Traders huddle around a share market terminal.
Traders huddle around a share market terminal.
Traders huddle around a share market terminal.
Traders huddle around a share market terminal.

Black September turns Gulf markets into a rollercoaster


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At the beginning of September market traders in the GCC were taking a deep breath after what had been a long, difficult summer. From the start of June until the end of August the Dubai Financial Market (DFM) collapsed in value by 18 per cent; Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange (ADX) fell by 13 per cent; and the Saudi Tadawul by eight per cent. Surely things could not get worse? The expectation was that Ramadan would provide some breathing space, and that the usually calm trading during the holy month would result in a pick-up in business in October, when positive third-quarter results were expected. Generally, traders were optimistic and most felt the underlying fundamentals of the region were so good that they would be shielded from the problems in the West. Most observers were divided on whether liquidity was tight, with most not expecting a regional credit crunch.

However, events on Wall Street set the tone for the grimmest month in markets' history. In September, the Saudi index lost 15 per cent of its value; the DFM Index shed 13 per cent; and the ADX lost nine per cent. The GCC markets as a whole lost Dh477 billion (US$13bn) over the course of September. The DFM and ADX's banking and real estate indexes all fell by between 13-15 per cent in September. Traders were left shaking their heads and wondering where it all went wrong.

The difference between September's collapse and the summer's were stark but both involved the decisive role of foreigners, albeit in very contrasting ways. One of the main causes of the GCC's summer of discontent was foreign investors pulling out - after piling into the markets the previous September on the expectation that local currencies would be revalued, and the peg to the dollar abandoned. Kuwait did so, but nobody else followed suit. In May it became clear this would not happen and as a result, large amounts of money were taken out of the country. In addition, turmoil in the West forced many investors to close their GCC positions in order to meet margin calls back home. According to the central bank, more than 90 per cent of "speculative money" had gone from the market. These events affected GCC liquidity, hitting lending which has been the fuel of so much growth in the Middle East.

Events of the summer were not conclusive in resolving the 'decoupling' theory, which states that the GCC has detached itself from the West and is no longer heavily influenced by events there. While foreigners were indeed causing much of the summer crisis by pulling money out, this was not a clear-cut, straightforward case of the GCC blindly following Western markets and economies, it was far more indirect than that.

The events of September have, however, completely blown the decoupling argument out of the water. Past weeks have seen the GCC rise when the US does, fall when the US does and stagnate when there is no positive news coming from Washington DC and New York on the resolution of the financial meltdown. Indeed, the last week has seen GCC markets fluctuate merely on any news as to how well the passing of the US$700bn bailout was going. Latest answer: badly, and possibly not at all. The GCC markets can count themselves lucky that Congress voted down the bailout on Monday literally hours after they closed for Eid.

The GCC is now once again well and truly hitched back onto the US's corporate bandwagon, as indeed one could argue the rest of the world now is too. One can only imagine how badly markets will react when they reopen after the Eid holiday. Udo Schaeberle, the director of clients at the Abu Dhabi branch of BHF Bank, is confident a second Congressional vote will see the measure passed before the GCC markets reopen on Sunday. If it is not, he believes the local markets will go into free fall, but will be limited by the 10 per cent floor the exchanges impose to prevent apocalyptic meltdowns.

"The reaction of the wester markets after the vote shows the potential of what the falls could be if it does not go through," he said. Despite his optimism, he maintains markets will take a long time to recover to previous lending levels, and the world will have to endure some long-term suffering. Mohammed Ali Yasin, the chief executive of Shuaa Securities in Dubai, said the difference between traders now and just a few months ago is discernible. "Now traders and speculators look at how the Asian markets have been performing overnight, and then follow the Europeans when they open because they know we can be affected by things around us now. This is one of the aspects now about emerging markets, that we are linked," he said.

The American influence may become even stronger over the coming months as it becomes clearer how much exposure local banks have to US toxic investments; the obvious local credit crunch seems to be heralding this new, dangerous stage. The question now is what to do to prevent the global recession engulfing the GCC, rather than a slowdown which is now seen as inevitable. The immediate problem is liquidity - inter-bank interest rates have been steadily rising since May, the amount of money being lent out for mortgages is falling, and bank capital is generally depleted after a summer of shrinking deposit bases and excess lending. If banks are not lending to each other, they are even less likely to lend to companies. In an official acknowledgement that there is a problem, the UAE's central bank recently announced a Dh50 billion emergency loan facility for local banks. Few - if any - have taken up the offer, declaring in private that it is too expensive. It is also seen as a sign of weakness to tap the central bank for funds.

There have also been reports that bank consolidation is on the cards, in particular the possibility that Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank and National Bank of Abu Dhabi would merge. The two banks have, however, denied they are holding merger talks. For Mr Yasin, more decisive action is needed, above and beyond mere loans - the central bank needs to take action to prop up long-term deposit bases, by depositing it with them like a customer, rather than just investing the cash abroad.

"Liquidity is in abundance and is in the hands of the government," he said. "We have a budget surplus, so are we going to put it in to keep things going? We need to pump liquidity into the system and make deposits available to banks. There is no other way in the short term to keep us moving and make sure banks go back to lending." Mr Schaeberle said the main threat to the region will be a slowdown in large infrastructure projects if loans dry up, but added the region may be rescued from contracting growth by the one commodity it has striven to escape from its dependency on - oil.

