A Saudi investor monitors the stock exchange

The Tadawul All-Shares Index (TASI) ended 0.1 percent higher on Monday but 0.7 percent off its intra-day peak, with petrochemicals lagging slightly. Travel agency Al-Tayyar, which had climbed 7.4 percent on Sunday in unusually heavy trade, fell back 1.3 percent.
Other Gulf stock markets were mixed on Monday as most reopened after the New Year, with Oman falling after the release of an austere state budget for 2017. Egypt edged down although foreign investors remained net buyers of stocks.
Dubai’s index rose 0.2 percent as much activity focused on speculative stocks with prices below 1 dirham. Islamic Arab Insurance, the most heavily traded stock, rocketed 15 percent in its largest volume since April.
Abu Dhabi fell 0.3 percent, partly due to a 7.6 percent slide in Abu Dhabi National Energy.
Qatar edged down 0.1 percent. Islamic bank Masraf Al Rayan dropped that much after saying it would suspend its brokerage business, Al Rayan Financial Brokerage Co. It said the brokerage’s paid-up capital represented just 0.06 percent of the bank’s total assets.
Oman dropped 0.8 percent after the government released a 2017 budget plan on Sunday that projected a smaller deficit but included fresh austerity steps and tight curbs on spending because of low oil prices.
Oman Telecommunications lost 2.1 percent after tumbling 4.3 percent on Sunday in response to an increase in the royalty that it must pay the government. Rival Ooredoo Oman fell 2.0 percent after plunging 7.9 percent on Sunday.
Bahrain listed its first sharia-compliant retail real estate investment trust, Eskan Bank Realty Income Trust. The REIT rose 7 percent in very thin trade.
In Egypt, the index pulled back 0.4 percent but exchange data showed non-Arab foreign investors remained net buyers of stocks by a small margin, continuing a streak that began with the floating of the Egyptian pound on Nov. 3.
Investment firm Qalaa Holdings was the most heavily traded stock, shooting up 9.7 percent to 1.13 pounds in its largest daily volume since it listed in late 2009.
The stock has been in a downtrend for several years from a peak of £5.45 in 2014, but it may now be reversing that trend. Its surge in the past two days triggered a reverse head and shoulders pattern formed by the highs and lows since June and pointing up to around £1.40.

Source: Arab News