Riyadh: Saudi Arabia is considering further steps to open up the Arab world's largest bourse to foreign investment, the head of the Capital Market Authority (CMA) said in remarks published Saturday.
In 2008, the word's top oil exporter and Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries member allowed so-called swap agreements between non-resident foreign investors and local intermediaries, permitting indirect foreign ownership on the bourse.
Previously, foreigners could enter the Saudi stock market only through selected funds.
But large international investors such as pension funds have held off investment on a large scale pending further steps to allow entry to the market and hope for eventual full ownership.
"We want to study new ways through which the foreign investor can enter," Abdul Rahman Al Tuwaijri, chairman of the CMA, told Al Watan newspaper.
Future investments could go through new funds, he said, without giving details.
He said foreign funds played an important role in stabilising the market but there were also risks involved and any further steps to open up should not have a negative impact on the bourse.
"It's correct that foreign investment has many benefits but at the same time there is the risk of hot money getting in and then pulled out in large sums," he said.
He said some liquidity had been pulled out of the Saudi bourse like in neighbouring markets as a result of global turmoil but the bourse was otherwise in good shape.