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DUBAI GROWS 80pc THIS YEAR

Mideast funds stay bullish on equities

Dubai, October 31, 2013

Fund managers in the Middle East show little sign of taking money off the table as a year of strong gains for Gulf stock markets nears its end, a Reuters survey showed.
    
Dubai's market, rebounding from the bursting of a real estate bubble in 2008-2010, is up 80 percent so far this year, while Kuwait is up 33 percent and Saudi Arabia has gained 18 percent.

While normally such gains might be expected to invite heavy profit-taking, most fund managers in the monthly survey of 16 leading Middle East-based investment institutions said they felt the markets had enough momentum to keep rising.

The survey, conducted in the past 10 days by Trading Middle East, a Reuters forum for market professionals, found 56 percent
 of the managers saying they expected to increase their overall equity allocation to the Middle East in the next three months, while only 6 percent expected to reduce it.

That was slightly more bullish than September, when 50 percent expected to increase equity allocations and 13 percent to decrease them.
    
"We do not see any resolution (other than postponing) to the biggest challenge in the global markets, namely, unwinding of leverage," said Tariq Qaqish, head of asset management at Al Mal Capital in the UAE.

"With this in mind, we expect investors to embrace more risk until the Fed (US central bank) eventually starts tapering its quantitative easing programme. We continue to remain positive on equities as an outperforming asset class."

Because of the spectacular gains in United Arab Emirates stock markets, opinion among fund managers is most sharply
 divided about them.

Twenty-five percent of managers in the latest survey expected to increase their UAE equity allocations and 25 percent to decrease them, while the rest intended to keep them the same.

In the September survey, the figures were 31 percent for an increase and 38 percent for a decrease.

"We all believe the strong fundamentals that Dubai and Abu Dhabi have, and yes we agree that markets were undervalued, but after making around 80 percent in 10 months, I think we should
 underweight UAE and be cautious since we might see the correction very soon," said Abdullah Al Durdunji, chief treasury officer at the Abu Dhabi Fund for Development.


But Mohammed Ali Yasin, managing director at NBAD Securities, said much would depend on whether Dubai was in late November awarded the right to host the 2020 World Expo. It is competing for that right with three other cities. A win could help to justify heavy real estate and
infrastructure investment in Dubai, and could push Dubai's stock index towards a gain of 100 percent for this year, Yasin said.

If its Expo bid is unsuccessful, the market could trim this year's gains to 65-70 percent.

The latest survey also showed slightly less optimism about Saudi Arabian equities; 56 percent of fund managers said they
expected to increase their allocations there, compared to 75 percent in September.
    
Disappointing third-quarter earnings from several Saudi consumer sector companies, which previously were heavily bought by local retail investors, have knocked that market back moderately in the last several days.

The survey suggested sentiment towards Egypt continues to improve gradually as fund managers hope the political and economic environment there will stabilise next year after planned elections.

Forty-four percent of managers expected to raise their equity allocations to Egypt in the next three months, while 19 percent expected to decrease them. In September, 38 percent
 expected to increase their Egyptian investment. - Reuters




Tags: Dubai | stocks | equities | markets |

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