The QSE Index in Qatar declined 0.8% due to losses in the insurance and banking indices. Qatar Islamic Insurance and Qatar Industrial Manufacturing Co. were the top losers. Mazaya Qatar Real Estate Development and Qatar First Bank were among the top gainers. Overall trading volume on the QSE fell 45.3% compared to the previous day. Globally, initial US jobless claims were slightly lower than expected while Chinese CPI and PPI came in as estimated. Several companies in Qatar announced plans to issue new bonds or list on the stock exchange.
The document provides an overview of stock market performance and news in Qatar and other GCC countries on May 3, 2017. The key points are:
- Qatar's stock market index declined 0.4% as the telecom and transportation sectors fell. Top losers were Al Khaleej Takaful Group and Qatar Industrial Manufacturing Co.
- Elsewhere in the GCC, stock markets in Saudi Arabia and Dubai declined while those in Abu Dhabi, Kuwait and Oman rose.
- Earnings reports from companies in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and other GCC countries showed mixed revenue and profit results for 1Q2017.
The QSE Index rose 1.3% led by gains in the Telecom and Insurance indices. Islamic Holding Group and Medicare Group were the top gainers rising 10% and 9.9% respectively. Qatar First Bank fell 1.5%. Trading volume rose 102.6% but was 15.5% lower than the 30-day average. In regional markets, most indices rose except for Dubai and Kuwait which fell slightly. Earnings were reported from several companies including Damac Properties and Air Arabia. News included QSE suspending DHBK trading for its AGM and ABQK planning a $250 million loan.
The QSE Index rose 0.1% to close at 9,015.2. Gains were led by the Banks & Financial Services and Industrials indices, gaining 0.4% and 0.1%, respectively.
The QE index in Qatar declined 0.6% led by losses in the transportation and banking indices. Ahli Bank and Dlala Brokerage were the top losers falling 3.6% and 2.3% respectively, while Ezdan Holding rose 7.8% and Aamal Co gained 3.9%. Trading volume fell 5.5% from the previous day but was lower than the 30-day average. In other GCC markets, Saudi Arabia's index rose marginally while Dubai and Abu Dhabi fell.
The QSE Index in Qatar declined 0.5% led by losses in the Telecom and Insurance indices. Top losers were Qatar Cinema & Film Distribution Co. and Qatar Islamic Insurance Co. falling 4.2% and 3.0% respectively. Other indexes in the region were mixed with Saudi Arabia and Kuwait rising while Abu Dhabi and Oman fell. Japan's exports rose 7.5% in April for the fifth straight month led by semiconductors and steel, though its trade surplus with the US narrowed.
The QE Index declined 0.6% to close at 8,479.2. Losses were led by the Banks & Financial Services and Transportation indices, falling 2.0% and 1.2%, respectively.
The QSE Index in Qatar declined 0.8% due to losses in the insurance and banking indices. Qatar Islamic Insurance and Qatar Industrial Manufacturing Co. were the top losers. Mazaya Qatar Real Estate Development and Qatar First Bank were among the top gainers. Overall trading volume on the QSE fell 45.3% compared to the previous day. Globally, initial US jobless claims were slightly lower than expected while Chinese CPI and PPI came in as estimated. Several companies in Qatar announced plans to issue new bonds or list on the stock exchange.
The document provides an overview of stock market performance and news in Qatar and other GCC countries on May 3, 2017. The key points are:
- Qatar's stock market index declined 0.4% as the telecom and transportation sectors fell. Top losers were Al Khaleej Takaful Group and Qatar Industrial Manufacturing Co.
- Elsewhere in the GCC, stock markets in Saudi Arabia and Dubai declined while those in Abu Dhabi, Kuwait and Oman rose.
- Earnings reports from companies in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and other GCC countries showed mixed revenue and profit results for 1Q2017.
The QSE Index rose 1.3% led by gains in the Telecom and Insurance indices. Islamic Holding Group and Medicare Group were the top gainers rising 10% and 9.9% respectively. Qatar First Bank fell 1.5%. Trading volume rose 102.6% but was 15.5% lower than the 30-day average. In regional markets, most indices rose except for Dubai and Kuwait which fell slightly. Earnings were reported from several companies including Damac Properties and Air Arabia. News included QSE suspending DHBK trading for its AGM and ABQK planning a $250 million loan.
The QSE Index rose 0.1% to close at 9,015.2. Gains were led by the Banks & Financial Services and Industrials indices, gaining 0.4% and 0.1%, respectively.
The QE index in Qatar declined 0.6% led by losses in the transportation and banking indices. Ahli Bank and Dlala Brokerage were the top losers falling 3.6% and 2.3% respectively, while Ezdan Holding rose 7.8% and Aamal Co gained 3.9%. Trading volume fell 5.5% from the previous day but was lower than the 30-day average. In other GCC markets, Saudi Arabia's index rose marginally while Dubai and Abu Dhabi fell.
The QSE Index in Qatar declined 0.5% led by losses in the Telecom and Insurance indices. Top losers were Qatar Cinema & Film Distribution Co. and Qatar Islamic Insurance Co. falling 4.2% and 3.0% respectively. Other indexes in the region were mixed with Saudi Arabia and Kuwait rising while Abu Dhabi and Oman fell. Japan's exports rose 7.5% in April for the fifth straight month led by semiconductors and steel, though its trade surplus with the US narrowed.
The QE Index declined 0.6% to close at 8,479.2. Losses were led by the Banks & Financial Services and Transportation indices, falling 2.0% and 1.2%, respectively.
The QE Index in Qatar declined 0.7% led by losses in the Banks & Financial Services and Transportation indices. Qatar Islamic Insurance Company and Mannai Corporation were the top losers falling 5.6% and 3.3% respectively. Volume traded fell 0.7% compared to the previous day. In other GCC markets, indices were mixed with Kuwait gaining 0.6% while Saudi Arabia fell 0.9% and Abu Dhabi declined 1.6%. QISI's AGM approved a 37.5% cash dividend.
The QSE Index declined 0.9% led by losses in the Industrials and Insurance indices. Ahli Bank and Qatar Cinema & Film Distribution Co. were the top losers. The Saudi TASI index rose 0.3% while indexes in Dubai and Bahrain declined. Regional news included DHBK joining a QDB SME financing program, Qatar and UAE offering strong business environments, and Qatar Airways adding more flights to Manila.
The QE index in Qatar declined 1.8% led by losses in the telecom and banking indices. Qatar Cinema and Qatar Islamic Bank were the top losers falling 10% and 5.3% respectively. Trading volume rose 34.4% but was lower than the 30-day average. A draft law was issued allowing non-Qatari investors up to 49% ownership in listed companies. The Commercial Bank of Qatar completed a $750 million bond issue.
The QE index in Qatar rose 1.3% led by gains in the banking and real estate indices. Ezdan Holding Group and Salam International Investment Co. were the top gainers rising 7% and 4.7% respectively. Regional indices were mixed with Kuwait up 0.6% while Abu Dhabi fell 0.7% and Saudi Arabia declined 0.1%. QNBK reported a 7% rise in 1H2014 net profit to QR5.1 billion driven by a 5% increase in operating income.
The QE index in Qatar declined 0.2% led by losses in the transportation and telecom indices. Qatar Gas Transport and Qatar Electricity & Water were the top losers. In other GCC markets, indices declined in Saudi Arabia by 0.3%, Dubai by 1.3%, and Abu Dhabi by 0.5%. Volume on the Qatar exchange rose 20.4% but remained below the 30-day average. International news discussed the US debt ceiling deadline and IMF warnings on exiting unconventional monetary policies.
The QE index in Qatar declined 1.8% led by losses in the Insurance and Industrials indices. Qatar Islamic Bank and Industries Qatar were the top losers. Regional markets were also mostly lower with Dubai declining 5.5% and Abu Dhabi down 2.3%. Earnings news was reported from several Kuwaiti companies while global economic data showed Japanese machine orders rising 19.1% in March. Local news included Karwa taxis in Qatar being privatized and BRES appointing a new acting CEO.
QNBFS Daily Market Report October 28, 2021QNB Group
The QE Index declined 0.3% to close at 11,665.7. Losses were led by the Telecoms and Consumer Goods & Services indices, falling 1.7% and 0.6%, respectively.
The QE Index declined 0.2% to close at 9,957.0. Losses were led by the Real Estate and Banks & Financial Services indices, falling 4.1% and 0.9%, respectively.
The QE index in Qatar declined 1.0% led by losses in the Telecom and Real Estate indices. Top losers were United Development Co and Qatar Insurance Co falling 2.2% and 1.8% respectively. Regional markets were mixed with Dubai and Abu Dhabi rising while Saudi Arabia and Kuwait declined. FTSE may upgrade Qatar's status to emerging market from frontier due to improvements in settlement processes and foreign ownership limits.
