05/05/2015 00:27 AST

A regulatory drive to reduce the volatility around initial public offers of shares is bolstering the Saudi funds sector and also creating an opportunity for international investors to sidestep the kingdom's foreign ownership restrictions.

With Saudi Arabia about to open its $575 billion stock market to direct foreign participation for the first time on June 15, both local and international investors are positioning themselves to trade the largest Arab bourse.
For the Saudi Capital Market Authority, a major motive for opening the market is the desire to create more stability in a bourse currently dominated by local retail investors who are prone to short-term thinking.
The same desire for stability can be seen in the regulator's stance towards IPOs; listing of stocks has traditionally been accompanied by massive volatility in their prices, so the CMA is encouraging investments in share flotations by IPO funds.
The result is a huge jump in the number of IPO funds offered in the kingdom. These open-ended funds, which specialise in subscribing to IPOs but often have broader remits, are run by CMA-regulated firms, from large commercial banks to investment houses.
Of the 12 such funds tracked by Zawya Funds Monitor, a Thomson Reuters unit, nine have been established in the last 12 months.
"It seems everyone is doing an IPO fund because the CMA is encouraging it and not allowing the (fund and asset) managers to take stakes in IPOs unless the companies do a fund," said James Stull, senior associate at law firm King & Spalding. The CMA didn't respond to requests for comment.
The potential profits are considerable. Many Saudi listings are offered at a substantial discount to normal valuations as a way for the kingdom to spread its oil riches to the population.
For example, when National Commercial Bank was sold to investors last year, it was priced at an 18.8 per cent return on equity, compared with a 13.4 per cent average for the sector. When NCB listed, its shares rose their 10 per cent daily limit for the first three days.
The average performance of Saudi IPO funds in the last three years has been 37 per cent per annum, according to Muscat Capital, which set up its fund earlier this year. The wider stock market returned about 10 per cent per annum in that time.
“A lot of the older companies are out of fashion and unprofitable, but the new ones have a lot of scrutiny from the regulator (in the run-up to a flotation) so it is obvious to investors that they are good, clean companies," said Beshr Bakheet, managing director of Osool & Bakheet, which set up the first IPO fund in the kingdom.

"And the pricing of these companies is below fair market value, so that is good for us." FOREIGNERS
Around the Gulf, IPOs are often reserved for local citizens; foreigners are excluded from subscribing to them and can only buy shares in the secondary market. This is expected to be the case in Saudi Arabia even after the market opens.
Putting money into IPO funds offers foreigners a way around this restriction, because when investing in the funds they effectively become classified as local investors.
The extent of foreign investment in IPO funds varies from fund to fund. However, "anybody is welcome - an investor is an investor," said Bakheet, adding that foreigners from outside the kingdom needed to invest through a local counterparty.
Foreigners are also being attracted by an even newer development in the Saudi funds sector, pre-IPO funds. Offered by Saudi investment firms, these closed-ended funds provide growth capital for Saudi companies and advice from professional investors in the run-up to listings in exchange for equity stakes. Investments are held until the companies go public.
For Western private equity firms, which have increasingly been looking to do deals in the kingdom, the benefits of pre-IPO funds are two-fold.


Reuters

Ticker Price Volume
RIBL 13.83 1,519,548

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%)
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