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Business Markets

Abu Dhabi’s ADX and DFM in Dubai hold the line as global markets slip into red

Go risk-off or pick up value or high dividend giving stocks



UAE stock markets did not join in the broad sell-off witnessed in the US and then extending to Asia and Saudi Arabia on Thursday (May 19).
Image Credit: Gulf News Archive

Dubai: First, the bad news – investors are starting to get really worried about what they should be doing with their stock holdings. The result? US stocks, including some of the bluest of blue-chips, took a beating on Wednesday (May 18) and which extended into sharp sell-offs in most Asian markets.

In the UAE, the DFM remained mostly flat, even with the bellwether stocks such as Emaar Properties (down 1.01 per cent), DEWA (-1.13 per cent) and Emirates NBD (-0.37 per cent) were all trailing at 01.10 pm. Going flat the day after the S&P 500 was down 4.04 per cent and Nasdaq by 4.73 per cent should constitute as a win in itself.

Craig Erlam

Oil prices are on the rise again as Shanghai takes a big step towards reopening following three days of no new cases in the broader community. Restrictions have been tight in many cities across China which have helped keep a lid on oil prices in this very tight market. But with activity now likely to pick up, crude prices could be on the rise once more.

- Craig Erlam, Senior Market Analyst at Oanda

But it was ADX that brought the cheer and the good news. The Abu Dhabi index was up 1.13 per cent, with market-setting stocks such as IHC and Alpha Dhabi gaining 8.75 per cent and 1.17 per cent, respectively. (The latter had announced a Dh9 billion participation in a new venture capital fund that will look at investments in the US and elsewhere, in areas such as AI and fintech.)

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“Even with a brutal sell-off in the US, ADX’s gains can be fully attributed to IHC since the stock rose by 7.6 per cent after the Dh7 billion strategic investment in India’s Adani Group portfolio companies,” said Vijay Valecha, Chief Investment Officer at Century Financial.

Even though a global economic slowdown is anticipated, business acquisitions and investments don’t seem to slow down in the Arab region. They have so far depicted resilience to withstand the turbulent times.

- Vijay Valecha of Century Financial

ADX has gained 18 per cent year-to-date while the US global benchmark is down 17 per cent.

Fretting about oil

In Saudi Arabia, investor sentiment seems mixed, with the Tadawul dropping 2.75 per cent on Thursday, mostly driven by oil’s price flip-flops. “Surging inflation and aggressive Fed tightening could result in an economic slowdown and which could lead to lower oil prices in Q3/Q4 of 2022,” said Valecha. “If that happens, demand could weaken for oil and Gulf economies will feel the brunt, and that sentiment has dragged down the Saudi market.” (Brent crude is at $108.3 a barrel on Thursday afternoon.)

Daniel Takieddine

The Abu Dhabi stock market continued to recover thanks to the strong oil prices and could reach its peak. The market is also seeing support from the announced IPO of ADNOC’s subsidiary, which could be one of the largest this year. The Dubai market recorded significant increases in the last few months and could see additional price corrections along with other international markets.

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- Daniel Takieddine, CEO - MENA at BDSwiss

What should investors do?

Depending on whether the prevailing mood is risk-free, then they should be looking even more closely at value – real value, mind you. Any company with the promise of solid dividend payouts – think DEWA and the promised one from the UAE’s latest IPO Borouge – should keep investors insulated against any future corrections. Repeat the process elsewhere as well.

“Record inflation levels worldwide hint at adding inflation-hedging stocks to one’s portfolio and one could consider utility service companies like DEWA, e& (formerly Etisalat), du and consumer staples such as Dubai Refreshments,” said Valecha. “These stocks may be less impacted by the overall selloff in the broader market.”

Recession vs stagflation

Analysts are starting to repeat the dreaded ‘stagflation’ chant, whereby economies suffer through rising consumer prices, high unemployment and tepid growth. Is such a scenario worse than whatever a recession brings in its wake?

A recession would perhaps be a positive outcome from all of this in the coming months

- Simon Ballard of FAB Global Markets
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“A recession would imply that even though current monetary tightening moves will send the global economy into restrictive territory, a higher rates complex will at least succeed in its intended goal of quashing inflation pressures,” writes Simon Ballard, Chief Economist – Markets Insight & Strategy at FAB Global Markets.

Not so with stagflation. “Global markets overnight – and again this morning – appear to be pricing in the far more worrying scenario of stagflation developing over the coming months, fueled by the combination of rising and perhaps largely interest rate-resilient global inflation, tighter monetary policy by the Fed and the BoE, subsequent slowing global economic growth as well as disrupted supply chains due to the war in Ukraine, all alongside China’s restrictive zero-Covid policies,” said Ballard in the note.

Each of the points he notes on their own have the power to hurt the global economy. Taken together, they constitute quite the nightmare scenario.

Raed Hamed Alkhedr

Many countries are facing a cost-of-living crisis and, to make matters worse, the cost of borrowing is rising too. As a result, there have been aggressive falls in assets, such as stocks, industrial metals, and cryptocurrencies. Oil is holding up relatively well, but that is due to concerns about supply rather than robust levels of demand.

- Raed Hamed Alkhedr, regional Head of Market Research at Equiti

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Watch the action

Unless investors want to do a Warren Buffett redux and make some buying the dip, they are better off on the sidelines. Only the brave would think of pumping crypto-assets back to anywhere close to their earlier prominence, while gold, for now, seems bound to the $1,800-$1,820 an ounce range.

Or the stock markets could bounce back overnight. According to Ballard at FAB Global Markets, “Given the magnitude of the US selloff into the close (on Wednesday), we would suggests that there could be an element of ‘dip buying’ today. US stock futures certainly also suggest that this could be the case…”.

So, which button will investors push? The risk-off? Or risk-on?

India’s Sensex loses 1,400 points
India’s Sensex dropped a dizzying 1,400 points – or 2.61 per cent – on Thursday, as inflation worries kept sniping at investors’ expectations. The landmark LIC share prices remain stuck in the doldrums amidst the across the board selling pressure as investors joined other Asian markets in mimicking US sentiments.

However, K.V. Shamshudeen at Sharjah-based Barjeel Geojit Financial Services, reckons investors should be selective in joining the stampede of sell-offs. “There are multiple companies such Kotak Mahindra, Titan, Bajaj Finance that have seen 10-year CAGR (compounded annual growth rate) of between 22-57 per cent,” he said.

“Each correction creates opportunities too.”

Some of India’s biggest blue-chips are currently 30-40 per cent off on their 52-week highs. These, if done correctly, represent significant opportunities to pick up on the cheap.

- K.V. Shamshudeen of Barjeel Geojit Financial Services
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