The QE Index rose 0.6% to close at 10,381.3. Gains were led by the Banks & Financial Services and Transportation indices, gaining 1.0% and 0.8%, respectively.
The QSE Index rose marginally to close at 13,729.8 led by gains in the Real Estate and Insurance indices. Qatar National Cement Co. and Doha Insurance Co. were the top gainers rising 2.7% and 2.1% respectively. Zad Holding Co. fell 1.8% and was among the top losers. Regional indices were mixed with Dubai and Abu Dhabi rising while Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain declined and Oman rose.
The QSE Index declined slightly by 0.1% led by losses in the real estate and insurance indices. Qatar General Insurance and Ahli Bank were the top losers falling 8.3% and 6.0% respectively. Zad Holding gained 10.0% while Qatar Islamic Insurance rose 7.5%. Trading volume rose by 37.1% but was lower than the 30-day average. The document also provides summaries of index movements and major stock movers in other GCC markets as well as global economic data and earnings releases.
The QE index in Qatar rose 0.3% led by gains in the telecom and banking indices. Ooredoo and Masraf Al Rayan were the top gainers rising 2.4% and 2.3% respectively, while Qatar Fuel Co fell 4.3%. Regional indices were mixed with Abu Dhabi up 2.5% and Dubai up 1.9% while Kuwait fell 0.9%. Qatar announced allowing foreign ownership of listed companies to rise to 49% subject to amendments in company statutes.
The QE index in Qatar declined slightly by 0.1% due to losses in the telecom and banking indices. Ezdan Holding Group and Mannai Corp. were the top losers. Trading volume declined compared to the previous day and 30-day average. In other GCC markets, indices in Saudi Arabia and Oman rose while Dubai gained slightly and Abu Dhabi and Kuwait fell. Global economic data was mixed with US job and services numbers beating estimates but the trade deficit widening.
The QE index in Qatar rose 0.8% led by gains in the telecom and banking indices. Ezdan Holding Group and Aamal Co. were the top gainers rising 10% and 6.9% respectively, while Qatar Cinema & Film Dist. Co. fell 5.6%. Regional indices were mixed with Saudi Arabia and Oman up while Kuwait declined. Trading volume on the QE was higher than the 30-day average.
QNBFS Daily Market Report August 16, 2018QNB Group
The QSE Index declined 0.5% led by losses in the Real Estate and Telecom indices. Ezdan Holding Group and Masraf Al Rayan were the top losers, falling 6.4% and 2.0% respectively. Trading volume fell 19.3% compared to the previous day. Regionally, indices were mixed with Abu Dhabi up 1.2% while Dubai fell 0.8%. Company earnings news and global economic indicators were also included in the document.
The document provides an intra-day market summary and commentary for Qatar and other GCC exchanges. It summarizes that the QE index in Qatar rose 1.3% led by gains in the real estate and industrial indices. Top gainers included Doha Insurance Co. and Gulf International Services. It also provides company earnings results and global economic data updates.
The QE Index rose 0.2% to close at 10,240.7. Gains were led by the Insurance and Consumer Goods & Services indices, gaining 0.8% and 0.5%, respectively.
The QE Index in Qatar declined 0.7% led by losses in the Banks & Financial Services and Transportation indices. Qatar Islamic Insurance Company and Mannai Corporation were the top losers falling 5.6% and 3.3% respectively. Volume traded fell 0.7% compared to the previous day. In other GCC markets, indices were mixed with Kuwait gaining 0.6% while Saudi Arabia fell 0.9% and Abu Dhabi declined 1.6%. QISI's AGM approved a 37.5% cash dividend.
The QSE Index declined 0.9% led by losses in the Industrials and Insurance indices. Ahli Bank and Qatar Cinema & Film Distribution Co. were the top losers. The Saudi TASI index rose 0.3% while indexes in Dubai and Bahrain declined. Regional news included DHBK joining a QDB SME financing program, Qatar and UAE offering strong business environments, and Qatar Airways adding more flights to Manila.
The QE index in Qatar declined 1.8% led by losses in the telecom and banking indices. Qatar Cinema and Qatar Islamic Bank were the top losers falling 10% and 5.3% respectively. Trading volume rose 34.4% but was lower than the 30-day average. A draft law was issued allowing non-Qatari investors up to 49% ownership in listed companies. The Commercial Bank of Qatar completed a $750 million bond issue.
The QE index in Qatar rose 1.3% led by gains in the banking and real estate indices. Ezdan Holding Group and Salam International Investment Co. were the top gainers rising 7% and 4.7% respectively. Regional indices were mixed with Kuwait up 0.6% while Abu Dhabi fell 0.7% and Saudi Arabia declined 0.1%. QNBK reported a 7% rise in 1H2014 net profit to QR5.1 billion driven by a 5% increase in operating income.
The QE index in Qatar declined 0.2% led by losses in the transportation and telecom indices. Qatar Gas Transport and Qatar Electricity & Water were the top losers. In other GCC markets, indices declined in Saudi Arabia by 0.3%, Dubai by 1.3%, and Abu Dhabi by 0.5%. Volume on the Qatar exchange rose 20.4% but remained below the 30-day average. International news discussed the US debt ceiling deadline and IMF warnings on exiting unconventional monetary policies.
The QE index in Qatar declined 1.8% led by losses in the Insurance and Industrials indices. Qatar Islamic Bank and Industries Qatar were the top losers. Regional markets were also mostly lower with Dubai declining 5.5% and Abu Dhabi down 2.3%. Earnings news was reported from several Kuwaiti companies while global economic data showed Japanese machine orders rising 19.1% in March. Local news included Karwa taxis in Qatar being privatized and BRES appointing a new acting CEO.
QNBFS Daily Market Report October 28, 2021QNB Group
The QE Index declined 0.3% to close at 11,665.7. Losses were led by the Telecoms and Consumer Goods & Services indices, falling 1.7% and 0.6%, respectively.
The QE Index declined 0.2% to close at 9,957.0. Losses were led by the Real Estate and Banks & Financial Services indices, falling 4.1% and 0.9%, respectively.
The QE index in Qatar declined 1.0% led by losses in the Telecom and Real Estate indices. Top losers were United Development Co and Qatar Insurance Co falling 2.2% and 1.8% respectively. Regional markets were mixed with Dubai and Abu Dhabi rising while Saudi Arabia and Kuwait declined. FTSE may upgrade Qatar's status to emerging market from frontier due to improvements in settlement processes and foreign ownership limits.
The QE Index rose 0.6% to close at 10,381.3. Gains were led by the Banks & Financial Services and Transportation indices, gaining 1.0% and 0.8%, respectively.
The QSE Index rose marginally to close at 13,729.8 led by gains in the Real Estate and Insurance indices. Qatar National Cement Co. and Doha Insurance Co. were the top gainers rising 2.7% and 2.1% respectively. Zad Holding Co. fell 1.8% and was among the top losers. Regional indices were mixed with Dubai and Abu Dhabi rising while Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain declined and Oman rose.
The QSE Index declined slightly by 0.1% led by losses in the real estate and insurance indices. Qatar General Insurance and Ahli Bank were the top losers falling 8.3% and 6.0% respectively. Zad Holding gained 10.0% while Qatar Islamic Insurance rose 7.5%. Trading volume rose by 37.1% but was lower than the 30-day average. The document also provides summaries of index movements and major stock movers in other GCC markets as well as global economic data and earnings releases.
The QE index in Qatar rose 0.3% led by gains in the telecom and banking indices. Ooredoo and Masraf Al Rayan were the top gainers rising 2.4% and 2.3% respectively, while Qatar Fuel Co fell 4.3%. Regional indices were mixed with Abu Dhabi up 2.5% and Dubai up 1.9% while Kuwait fell 0.9%. Qatar announced allowing foreign ownership of listed companies to rise to 49% subject to amendments in company statutes.
The QE index in Qatar declined slightly by 0.1% due to losses in the telecom and banking indices. Ezdan Holding Group and Mannai Corp. were the top losers. Trading volume declined compared to the previous day and 30-day average. In other GCC markets, indices in Saudi Arabia and Oman rose while Dubai gained slightly and Abu Dhabi and Kuwait fell. Global economic data was mixed with US job and services numbers beating estimates but the trade deficit widening.
The QE index in Qatar rose 0.8% led by gains in the telecom and banking indices. Ezdan Holding Group and Aamal Co. were the top gainers rising 10% and 6.9% respectively, while Qatar Cinema & Film Dist. Co. fell 5.6%. Regional indices were mixed with Saudi Arabia and Oman up while Kuwait declined. Trading volume on the QE was higher than the 30-day average.
QNBFS Daily Market Report August 16, 2018QNB Group
The QSE Index declined 0.5% led by losses in the Real Estate and Telecom indices. Ezdan Holding Group and Masraf Al Rayan were the top losers, falling 6.4% and 2.0% respectively. Trading volume fell 19.3% compared to the previous day. Regionally, indices were mixed with Abu Dhabi up 1.2% while Dubai fell 0.8%. Company earnings news and global economic indicators were also included in the document.
