ended 0.2% lower.

Meanwhile, Egypt’s index dropped 2.2% in response to the gloom in the Gulf.

“The hangover from the oil price decline is hurting the sentiment in the Gulf and spilling over into Egypt,” said Allen Sandeep, director of research at Naeem brokerage in Cairo.


Reuters

Ticker Price Volume
SABIC 114.77 5,915,941

GB GCC 4,414.00 14.48 (0.33%)

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
Foreign investors pile into Saudi Arabia in March amid kingdom's FTSE upgrade

05/04/2018

Foreign investors bought $1.18 billion in Middle East and North African equities in March, especially Saudi ones amid the kingdom’s upgrade to emerging market status by FTSE Russell, according to a r

The National

Muscat bourse gains lifted by activity in financial shares

05/04/2018

Buying activity in financials lifted the MSM30 Index to 4,794.61 points, up 0.41 per cent. The MSM Sharia Index closed at 676.52 points, down 0.08 per cent. Gulf Investment Services was the most acti

Times of Oman

Dubai bourse takes a hit in traded value

05/04/2018

Traded value on the Dubai Financial Market tumbled on Wednesday as global stocks declined amid an intensifying US-China trade war. In Abu Dhabi, banking shares surged ahead of first quarter results s

Gulf News

Financial blue chips drive Muscat bourse recovery

04/04/2018

Driven by financial blue chips, the MSM30 Index continued its recovery to close at 4,775.27 points, a gain of 0.53 per cent. The MSM Sharia Index ended at 677.06 points, down 0.07 per cent. HSBC Bank

Times of Oman

Emaar Properties stock hits new one-year low

04/04/2018

Emaar Properties shares extended losses for another session on Tuesday, to hit their lowest level in a year, as selling continued on the wider Dubai gauge. Emaar Properties fell to a low of Dh5.58, b

Gulf News