"The world is connected and linked but maybe the future story is still decoupling, even if the region suffers lower growth - because of oil. All the GCC will grow next year as long as oil stays above $60," said Mr Schaeberle. His bank, BHF, is confident that even in a global recession the price of oil will only drop to around the $60-70, which will be enough to keep the GCC ticking over. He adds there may be a repatriation of GCC funds from abroad - he said he has noticed his clients start to move capital back to local banks in their home countries because it is seen as safest, so this may counterbalance the summer's net outflow of funds from the Middle East.

It is hard to predict how the following year will turn out, just as few people guessed the current situation a year ago at the start of the credit crunch. As Mr Schaeberle said, six weeks ago he thought all the big European banks were safe to deal with - now, he just can not know, because in Europe and the US, "there is no safe haven". afoxwell@thenational.ae

Arabian Gulf Cup FINAL

Al Nasr 2

(Negredo 1, Tozo 50)

Shabab Al Ahli 1

(Jaber 13)

Groom and Two Brides

Director: Elie Semaan

Starring: Abdullah Boushehri, Laila Abdallah, Lulwa Almulla

Rating: 3/5

Scoreline

UAE 2-1 Saudi Arabia

UAE Mabkhout 21’, Khalil 59’

Saudi Al Abed (pen) 20’

Man of the match Ahmed Khalil (UAE)

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Profile

Company name: Jaib

Started: January 2018

Co-founders: Fouad Jeryes and Sinan Taifour

Based: Jordan

Sector: FinTech

Total transactions: over $800,000 since January, 2018

Investors in Jaib's mother company Alpha Apps: Aramex and 500 Startups

Pad Man

Dir: R Balki

Starring: Akshay Kumar, Sonam Kapoor, Radhika Apte

Three-and-a-half stars

Don't get fined

The UAE FTA requires following to be kept:

  • Records of all supplies and imports of goods and services
  • All tax invoices and tax credit notes
  • Alternative documents related to receiving goods or services
  • All tax invoices and tax credit notes
  • Alternative documents issued
  • Records of goods and services that have been disposed of or used for matters not related to business
Farage on Muslim Brotherhood

Nigel Farage told Reform's annual conference that the party will proscribe the Muslim Brotherhood if he becomes Prime Minister.
"We will stop dangerous organisations with links to terrorism operating in our country," he said. "Quite why we've been so gutless about this – both Labour and Conservative – I don't know.
“All across the Middle East, countries have banned and proscribed the Muslim Brotherhood as a dangerous organisation. We will do the very same.”
It is 10 years since a ground-breaking report into the Muslim Brotherhood by Sir John Jenkins.
Among the former diplomat's findings was an assessment that “the use of extreme violence in the pursuit of the perfect Islamic society” has “never been institutionally disowned” by the movement.
The prime minister at the time, David Cameron, who commissioned the report, said membership or association with the Muslim Brotherhood was a "possible indicator of extremism" but it would not be banned.

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SPEC SHEET

Display: 10.9" Liquid Retina IPS, 2360 x 1640, 264ppi, wide colour, True Tone, Apple Pencil support

Chip: Apple M1, 8-core CPU, 8-core GPU, 16-core Neural Engine

Memory: 64/256GB storage; 8GB RAM

Main camera: 12MP wide, f/1.8, Smart HDR

Video: 4K @ 25/25/30/60fps, full HD @ 25/30/60fps, slo-mo @ 120/240fps

Front camera: 12MP ultra-wide, f/2.4, Smart HDR, Centre Stage; full HD @ 25/30/60fps

Audio: Stereo speakers

Biometrics: Touch ID

I/O: USB-C, smart connector (for folio/keyboard)

Battery: Up to 10 hours on Wi-Fi; up to 9 hours on cellular

Finish: Space grey, starlight, pink, purple, blue

Price: Wi-Fi – Dh2,499 (64GB) / Dh3,099 (256GB); cellular – Dh3,099 (64GB) / Dh3,699 (256GB)

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
The specs

Engine: 3.5-litre V6

Power: 272hp at 6,400rpm

Torque: 331Nm from 5,000rpm

Transmission: 8-speed auto

Fuel consumption: 9.7L/100km

On sale: now

Price: Dh149,000

 

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
UAE players with central contracts

Rohan Mustafa, Ashfaq Ahmed, Chirag Suri, Rameez Shahzad, Shaiman Anwar, Adnan Mufti, Mohammed Usman, Ghulam Shabbir, Ahmed Raza, Qadeer Ahmed, Amir Hayat, Mohammed Naveed and Imran Haider.

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if you go

The flights

Etihad, Emirates and Singapore Airlines fly direct from the UAE to Singapore from Dh2,265 return including taxes. The flight takes about 7 hours.

The hotel

Rooms at the M Social Singapore cost from SG $179 (Dh488) per night including taxes.

The tour

Makan Makan Walking group tours costs from SG $90 (Dh245) per person for about three hours. Tailor-made tours can be arranged. For details go to www.woknstroll.com.sg

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Need to know

When: October 17 until November 10

Cost: Entry is free but some events require prior registration

Where: Various locations including National Theatre (Abu Dhabi), Abu Dhabi Cultural Center, Zayed University Promenade, Beach Rotana (Abu Dhabi), Vox Cinemas at Yas Mall, Sharjah Youth Center

What: The Korea Festival will feature art exhibitions, a B-boy dance show, a mini K-pop concert, traditional dance and music performances, food tastings, a beauty seminar, and more.

For more information: www.koreafestivaluae.com