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Business / Qatar Business

Qatari bourse index adds 45.53 points

Published: 30 Sep 2013 - 01:01 am | Last Updated: 29 Jan 2022 - 07:10 pm

Doha: Qatar Exchange index added 45.53 points, or 0.48 percent advance to 9,626.30 points from 9,580.77 on Thursday. 

The volume of the shares traded up to 6,733,015 from  6,106,602 on Thursday and the value of shares decreased to QR278,500,585.62 from QR338,467,035.34 on Thursday.

Among the top gainers were Qatar National Bank which was up 0.36 percent to QR167.50, Industries Qatar gained 1.08 percent to QR149.10, Ooredoo added 0.43 percent to QR140.10 and Qatar Navigation up by 1.50 percent to QR81.

The Banking and Financial sector index was added 0.11 points while Consumer Goods and Services sector index lost 0.85 points. The industrial sector was up 0.75 points while insurance sector gained 0.05 points.

Meanwhile,  Dubai’s shares rose to their highest level in almost five years in heavy trading yesterday as retail investors bet on small-caps ahead of third-quarter earnings, while other regional markets were mixed. 

Dubai’s benchmark advanced 1.2 percent to 2,771 points, its highest finish since November 2008, taking year-to-date gains to 70.8 percent. Turnover surged to Dh1.3bn ($354m), the biggest daily value since a spike on June 3. 

“We have a lot of catalysts — real estate is doing well, the Expo 2020 decision is coming up and later, people will start gearing up for the MSCI upgrade,” said Amer Khan, fund manager at Shuaa Asset Management. “Political risk has dissipated and the outlook is positive.”    

Yesterday’s rise suggested a break above the August peak of 2,762 points, though another daily close will be needed for confirmation. A double bottom formed by lows dating back to 2009 points the index up to the 3,500-point area in the long term.

The World Expo committee will make a decision on November 27 on whether or not Dubai will win the rights to host the world’s fair in 2020. Index compiler MSCI upgraded the United Arab Emirates and Qatar to emerging market status earlier this year, which will bring in fresh foreign funds when it takes effect in June 2014. 

Khan said that despite Dubai’s hefty 2013 gains, the market was not expensive in terms of valuations because of the positive catalysts. Analysts are expecting modest profit growth for the third quarter, however, with the hot summer having a dampening effect on some sectors. 

Small-cap Gulf Navigation surged 15 percent yesterday, leaving it up 82.1 percent since the firm’s announcement of plans to sell some ships and raise capital a week ago. It accounted for more than a third of total shares trading. 

Thursday’s news that Dubai will double its land transaction fee to 4 percent did not dampen the real estate market or property stocks significantly.

“Even if the fee is increased by the DLD, in the global context, purchase costs will still be relatively low,” property consultants Knight Frank said in a report.

In Saudi Arabia, the index declined 0.4 percent, down for a fourth consecutive session to hit a two-week low. 

Investors sold most large-cap stocks ahead of third-quarter earnings. Analysts and investors are expecting most earnings growth to come from sectors that rely on domestic demand, which benefits from a strong economy and growing population. 

Agencies