The document provides an intra-day market summary and commentary for Qatar and other GCC exchanges. It summarizes that the QE index in Qatar rose 1.3% led by gains in the real estate and industrial indices. Top gainers included Doha Insurance Co. and Gulf International Services. It also provides company earnings results and global economic data updates.
The QE Index rose 0.2% to close at 10,240.7. Gains were led by the Insurance and Consumer Goods & Services indices, gaining 0.8% and 0.5%, respectively.
QNBFS Daily Market Report September 16, 2020QNB Group
The QE Index rose 0.2% to close at 9,892.5. Gains were led by the Industrials and Consumer Goods & Services indices, gaining 1.0% and 0.7%, respectively.
QNBFS Daily Market Report October 12, 2020QNB Group
The QE Index declined 0.3% to close at 10,001.2. Losses were led by the Telecoms and Banks & Financial Services indices, falling 1.0% and 0.8%, respectively.
QNBFS Daily Market Report October 28, 2020QNB Group
The QE Index rose 0.5% to close at 9,853.2. Gains were led by the Telecoms and Banks & Financial Services indices, gaining 1.0% and 0.8%, respectively.
The QE index in Qatar rose 0.3% led by gains in the telecom and insurance indices. Dlala Brok. & Inv. Holding Co. and Ooredoo were the top gainers, while Islamic Holding Group and Al Meera Consumer Goods Co. declined. Volume traded was lower than the 30-day average. In other GCC markets, Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi rose while Kuwait fell. Global economic data showed higher than expected US consumer credit and small business optimism, while UK industrial production was flat.
The QE index in Qatar rose 1.0% led by gains in the telecom and transportation indices. Mannai Corp and Mazaya Qatar Real Estate Dev gained 10% each. Volume traded fell 14.6% but was 90.6% higher than the 30-day average. Fitch forecasts Qatar's non-oil growth to pick up in 2014 due to high government spending and population growth. Doha Bank will invest $25 million initially to expand operations in India and invest in trade finance, corporate banking and treasury services. Qatar Cinema & Film will disclose first quarter 2014 results on April 20.
The QSE Index in Qatar declined 0.4% led by losses in the Telecom and Insurance indices. Dlala Brokerage and Doha Insurance were the top losers, falling 3.3% and 2.9% respectively. Ahli Bank and National Leasing were among the top gainers. Regional markets were mixed with Saudi Arabia up 1.1% while Abu Dhabi fell 0.8%. Earnings reports and economic indicators were also included in the document.
The document summarizes daily market activity in Qatar and other GCC countries. On the Qatari market, the QE Index rose 0.4% as the Real Estate and Consumer Goods & Services indices increased. Investment Holding Group and Ezdan Holding Group were the top gainers. Saudi markets declined marginally overall while Dubai and Abu Dhabi gained. Earnings reports are expected soon from several Qatari banks and companies. Global economic data showed initial US jobless claims rose slightly while Chinese CPI and PPI increased more than expected year-over-year.
The QE index in Qatar rose 0.2% led by gains in the real estate and industrial indices. Islamic Holding Group and Mesaieed Petrochemical Holding Co. were the top gainers rising 10% and 7.2% respectively, while Zad Holding Co. fell 9.4%. Trading volume on the Qatar exchange rose 6.9% compared to the previous day. Regional indices were mixed with Saudi Arabia and Dubai rising while Oman and Bahrain fell.
The QE index in Qatar rose 1.3% led by gains in the transportation and real estate indices. Al Khalij Commercial Bank and Ezdan Holding Group were the top gainers rising 10.0% and 9.9% respectively. Volume traded fell by 2.7% but was 133.1% higher than the 30-day moving average. Qatar Gas Transport Co. and Vodafone Qatar were the most active stocks. KCBK reported a 28.5% drop in 1Q2014 net profit year-over-year mainly due to lower fees and commissions and muted investment income, despite a 12.4% rise in net interest income. Qatar Gas Transport expanded its LNG fleet through a joint
The QE Index rose 0.2% to close at 10,236.2. Gains were led by the Insurance and Banks & Financial Services indices, gaining 0.6% and 0.4%, respectively.
The QE index in Qatar declined 0.5% led by losses in the banking and financial services and industrials indices. QNB Group and Medicare Group were the top losers. Doha Insurance Co. and Zad Holding Co. were among the top gainers. Trading volume fell 16.5% compared to the previous day but was 4.9% higher than the 30-day moving average. Qatar is set to award infrastructure projects worth $26.2 billion in 2014, a significant increase from $9.4 billion in 2013, as major construction projects are planned across GCC countries.
The QE index in Qatar rose 0.2% led by gains in the insurance and banking indices. Ezdan Holding Group and Doha Bank were the top gainers rising 10% and 5.9% respectively. In other GCC markets, Dubai and Abu Dhabi rose while Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Oman and Bahrain fell. Regionally, company earnings were reported including an 8% profit rise at Masraf Al Rayan and a 10.2% increase at Qatar International Islamic Bank.
The QE Index rose 0.1% to close at 10,613.5. Gains were led by the Consumer Goods & Services and Banks & Financial Services indices, gaining 0.5% and 0.4%, respectively.
Similar to QNBFS Daily Market Report March 30, 2021 (20)
QNBFS Daily Market Report December 24, 2023QNB Group
The QE Index rose 0.8% to close at 10,285.3. Gains were led by the Transportation and Banks & Financial Services indices, gaining 1.4% and 1.2%, respectively.
QNBFS Daily Technical Trader Qatar - October 10, 2023 التحليل الفني اليومي لب...QNB Group
The document provides a daily technical analysis of the QE Index and QATAR INSURANCE CO stock. For the QE Index, it notes the index remains in a downtrend but is approaching a support level of 9,700, where long positions could be taken. It provides expected resistance and support levels. For QATAR INSURANCE CO stock, it notes the stock has not fallen as much as others and the uptrend remains intact above moving averages, though liquidity is low. It provides expected price targets and resistance/support levels for the stock. Definitions of technical analysis terms like candlesticks, support, and simple moving average are also included.
QNBFS Daily Market Report October 04, 2023QNB Group
The QE Index rose 0.2% to close at 10,273.3. Gains were led by the Transportation and Consumer Goods & Services indices, gaining 1.7% and 0.1%, respectively.
QNBFS Daily Technical Trader Qatar - October 04, 2023 التحليل الفني اليومي لب...QNB Group
The General Index failed to sustain its breakout above the double-bottom formation’s neckline and continued with its decline into the formation’s territory.
QNBFS Daily Technical Trader Qatar - September 28, 2023 التحليل الفني اليومي ...QNB Group
The General Index failed to sustain its breakout above the double-bottom formation’s neckline and continued with its decline into the formation’s territory.
QNBFS Daily Market Report September 24, 2023QNB Group
- The QE Index in Qatar rose 0.3% led by gains in the Transportation and Industrials indices. Qatar Navigation and Al Khaleej Takaful Insurance were the top gainers.
- Regional markets were mixed with Saudi Arabia down 1% but Abu Dhabi up marginally. Economic data from the US and Europe was mixed.
- In Qatar news, QR500mn in bills were sold at a yield of 5.755% and Gulf International Services approved final merger agreements. Ooredoo also signed an MoU to support businesses in Qatar free zones.
QNBFS Daily Technical Trader Qatar - September 24, 2023 التحليل الفني اليومي ...QNB Group
The General Index failed to sustain its breakout above the double-bottom formation’s neckline and continued with its decline into the formation’s territory.
QNBFS Daily Technical Trader Qatar - September 19, 2023 التحليل الفني اليومي ...QNB Group
The General Index failed to sustain its breakout above the double-bottom formation’s neckline and continued with its decline into the formation’s territory.
QNBFS Daily Market Report September 17, 2023QNB Group
The QE Index declined 0.5% to close at 10,319.3. Losses were led by the Industrials and Consumer Goods & Services indices, falling 1.4% and 1.1%, respectively.
QNBFS Daily Technical Trader Qatar - September 07, 2023 التحليل الفني اليومي ...QNB Group
The General Index failed to
sustain its breakout above the
double-bottom formation’s
neckline and continued with
its decline into the
formation’s territory.
Solution Manual For Financial Accounting, 8th Canadian Edition 2024, by Libby...Donc Test
Solution Manual For Financial Accounting, 8th Canadian Edition 2024, by Libby, Hodge, Verified Chapters 1 - 13, Complete Newest Version Solution Manual For Financial Accounting, 8th Canadian Edition by Libby, Hodge, Verified Chapters 1 - 13, Complete Newest Version Solution Manual For Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Chapters Download Stuvia Solution Manual For Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Ebook Download Stuvia Solution Manual For Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Solution Manual For Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Download Stuvia Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Chapters Download Stuvia Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Ebook Download Stuvia Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Download Stuvia
Lecture slide titled Fraud Risk Mitigation, Webinar Lecture Delivered at the Society for West African Internal Audit Practitioners (SWAIAP) on Wednesday, November 8, 2023.
