22/06/2015 16:19 AST

There is much hype about the opening up of the Saudi stock market, but any detached view is least supportive of optimism.

The more realistic assessment is based on the fact that the market has already factored in the positivity and moved too far ahead in the expectation of large foreign inflows, making the market expensive for any new entrants.

According to the assessment of Bank of America Merrill Lynch, given the expectation for large foreign inflows, the market has re-rated strongly, with P/E's expanding 31 percent year to date. This is despite net earnings downgrades of 13 percent and a very weak earnings revision ratio, which has been below 1.0 since May 2014.

This strength has left Saudi market looking relatively expensive to both historical levels and relative to emerging markets on a range of valuation metrics. According to BofA Merrill Lynch, the market is trading on a 12 month forward P/E of 16.4 times, a 16 percent premium to its post 2009 average and a 31 percent premium to the emerging markets.

A serious problem with the Saudi market is that the fundamentals look relatively unsupportive, especially in the near term. BofA ML has based this assessment of the weak earnings momentum and the weakness in oil prices, apart from the high valuations. The premium valuation can be observed across most sectors.

It says the Saudi market suffers from a very weak earnings revision ratio of 0.27, indicating a significant higher number of downgrades than upgrades. Also, given a relatively over supplied market and signs that US supply growth could resume amidst the recent run up in prices, the oil price outlook is negative.

While the Saudi market's correlation to the oil price has weakened since 2008, a sharp downward correction could raise concerns on the economic outlook for the Kingdom and its ability to meet public spending commitments without drawing against reserves.

These considerations have prompted the bank to go underweight on the Saudi equity market. Consequently, the bank's investment strategy calls for caution and reliance on stock picking to generate superior returns.


The Arabian Post

Ticker Price Volume
SABIC 114.77 5,915,941
SAMBA 26.98 1,138,683
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%)
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