31/12/2010 00:00 AST

Trading volumes have plunged in the last two years, putting many brokers out of business

TRADING volumes are a fraction of what they were just two years ago, and broker-dealers are closing up shop for lack of business. But a merger of the three stock exchanges of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), a move that could solve many of these woes in one stroke, remains entangled in politics and technical problems.

While stock market trading across the Middle East has dropped off sharply with the onset of the global financial crisis, figures from the Arab Monetary Fund (AMF) released Thursday show that two of the UAE’s bourses shrunk the most last year: Volume on the Dubai Financial Market (DFM) plunged 61 percent this year and on the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange (ADX) by 51 percent through Dec. 29.

Only Nasdaq Dubai, which isn’t included the AMF figures, showed some improvement this year, with the value of securities traded reaching $1.2 billion in the first 11 months, compared with $1.08 billion for all of 2009.

The sensitivity of the merger issue came to light last week when the advisory board of the UAE’s Securities and Commodities Authority (ESCA) publicly backed a merger, saying “the markets would witness significant growth if merged into one.” Within hours, ESCA retracted the statement, attributing it to an error in translation from Arabic.

But brokers and investors are nearly unanimous that a merger is urgently needed. Jeff Singer, the chief executive officer of Nasdaq Dubai, has come out publicly in favor of a limited tie-up that would enable investors to trade on a single platform with much the same rules and regulations.

“A merger is definitely positive from our perspective,” V. Subramanyeswara Sarma, an investment analyst at Dubai International Securities said. “The most important thing is the volume, which has dwindled quite significantly for all three exchanges in the last past 1-1/2 to two years. For survival and ease of operations, it’s imperative (for brokers) to reduce their operating costs.”

The DFM lists 98 brokers on its website but when end-of-2010 figures are released the number will probably fall to about 80, as operations with the highest costs drop out in the face of declining business, industry executives say.

For the stock exchanges, a merger would help them eliminate duplicate staff and infrastructure. Investors would gain by having all UAE companies available to trade on a single platform, with a single set of rules and regulations. For instance now, the DFM lists the property giant Emaar while Nasdaq Dubai is the only exchange to trade DP World, one of the world’s biggest port operators. The DFM and AFX are regulated by ESCA while the Nasdaq Dubai answers to the Dubai Financial Services Authority.

Merger discussions on a governmental level have been under way since at least last March. Reports surfaced in June a decision was imminent. Traders say ESCA’s flip-flop on the prospective merger could have been an honest error but suspect officials would prefer to avoid public discussion of the subject until they have reached a consensus on how to proceed.

For more on this Click Here


Arab News

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

ADX 4,608.97 23.76 (0.52%)

Market
Dividend Yield (%)
P/E
Price/BookValue
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
ADIB 3.91 0.02 (0.51%)
FAB 11.95 0.20 (1.70%)
ADCB 6.60 0.05 (0.76%)
CBI 0.87 0.11 (14.47%)
FGB 0.00 0.00 (0.00%)

DFM 3,091.15 -9.24 (-0.30%)

Market
Dividend Yield (%)
P/E
Price/BookValue
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
EMIRATESNBD 10.65 0.05 (0.47%)
EIB 9.50 0.00 (0.00%)
EMAAR 5.61 -0.03 (-0.54%)
EMAARMALLS 2.16 0.00 (0.00%)
DIB 5.30 0.00 (0.00%)
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