How Does CRISIL Evaluate Lenders in India for Credit RatingsShaheen Kumar
CRISIL evaluates lenders in India by analyzing financial performance, loan portfolio quality, risk management practices, capital adequacy, market position, and adherence to regulatory requirements. This comprehensive assessment ensures a thorough evaluation of creditworthiness and financial strength. Each criterion is meticulously examined to provide credible and reliable ratings.
2. Elemental Economics - Mineral demand.pdfNeal Brewster
After this second you should be able to: Explain the main determinants of demand for any mineral product, and their relative importance; recognise and explain how demand for any product is likely to change with economic activity; recognise and explain the roles of technology and relative prices in influencing demand; be able to explain the differences between the rates of growth of demand for different products.
Vicinity Jobs’ data includes more than three million 2023 OJPs and thousands of skills. Most skills appear in less than 0.02% of job postings, so most postings rely on a small subset of commonly used terms, like teamwork.
Laura Adkins-Hackett, Economist, LMIC, and Sukriti Trehan, Data Scientist, LMIC, presented their research exploring trends in the skills listed in OJPs to develop a deeper understanding of in-demand skills. This research project uses pointwise mutual information and other methods to extract more information about common skills from the relationships between skills, occupations and regions.
Falcon stands out as a top-tier P2P Invoice Discounting platform in India, bridging esteemed blue-chip companies and eager investors. Our goal is to transform the investment landscape in India by establishing a comprehensive destination for borrowers and investors with diverse profiles and needs, all while minimizing risk. What sets Falcon apart is the elimination of intermediaries such as commercial banks and depository institutions, allowing investors to enjoy higher yields.
Independent Study - College of Wooster Research (2023-2024) FDI, Culture, Glo...AntoniaOwensDetwiler
"Does Foreign Direct Investment Negatively Affect Preservation of Culture in the Global South? Case Studies in Thailand and Cambodia."
Do elements of globalization, such as Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), negatively affect the ability of countries in the Global South to preserve their culture? This research aims to answer this question by employing a cross-sectional comparative case study analysis utilizing methods of difference. Thailand and Cambodia are compared as they are in the same region and have a similar culture. The metric of difference between Thailand and Cambodia is their ability to preserve their culture. This ability is operationalized by their respective attitudes towards FDI; Thailand imposes stringent regulations and limitations on FDI while Cambodia does not hesitate to accept most FDI and imposes fewer limitations. The evidence from this study suggests that FDI from globally influential countries with high gross domestic products (GDPs) (e.g. China, U.S.) challenges the ability of countries with lower GDPs (e.g. Cambodia) to protect their culture. Furthermore, the ability, or lack thereof, of the receiving countries to protect their culture is amplified by the existence and implementation of restrictive FDI policies imposed by their governments.
My study abroad in Bali, Indonesia, inspired this research topic as I noticed how globalization is changing the culture of its people. I learned their language and way of life which helped me understand the beauty and importance of cultural preservation. I believe we could all benefit from learning new perspectives as they could help us ideate solutions to contemporary issues and empathize with others.
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1. Page 1 of 9
QSE Intra-Day Movement
Qatar Commentary
The QE Index rose 1.3% to close at 10,324.0. Gains were led by the Telecoms and
Industrials indices, gaining 2.3% and 1.7%, respectively. Top gainers were Mannai
Corporation and Investment Holding Group, rising 10.0% and 3.6%, respectively.
Among the top losers, Al Meera Consumer Goods Company fell 5.9%, while Al
Khaleej Takaful Insurance Company was down 3.6%.
GCC Commentary
Saudi Arabia: The TASI Index gained 1.4% to close at 9,615.6. Gains were led by the
Software & Serv. and Consumer Dur. indices, rising 5.3% and 1.8% respectively.
Theeb Rent a Car Co. rose 30.0%, while Aseer Trading Tourism was up 10.0%.
Dubai: The DFM Index gained 2.1% to close at 2,552.6. The Real Estate &
Construction index rose 4.4%, while the Transportation index gained 2.4%. Amlak
Finance rose 14.9%, while DAMAC Properties Dubai Company was up 14.2%.
Abu Dhabi: The ADX General Index gained 1.2% to close at 5,824.1. The Industrial
index rose 5.0%, while the Investment & Financial Services index gained 3.0%. Gulf
Pharmaceutical Industries rose 14.4%, while Arkan Building Materials was up 9.5%.
Kuwait: The Kuwait All Share Index fell 0.2% to close at 5,746.6. The Technology
index declined 1.1%, while the Industrials index fell 0.4%. National Consumer
Holding Company declined 9.3%, while Gulf Investment House was down 6.4%.
Oman: The MSM 30 Index fell 0.5% to close at 3,684.3. The Financial index declined
0.7%, while the other indices ended in green. Ahli Bank declined 4.5%, while Takaful
Oman was down 4.3%.
Bahrain: The BHB Index fell 1.0% to close at 1,458.1. The Services index declined
2.0%, while the Commercial Banks index fell 1.5%. APM Terminals Bahrain declined
7.6%, while Ithmaar Holding was down 6.1%.
QSE Top Gainers Close* 1D% Vol. ‘000 YTD%
Mannai Corporation 4.14 10.0 1,771.4 37.9
Investment Holding Group 0.83 3.6 74,502.2 37.9
Industries Qatar 12.20 2.7 2,060.7 12.2
Ooredoo 7.05 2.5 1,358.5 (6.3)
QNB Group 17.59 2.1 3,309.8 (1.3)
QSE Top Volume Trades Close* 1D% Vol. ‘000 YTD%
Investment Holding Group 0.83 3.6 74,502.2 37.9
Salam International Inv. Ltd. 0.68 0.9 24,668.1 4.0
Baladna 1.63 (0.7) 21,113.2 (9.2)
Ezdan Holding Group 1.62 (0.4) 18,834.1 (9.1)
Mazaya Qatar Real Estate Dev. 1.27 (0.6) 12,840.9 0.2
Market Indicators 29 Mar 21 28 Mar 21 %Chg.
Value Traded (QR mn) 504.4 366.0 37.8
Exch. Market Cap. (QR mn) 601,208.1 593,665.3 1.3
Volume (mn) 255.0 222.8 14.5
Number of Transactions 11,754 7,457 57.6
Companies Traded 48 46 4.3
Market Breadth 29:18 26:18 –
Market Indices Close 1D% WTD% YTD% TTM P/E
Total Return 20,423.26 1.3 1.5 1.8 19.2
All Share Index 3,281.41 1.3 1.3 2.6 19.9
Banks 4,271.96 1.4 1.3 0.6 15.3
Industrials 3,357.30 1.7 2.5 8.4 37.3
Transportation 3,493.04 0.1 0.5 5.9 23.6
Real Estate 1,864.66 1.2 2.5 (3.3) 17.6
Insurance 2,612.47 (0.1) (0.6) 9.0 97.1
Telecoms 1,062.85 2.3 2.2 5.2 24.8
Consumer 8,092.28 0.4 (0.4) (0.6) 27.8
Al Rayan Islamic Index 4,377.78 0.9 1.0 2.5 20.2
GCC Top Gainers## Exchange Close# 1D% Vol. ‘000 YTD%
Emaar Malls Dubai 1.72 4.9 6,314.5 (6.0)
Sahara Int. Petrochem. Saudi Arabia 21.20 3.9 2,331.0 22.4
Saudi Arabian Mining Saudi Arabia 56.50 3.7 1,164.1 39.5
ADNOC Distribution Abu Dhabi 4.54 3.7 20,693.8 21.1
National Comm. Bank Saudi Arabia 50.20 3.6 2,605.5 15.8
GCC Top Losers## Exchange Close# 1D% Vol. ‘000 YTD%
Ahli Bank Oman 0.11 (4.5) 180.0 (17.3)
BBK Bahrain 0.48 (3.0) 30.3 4.6
Sohar International Bank Oman 0.09 (2.2) 186.1 (3.3)
Bahrain Telecom. Co. Bahrain 0.56 (2.1) 49.0 (6.7)
Bank Nizwa Oman 0.09 (2.1) 18.3 (2.1)
Source: Bloomberg (# in Local Currency) (## GCC Top gainers/losers derived from the S&P GCC
Composite Large Mid Cap Index)
QSE Top Losers Close* 1D% Vol. ‘000 YTD%
Al Meera Consumer Goods Co. 19.99 (5.9) 498.9 (3.5)
Al Khaleej Takaful Insurance Co. 3.10 (3.6) 3,057.7 63.3
Qatar National Cement Company 4.88 (2.3) 685.8 17.6
Al Khalij Commercial Bank 2.06 (2.3) 1,908.9 12.2
Qatari German Co for Med. Dev. 3.01 (1.8) 3,545.9 34.7
QSE Top Value Trades Close* 1D% Val. ‘000 YTD%
Investment Holding Group 0.83 3.6 61,167.3 37.9
QNB Group 17.59 2.1 57,722.7 (1.3)
Baladna 1.63 (0.7) 34,197.0 (9.2)
Ezdan Holding Group 1.62 (0.4) 31,089.6 (9.1)
Industries Qatar 12.20 2.7 24,842.6 12.2
Source: Bloomberg (* in QR)
Regional Indices Close 1D% WTD% MTD% YTD%
Exch. Val. Traded
($ mn)
Exchange Mkt.
