Dubai - Arab Today
Saudi Arabia’s stock market declined for a fourth straight day on Wednesday after oil prices fell further.
The Tadawul All Share Index (TASI) pulled back 1.6 percent to 6,895 points, falling below technical support at the mid-December low of 7,002 points. Another straight close below support would confirm a break, triggering a double top formed by the December and January peaks and pointing down to around 6,770 points.
The market had rebounded more than 30 percent from its October lows so analysts said profit-taking pressure was inevitable.
“Beyond fourth-quarter earnings, which may show moderate improvement in earnings for some sectors like banks, investors will be focusing on economic reforms in 2017,” said Santhosh Balakrishnan, senior analyst at Riyad Capital.
In that environment, he added, stocks are only likely to rise if earnings come in much higher than analysts’ expectations.
Yanbu National Petrochemical Co. jumped as much as 4 percent in the first hour of trade on Wednesday but closed flat after it reported a 53.4 percent rise in fourth-quarter net profit to SR602.85 million ($161 million), in line with analysts’ forecasts.
Twelve of the 13 other listed petrochemical producers declined with heavyweight Saudi Basic Industries dropping 0.5 percent. All 12 listed banks were weak, with Al Rajhi falling 1.2 percent.
Meanwhile, Dubai’s main index pulled back 0.1 percent to 3,722 points. Union Properties dropped 1.7 percent and Dubai Financial Market, the only listed exchange in the Gulf, closed 1.4 percent lower.
But some shares in the insurance sector outperformed with Islamic Arab Insurance surged 6.5 percent in heavy trade to its highest close since August 2015. There is speculation that the finance and insurance industries may witness further tie-ups after the impending merger of National Bank of Abu Dhabi and First Gulf Bank.
Insurers were also volatile in neighboring Abu Dhabi. Methaq Takaful Insurance jumped 5 percent but Al-Khazna Insurance slumped 8.5 percent. The main index fell 0.1 percent.
Source: Arab News