Cap. ($ mn)
P/E** P/B**
Dividend
Yield
Qatar* 10,323.98 1.3 1.5 1.8 (1.1) 136.38 162,386.3 19.2 1.5 2.9
Dubai 2,552.60 2.1 2.3 0.0 2.4 57.66 97,213.0 20.9 0.9 3.2
Abu Dhabi 5,824.13 1.2 1.7 2.8 15.4 243.02 226,107.5 23.0 1.6 4.6
Saudi Arabia 9,615.63 1.4 2.1 5.1 10.7 2,801.59 2,500,279.0 38.7 2.3 2.3
Kuwait 5,746.63 (0.2) (0.4) 1.7 3.6 92.27 108,342.9 56.3 1.4 3.0
Oman 3,684.27 (0.5) 0.2 2.0 0.7 5.64 16,770.0 12.1 0.7 6.7
Bahrain 1,458.07 (1.0) (0.4) (0.6) (2.1) 2.41 22,295.5 37.3 1.0 4.4
Source: Bloomberg, Qatar Stock Exchange, Tadawul, Muscat Securities Market and Dubai Financial Market (** TTM; * Value traded ($ mn) do not include special trades, if any)
10,150
10,200
10,250
10,300
10,350
9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 13:00
2. Page 2 of 9
Qatar Market Commentary
The QE Index rose 1.3% to close at 10,324.0. The Telecoms andIndustrials
indices led the gains. The index rose on the back of buying support from
Arab and Foreign shareholders despite selling pressure from Qatari and
GCC shareholders.
Mannai Corporation and Investment Holding Group were the top gainers,
rising 10.0% and 3.6%, respectively. Among the top losers, Al Meera
Consumer Goods Company fell 5.9%, while Al Khaleej Takaful Insurance
Company was down 3.6%.
Volume of shares traded on Monday rose by 14.5% to 255.0mn from
222.8mn on Sunday. Further, as compared to the 30-day moving average
of 232.5mn, volume for the day was 9.7% higher. Investment Holding
Group and Salam International Investment Limited were the most active
stocks, contributing 29.2% and 9.7% to the total volume, respectively.
Source: Qatar Stock Exchange (*as a % of traded value)
Earnings Releases, Global Economic Data and Earnings Calendar
Earnings Releases
Company Market Currency
Revenue (mn)
4Q2020
% Change
YoY
Operating Profit
(mn) 4Q2020
% Change
YoY
Net Profit
(mn) 4Q2020
% Change
YoY
BinDawood Holding Co.* Saudi Arabia SR 5,156.5 6.5% 514.6 -0.7% 447.7 6.8%
Nama Chemicals Co.* Saudi Arabia SR 439.2 -16.5% (38.5) N/A (45.2) N/A
Saudi Research and Marketing
Group*
Saudi Arabia SR 2,260.1 -6.2% 371.5 12.2% 245.6 -0.2%
Source: Company data, DFM, ADX, MSM, TASI, BHB. (*Financial for FY2020)
Global Economic Data
Date Market Source Indicator Period Actual Consensus Previous
03/29 UK Bank of England Money Supply M4 MoM Feb 0.8% – 0.7%
03/29 UK Bank of England M4 Money Supply YoY Feb 13.6% – 13.3%
Source: Bloomberg (s.a. = seasonally adjusted; n.s.a. = non-seasonally adjusted; w.d.a. = working day adjusted)
Earnings Calendar
Tickers Company Name Date of reporting 1Q2021 results No. of days remaining Status
QNCD Qatar National Cement Company 07-Apr-21 8 Due
QIBK Qatar Islamic Bank 11-Apr-21 12 Due
QNBK QNB Group 11-Apr-21 12 Due
ABQK Ahli Bank 20-Apr-21 21 Due
UDCD United Development Company 21-Apr-21 22 Due
QIGD Qatari Investors Group 21-Apr-21 22 Due
DHBK Doha Bank 28-Apr-21 29 Due
Source: QSE
Overall Activity Buy %* Sell %* Net (QR)
Qatari Individuals 39.16% 47.84% (43,746,438.2)
Qatari Institutions 11.86% 21.99% (51,069,906.6)
Qatari 51.03% 69.83% (94,816,344.8)
GCC Individuals 0.53% 3.24% (13,665,214.3)
GCC Institutions 1.35% 1.27% 419,861.1
GCC 1.89% 4.51% (13,245,353.2)
Arab Individuals 13.03% 12.11% 4,660,359.3
Arab 13.03% 12.11% 4,660,359.3
Foreigners Individuals 2.91% 3.09% (913,882.2)
Foreigners Institutions 31.14% 10.46% 104,315,220.9
Foreigners 34.05% 13.55% 103,401,338.7
3. Page 3 of 9
News
Qatar
QNB Group receives 'AA' rating by index provider MSCI ESG
Research – The rating upgrade to ‘AA’ places QNB Group into the
top quartile of the ESG index, and confirms the Group’s
leadership in the banking sector on this topic. QNB Group
received a rating of ‘AA’ in the MSCI ESG Ratings assessment,
conducted by MSCI ESG Research LLC. Regulator, authorities,
policy makers and investors increasingly put more pressure on
banks to address environmental, social and governance (ESG)
related factors. These represent risks and add additional
complexity for financial service providers to be identified,
addressed and managed adequately. The rating recognises QNB
Group as a leader in its industry in managing ESG risks and
opportunities. The rating is also a testament that QNB Group has
developed a meaningful sustainability strategy, which
addresses all topics of materiality and has been successful in
executing upon it. The rating upgrade to ‘AA’ places QNB Group
into the top quartile of the ESG index, and confirms the Group’s
leadership in the banking sector on this topic. MSCI ESG
Research is a leading research and data provider measuring
companies’ performance on the grounds on Environmental,
Social, and Governance (ESG) factors. MSCI ESG Ratings aim to
measure a company’s resilience to long-term ESG risks. (Gulf-
Times.com)
MARK to disclose its 1Q2021 financial results on April 19 –
Masraf Al Rayan (MARK) will disclose its financial statement for
the period ending March 31, 2021 on April 19, 2021. (QSE)
QE Index, QE Al Rayan Islamic Index and QE All Share
constituent’s changes effective from April 1 – Market Notice
(Number 10) on March 9, 2021 provided constituent changes of
all QSE indices effective from April 1,2021. This notice provides
the final Index Free Float number of shares and capping factors
(where applicable) to be used in the QE Index and QE All Share
Index calculation effective from April 1, 2021. The new index
composition of QE Al Rayan Islamic Index (fixed weightings as
given in the Market Notice is also restated. The Market Notice on
March 9, 2021 is :– Mazaya Real Estate Development (MRDS) and
Qatar First Bank (QFBQ) will replace Aamal Company (AHCS)
and Doha Bank (DHBK) in the QE Index with effect from April 1.
According to the statement, QFBQ will also join the QE Al Rayan
Islamic Index from the same date. There will be no change in the
constituents of QE All Share Index and related sectors indices,
the statement said. (QSE)
Listed companies in Qatar report cumulative net profit of
QR31.63bn in 2020 – Qatar's listed companies have reported a
cumulative net profit of QR31.63bn in 2020, mainly contributed
by the net earnings of the banking and financial services sector.
Amidst the challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic, as
many as 14 listed entities on the Qatar Stock Exchange (QSE)
witnessed their net earnings grow year-on-year in 2020
although the overall cumulative net profitability of the listed
companies was on the decline. Insurance was the lone sector
that saw earnings growth on the QSE, which otherwise saw
19.65% YoY fall in its cumulative net profits in 2020, compared
to 5.53% shrinkage in 2019, said the figures collated from the
QSE website. The industrials sector was seen as the major drag
in the overall profitability of the listed companies in 2020. The
shrinkage in earnings in the transport and banking sectors also
had their role in pulling the overall profitability down in the
review period. In 2020, the insurance sector's cumulative net
profit grew 18.92% YoY to QR499.69mn compared to a sharp
46.26% plunge in 2019. The sector now has six constituents with
QLMI being the latest entrant. The sector, which saw four of the
six constituents report gains in net earnings, contributed 1.58%
to the overall kitty compared to 1.07% a year ago. However, the
industrials sector, which has 10 listed constituents, witnessed a
huge 44.24% year-on-year contraction in net profitability to
QR3.91bn against a 32.86% decrease in 2019. The sector
contributed 12.36% to the overall net profitability of the listed
entities in the review period compared to 17.8% the previous
year. Only one among them witnessed gains in net earnings. The
cumulative net profitability of banks and financial services
sector, which has 13 listed entities, declined 12.22% YoY to
QR21.35bn against 6.5% growth in 2019. The banking and
financial services sector contributed 67.5% to cumulative net
profits 2020 against 61.8% the year ago. Five of the constituents
witnessed higher growth in profits. The COVID-19 and the slide
in oil prices would make a dent in the net profitability of the
banking sector in the GCC for the whole of this year, Moody's, an
international credit rating agency had said earlier. The realty
segment, which has four listed entities, saw a 20.1% YoY
contraction in net earnings to QR1.82bn in 2020 against 20.86%
plunge the previous year. The sector constituted 5.75% of the
overall net profitability in 2020 compared to 5.79% in 2019. Only
one among them exhibited stronger performance in net earnings.
In 2020, the transport sector’s cumulative net earnings shrank
19.08% YoY to QR1.46bn against 10% expansion in 2019. The
sector has three listed constituents and its net profit constituted
4.62% of the total net profit of the listed companies compared to
4.57% in 2019. Only one among them saw jump in net earnings.
The consumer goods sector, which has 10 listed entities,
witnessed a 23.14% YoY shrinkage in cumulative net profit to
QR1.28bn in 2020 compared to a 10.36% fall in 2019. The sector
contributed 4.05% to the overall net profitability in the review
period against 4.24% in 2019. Two among them saw their net
earnings grow on an annual basis in 2020. The telecom sector
saw its 2020 net profit decline 29.81% YoY to QR1.31n compared
to 11.03% rise in 2019. The sector contributed 4.14% to overall
net profit in the review period against 4.75% in 2019. It is worth
noting that all financial data of the listed companies are
available on the website of the Qatar Stock Exchange. Qatar
Stock Exchange would like to thank all listed companies for their
efforts in enhancing the disclosure and transparency principles.
(QSE, Gulf-Times.com)
QGMD announces result of Board of Directors meeting – Qatari
German Company for Medical Devices (QGMD) announced that
the Board of Directors elected by the General Assembly has
convened on March 28, 2021 and approved the following:– (1)
Formation of the elected board of directors as follows: Chairman
4. Page 4 of 9
– Ali Hassan Ibrahim Ali Al- Emadi, holding bachelor’s degree in
Business Administration from London South Bank university -
UK, he is a businessman who held the position of CEO at Liberty
packing manufactures in Qatar. The following are also some of
the positions held by him: (i) Sales and Business Development
Director - Mowasalat karwa, (ii) Operation Manager - Al-ijarah
Holding, and (iii) Member in the International Federation of
public transport. Vice-Chairman – Mohammad Abdulmoneim Al-
Sayed, holding a master’s degree in Management and
International Business from Nottingham Trent University - UK,
has an outstanding record of delivering successful restructurings
that continuously improve shareholder value via successful
investments. The following are some of the positions held by
him: (i) Works in the Investment and Business Development
Department at Barzan Holdings, (ii) Board member at Gulf
Warehousing Company, (iii) Board member at Inma Holding, and
(iv) Board member at Dalalah Brokerage Company. Managing
Director – Mohammad Ali Al-Ansari, holding bachelor’s degree
in Arts for Business Administration from Arab Academy for
science, technology, and maritime Alexandria - Egypt. A
businessman who held the position General Manager of Qatar
Company for the manufacture of foam and furnishings ‘Qatar
Foam’. (2) Formation of the Board committees. (3)
Determination of the authorized signatories in CR and the
financial transactions and the limits of authority. (QSE)
AKHI announces the details of the settlement with the X-CEO –
Al Khaleej Takaful Insurance Company (AKHI) announced that
its General Assembly held on March 28, 2021, has approved the
amendment of the settlement that it had previously made with
the former CEO of the company, regarding some investment
files, with the company acquiring a plot of land in the city of
Doha with a value of QR40mn, in addition to an amount of
QR30mn has been previously collected, and with the right to
follow-up of what can be collected from the relevant cases and
files (the General Assembly has authorized the Board of
Directors to do so). As a result, an amount of QR76mn was
considered as a provision for debts that were not collected and
recorded in the accounting records for the year 2020. (QSE)
QISI changes method in holding its General Assembly – Due to
government instructions it has been decided to change the
method in holding the General Assembly Meeting for Qatar
Islamic Insurance Group (QISI) to be via Zoom instead of
personal attendance. The meeting will take place on April 5,
2021. (QSE)
Ooredoo hires banks for dollar bond issue – Ooredoo has hired a
group of banks to arrange an issuance of U.S. dollar-
denominated bonds, a document showed on Monday. Barclays,
BNP Paribas, Citi, Credit Agricole, DBS, Mizuho, QNB Capital and
Standard Chartered will hold fixed income investor calls starting
on Monday, the document from one of the banks showed. A 10-
year bond issuance will follow, subject to market conditions.
(Zawya)
Ooredoo’s Indosat nears deal for towers sale to digital colony –
According to sources, Ooredoo’s Indonesian unit PT Indosat is
nearing a deal to sell about about 4,000 towers to Digital Colony.
The companies are working on the details of a transaction that
could be announced as early as this week, the people said, asking
not to be identified because the matter is private. A deal could be
valued at more than $700mn. Digital Colony is planning to
purchase the tower assets through Edgepoint Infrastructure, a
partnership it recently formed with former Edotco Group Sdn. An
agreement would come weeks after Indosat said it was in the
early stage of exploring the sale of about 4,000 towers, without
naming any potential buyers. Talks could still face delays or
even fall apart, the people said. A spokesperson for Edgepoint
declined to comment, while representatives for Digital Colony
and Ooredoo didn’t immediately respond to requests for
comment. (Bloomberg)
Qatar’s PPI of industrial sector witnesses 2.4% MoM jump in
February – Qatar’s industrial sector continued to gain traction as
it witnessed 2.4% MoM jump in the producer price index (PPI) in
February this year, mainly on the back of hydrocarbons and
certain manufactured products as basic chemicals and other
chemical products, according to official estimates. Qatar's PPI –
a measure of the average selling prices received by the domestic
producers for their output – however saw 2% YoY decline, said
the figures released by the Planning and Statistics Authority
(PSA). The mining PPI, which carries the maximum weight of
72.7%, reported a robust 2.9% surge on a monthly basis in
February 2021 as the selling price of crude petroleum and natural
gas was seen gaining 2.9% and that of stone, sand and clay by
0.5%. The mining PPI registered 3.4% shrinkage on a yearly
basis in February this year on the back of a 3.4% slump in the
selling price of crude petroleum and natural gas and 5.3% in
stone, sand and clay. The manufacturing sector, which has a
weight of 26.8% in the PPI basket, witnessed a 1.3% increase
MoM in February 2021 on a 5.8% jump in the price of basic
chemicals, 4.6% in other chemical products and fibres, 0.5% in
refined petroleum products, 0.4% in rubber and plastics products
and 0.1% each in basic metals and grain mill and other products.
The manufacturing sector PPI had seen a yearly 0.8% expansion
in February 2021 as the selling price of basic metals had shot up
18.7%, paper and paper products (7.9%), basic chemicals (7.5%),
juices (6.4%), rubber and plastics products (1.2%), dairy
products (0.5%) and beverages (0.1%). The utilities group, which
has a mere 0.5% weightage in the PPI basket, saw its index surge
7.4% on monthly basis because the selling prices of electricity
and water were seen rising 10.5% and 3.3% respectively in
February 2021. The index had seen a 6.3% growth YoY this
February with the selling price of water and electricity soaring
10.2% and 3.6% respectively. (Gulf-Times.com)
Shura Council approves draft law on insurance cover for GCC
citizens – The Shura Council held its weekly meeting yesterday
via video conference under the chairmanship of Speaker HE
Ahmed bin Abdullah bin Zaid al-Mahmoud. During the meeting,
the council discussed the report of the Legal and Legislative
Affairs Committee on amending some provisions of Law No 4 of
2007 enacting the common system of extending insurance
protection to GCC citizens working outside their countries in any
member state. The council decided to approve the
aforementioned law and refer its recommendations thereon to
the government. The draft law includes adding one article to
Law No. 4 of 2007, stating that the employer is not obligated to
pay end-of-service gratuity, according to the Labour Law
promulgated by Law No.14 of 2004, or the Civil Human
Resources Law Act No.15 of 2016 or any work contracts or
special regulations. The draft law came in implementation of the
5. Page 5 of 9
principle of reciprocity and in line with similar laws in other GCC
countries. Draft law on healthcare Meanwhile, the Shura
Council’s Services and Public Utilities Committee held a meeting
yesterday chaired by its Rapporteur HE Mohamed bin Mahdi al-
Ahbabi. During the meeting, the committee studied a draft law
organising healthcare services within the country and decided to
submit its recommendations regarding it to the Shura Council.
(Gulf-Times.com)
Moderna vaccine available at all PHCC health centres – The
Primary Health Care Corporation (PHCC) is now administering
the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine across all 27 health centres,
Qatar National Convention Centre as well as at the Lusail City
and Al Wakra drive-through vaccination centres. The Ministry
of Public Health (MoPH) had in February issued emergency use
authorisation for Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine, the second
coronavirus vaccine to be approved for use in Qatar. Moderna’s
COVID-19 vaccine was approved after the MoPH’s Department
of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Control carried out an
extensive review of the vaccine and assessed the results of
clinical studies conducted on tens of thousands of volunteers.
This approval, follows similar authorisation of Moderna’s
vaccine by health agencies in the US, Canada, the European
Union, the UK and Switzerland. Dr Samya Abdulla, executive
director of operations at PHCC, said, “The Pfizer and Moderna
vaccines have shown equivalent degrees of efficacy. Both
vaccines have shown efficacy of 95% at preventing
symptomatic Covid infection after two doses.” (Gulf-Times.com)
The Amir, Saudi Crown Prince review ‘green initiative’, bilateral
ties in phone call – His Highness the Amir Sheikh Tamim bin
Hamad Al-Thani held a telephone conversation with Crown
Prince, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defence of the
sisterly Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Mohamed bin Salman bin
Abdulaziz Al-Saud. During the phone call which the Amir
received from the Saudi Crown Prince, the two sides reviewed
the fraternal relations between the two countries and means of
supporting and enhancing them. They also reviewed the ‘Saudi
Green Initiative’ and the ‘Green Middle East Initiative’
announced by the Saudi Crown Prince, as well as the importance
of joint action to meet the environmental challenges that the
region is going through. The Amir expressed Qatar’s support for
these initiatives and all eff orts that would achieve their goals.
(Gulf-Times.com)
Qatar Airways to expand network to 140 destinations – Qatar
Airways has announced its summer schedule with plans to
expand network to more than 140 destinations, maintaining its
position as the leading international carrier providing reliable
global connectivity. Having never stopped flying throughout the
pandemic the airline has worked diligently to be the world’s
leading airline for safety, innovation and customer experience.
By the peak of the IATA Summer Season, the national carrier
plans to operate more than 1,200 weekly flights to 140 plus
destinations. (Gulf-times.com)
International
Fed will not keep interest rates low for government's benefit,
Waller says – The Federal Reserve will not bend its interest rate
or bond-buying policies to help finance the federal government’s
rising deficits, Christopher Waller said on Monday in his debut
speech as a member of the US central bank’s board of governors.
“Because of the large fiscal deficits and rising federal debt, a
narrative has emerged that the Federal Reserve will succumb to
pressures to keep interest rates low to help service the debt and
to maintain asset purchases to help finance the federal
government,” Waller said in remarks prepared for delivery at an
online event organized by the Peterson Institute for
International Economics. “My goal today is to definitively put
that narrative to rest. It is simply wrong. Monetary policy has
not and will not be conducted for these purposes.” Policy, he said,
will be set “solely to fulfill” the Fed’s mandated goals of
achieving maximum employment and stable inflation. The
comments were Waller’s first since he joined the Fed’s board of
governors in December, after serving as executive vice president
and research director at the St. Louis Fed, and he used them to
wade into a potentially contentious issue. (Reuters)
Biden targets big offshore wind power expansion to fight climate
change – The Biden administration on Monday unveiled a goal to
expand the nation’s fledgling offshore wind energy industry in
the coming decade by opening new areas to development,
accelerating permits, and boosting public financing for projects.
The plan is part of President, Joe Biden’s broader effort to
eliminate US greenhouse gas emissions to fight climate change,
an agenda that Republicans argue could bring economic ruin but
which Democrats say can create jobs while protecting the
environment. The blueprint for offshore wind power generation
comes after the Biden administration’s suspension of new oil and
gas leasing auctions on federal lands and waters, widely seen as
a first step to fulfilling the president’s campaign promise of a
permanent ban on new federal drilling to counter global
warming. The US, with just two small offshore wind facilities,
has lagged European nations in developing the renewable
energy technology. The administration of Biden’s predecessor
Donald Trump had vowed to launch offshore wind as a promising
new domestic industry but failed to permit any projects. “We’re
ready to rock and roll,” National Climate Advisor, Gina McCarthy
said at a virtual press conference to announce the
administration’s moves. (Reuters)
Global reinsurers stare at massive losses from Suez Canal
blockage, Fitch says – The blocking of the Suez Canal by one of
the world’s largest container ships is likely to result in losses
worth hundreds of millions of euros for the reinsurance industry,
Fitch Ratings said, even as rescue teams were successful in
partially refloating the vessel on Monday. The 400-metre (430-
yard) long Ever Given got wedged diagonally across the canal in
high winds early last Tuesday, blocking the path for hundreds of
vessels waiting to transit the shortest shipping route between
Europe and Asia. This event will reduce global reinsurers'
earnings but should not materially affect their credit profiles,
while prices for marine reinsurance will rise further, the credit
rating agency said. Shipping rates for oil product tankers nearly
doubled after the ship got jammed, and the blockage has
disrupted global supply chains, threatening costly delays for
companies already dealing with COVID-19 restrictions.
(Reuters)
EU rescue funds agreement compatible with EU treaties, ECB's
de Cos says – The European Union (EU) agreement to disburse
rescue funds to member countries funded by common debt is
compatible with EU treaties, European Central Bank Governing
6. Page 6 of 9
Council member Pablo Hernandez de Cos said on Monday.
Germany’s constitutional court said on Friday it was looking into
an emergency appeal by five plaintiffs there against the debt-
financed investment plan. “I have no doubt that the European
agreement is perfectly compatible with the treaty,” de Cos, who
is also Governor of the Bank of Spain, said during an event held
in Madrid by news agency Europa Press. The EU governments
have agreed to allow the European Commission to raise up to
EUR750bn in capital markets and pass on the money to member
states worst hit by the pandemic through payments linked to
jointly agreed reform and investment plans, partly as grants and
partly as loans. (Reuters)
UK consumers cut their borrowing at record annual pace in
February – British consumers reined in their borrowing at the
fastest annual pace on record in February, according to Bank of
England data that could presage a spending-fueled bounce-back
for the economy as COVID-19 restrictions are eased. Consumer
borrowing dropped 9.9% YoY compared with February last year
- just before the pandemic struck the West - the biggest fall since
the series began in 1998, the BoE said. In February alone,
borrowing was down for a seventh consecutive month although
the pace of the fall eased. The data came as England’s stay-at-
home lockdown order ended on Monday with people allowed to
meet up outside in groups of six for the first time in nearly three
months - the first in a series of steps to reopen the country and
the economy. While repayments of consumer credit have fallen
sharply during the pandemic, new borrowing has fallen by much
more. (Reuters)
Spain's 2020 budget deficit rises to nearly 11% of GDP – Spain’s
budget deficit jumped to an 11-year high in 2020 after social
spending rose and tax revenue fell because of restrictions
imposed to curb the spread of COVID-19, but the gap was below
the government’s forecast. Budget Minister Maria Jesus Montero
told a news conference on Monday the deficit had widened to the
equivalent of 10.97% of gross domestic product in 2020 from
2.9% in 2019 and said the government would reduce the deficit
this year. The budget gap was narrower than the government’s
latest official target, which stood at 11.3% of GDP. Excluding the
roughly $11.78bn hit from the recent reclassification of Spain’s
SAREB ‘bad bank’ as a public entity, the deficit was 10.09% of
GDP. “The deficit increase doesn’t imply the government has
renounced the principleand benefit of budget stability,” she said.
“The priority will still be the pandemic, but that will not prevent
us from reducing the deficit in 2021.” (Reuters)
Japan's retail sales fall for third straight month – Japanese retail
sales fell for the third straight month in February as households
kept a lid on expenditure amid the coronavirus emergency,
underscoring the fragile nature of the economy’s recovery from
last year’s slump. Analysts expect Japan’s economy sharply
contracted in the first quarter, as lackluster consumer spending
and weakening exports create challenges for policymakers who
have already rolled out massive stimulus. Retail sales lost 1.5%
in February from a year earlier, government data showed on
Tuesday, a smaller fall than the median market forecast for a
2.8% drop. But it marked the third straight month of declines
following January’s 2.4% fall and a 0.2% drop in December.
“That the coronavirus isn’t subsiding is a major reason to worry
about a delay of an economic recovery,” Chief Economist at
Itochu Economic Research Institute, Atsushi Takeda said.
(Reuters)
China bonds set for billions of inflows after final FTSE WGBI nod
– Index provider FTSE Russell gave final approval on Monday for
inclusion of Chinese sovereign bonds in its flagship bond index,
starting later this year, setting the stage for billions of dollars of
inflows into the world’s second-largest economy. The index
provider also said India and Saudi Arabia were being considered
for potential inclusion, and that Malaysia was no longer on a
watch list for exclusion. Chinese government bonds will be
added to the FTSE World Government Bond Index (WGBI) over
three years from the end of October, FTSE Russell said in a
statement. Chinese government bonds were previously included
in index suites from JPMorgan and Bloomberg Barclays, but
FTSE WGBI inclusion is expected to have a larger effect due to
the size of passive flows tracking it. HSBC said that with roughly
$2.5tn tracking the WGBI, some $130bn in inflows could be
expected, given China’s eventual 5.25% weighting - about
$3.6bn a month. (Reuters)
Regional
Russia supports OPEC+ oil output rollover to May, seeks small
rise for itself – Russia would support broadly stable oil output by
OPEC+ group of leading global oil producers in May, while
seeking a relatively small output hike for itself to meet the rising
seasonal demand, source familiar with Russia’s thinking said on
Monday. Russian energy ministry and the office of Deputy Prime
Minister, Alexander Novak, in charge of Moscow’s ties with
OPEC+, have not immediately responded to requests for
comments. Sources told Reuters last week that they expect a
decision similar to the last meeting when the OPEC and its allies
including Russia, also known as OPEC+, meets on April 1 to
decide output policy. The OPEC+ group of producers, which are
holding back about 8mn bpd of output, 1mn of which is a Saudi
Arabia’s voluntary cut, surprised the market on March 4 by
deciding to hold output broadly steady. (Reuters)
Saudi Arabia wants OPEC+ to extend oil cuts into May-June –
Saudi Arabia is prepared to support extending oil cuts by OPEC
and allies into May and June and is also ready to extend its own
voluntary cuts to boost oil prices amid a new wave of
coronavirus lockdowns, a source briefed on the matter said on
Monday. With oil prices making steady gains earlier this year,
OPEC and allies, known as OPEC+, had hoped to ease output cuts.
But last week four OPEC+ sources told Reuters a fresh wave of
lockdowns would most likely encourage the group to extend cuts
into May when it meets on Thursday. On Monday, the source
said Saudi Arabia was keen to extend cuts into June. “They don’t
see demand as yet strong enough and want to prevent prices
from falling,” the source said. (Reuters)
Saudi Arabia’s February M1 money supply rises 13.1% YoY –
Saudi Arabian Central Bank in Riyadh published data on
monetary aggregates for February, which showed that M1
money supply rose 13.1% YoY. The M2 money supply rose 8.8%
YoY. The M3 money supply rose 9.8% YoY. (Bloomberg)
Saudi grocery chain BinDawood considering Middle East deal –
Saudi Arabia’s BinDawood Holding Co. is looking for a “sizable”
deal in the Middle East as the grocery chain plans an expansion
outside the Kingdom, according to its Chief Executive Officer.
“We are looking for a sizable merger or acquisition that will add
7. Page 7 of 9
value to shareholders,” Ahmad Bindawood said. “It’s not
necessarily going to be in Saudi Arabia, we’re also looking to
neighboring countries.” BinDawood is one of the biggest grocery
chains in Saudi Arabia, operating upmarket stores under the
Danube brand and mass-market stores under the BinDawood
brand. It was founded in 1984 by Khaled Dawood Ibrahim
BinDawood and has since grown to operate more than 70 stores.
The company currently has no debt and could look to borrow to
finance a potential deal, the CEO said. It has not yet appointed
any financial advisers to help arrange a deal, he said. The CEO
also said: Optimistic that growth will pick up further in 2021 as
the Saudi economy loosens restrictions to combat the
coronavirus pandemic and international travel resumes. “As
flights reopen and pilgrims are allowed to come back, that will
have a positive impact.” (Bloomberg)
Dubai to develop $1.1bn energy from waste facility – Dubai
Holding, the investment vehicle of Dubai’s ruler Sheikh
Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, said on Monday it had
partnered with five firms to develop a $1.1bn energy-from-waste
facility. The consortium consists of Dubal Holding, Switzerland-
headquartered Hitachi Zosen Inova, Japan’s ITOCHU
Corporation, Belgium’s BESIX Group and local construction firm
Tech Group, Dubai Holding said in a statement. The build and
operate project has a 35-year concession period with the Dubai
municipality, the statement said. “The facility will treat 5,666
tons of municipal solid waste produced by Dubai per day,” it said,
adding that it would generate energy by processing 1.9mn tons
of waste per year. Project finance loan agreements worth $900
million have been finalized with Japan Bank for International
Cooperation and financial institutions including Standard
Chartered Bank and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp. (Reuters)
Emirates says over 85% of pilots, cabin crew vaccinated against
COVID-19 – Emirates said on Monday that over 85% of its pilots
and cabin crew had been administered both doses of a
coronavirus vaccine. The global take-up of coronavirus vaccines
is seen as key to the reopening of borders and lifting social
restrictions that have hit travel demand over the past year. Over
35,000 Emirates employees have taken a vaccine shot, the
company said in a statement. Emirates has around 80,000 staff
across the group, which includes airport operator dnata.
(Reuters)
Dubai theme park group DXBE adds clause to smoothen Meraas
takeover – Dubai-based theme park operator DXB
Entertainments has amended the Articles of Association to
facilitate its takeover by Dubai property company Meraas. In a
filing to Dubai Financial Market, DXBE said it has added a clause
to the Articles of Association that stipulates that any
shareholder who owns 90% plus one additional share in DXBE’s
issued share capital has the right to enforce its minority
shareholders to sell or swap shares owned by them in favor of the
90% plus shareholder. DXBE, which operates Dubai Parks and
Resorts theme parks, has seen continued losses while attempts
at expansion restructuring have failed. It saw losses widen to
AED7.8bn in 2020 following months of closures and measures to
restrict the spread of COVID-19. Meraas Leisure and
Entertainment in December announced its intent to buy out
minority shareholders and take DXBE private. Earlier this
month, DXBE’s shareholders passed a resolution enabling
Meraas to acquire the senior bank debt of DXBE and
subsequently convert this debt into new shares of DXBE at a
conversion price of AED0.08 per share. (Zawya)
Murban crude futures start trading at new ICE, Abu Dhabi
exchange – Abu Dhabi started trading Murban crude futures
contracts on Monday, offering a potential rival benchmark for
trading Middle East crude. The key contract of the new ICE
Futures Abu Dhabi (IFAD) oil exchange was priced at $63.18 per
barrel with 4,164 lots traded, ICE said. Each lot is 1,000 barrels.
Abu Dhabi-based IFAD is backed by the Intercontinental
Exchange Inc, Abu Dhabi National Oil Co (ADNOC) and partners
including international oil majors. “Starting today, Murban
futures will be freely traded from Singapore to London, and from
Abu Dhabi to New York,” ADNOC Chief Executive, Sultan Al-
Jaber said. (Reuters)
Abu Dhabi looks to become pharma hub after Sinopharm deal –
Abu Dhabi is looking to transform itself into a pharmaceutical
hub, with a goal to help distribute billions of vaccine doses. “Our
target for the future is to make Abu Dhabi a pharmaceutical
center” and a “hub for life sciences,” Abu Dhabi Ports Chairman,
Falah Mohammed Al Ahbabisaid at a virtual event on Monday.
“We are building our airport, our capacity, our infrastructure and
all our processes to achieve that target.” (Bloomberg)
Kuwait moves to allocate KD600mn for health worker bonuses –
The Kuwait cabinet has adopted a proposal to open an additional
credit line of KD600mn to cover the bonuses of front-line health
workers fighting the pandemic, state-run KUNA reported. The
measure will be submitted to the Kuwaiti emir before being
brought before the National Assembly. (Bloomberg)
Oman's Port of Duqm says ships stuck on the Red Sea can offload
cargo at the port – Oman’s Port of Duqm said on Monday it is
ready to provide storage options, transshipment, and bunkering
solutions for containers, RORO units, and any vessel types
looking for new safe haven in the Middle East, Port of Duqm
Company said. The company said the port is also ready to
mitigate the situation being faced by shipping operators who
have their ships stuck on the Red Sea-side of the Suez Canal. It
added that “these ships can explore the options of offloading
their containers or their cargo at the port, for temporary storage
and later on, through the deployment of specific relief ships of
varying sizes, decide to clear these back logs for final delivery to
the destination points.” (Reuters)
Oman sells OMR146mn 91-day bills; bid-cover at 1.07x – Oman
sold OMR146mn of 91-day bills due on June 30. Investors offered
to buy 1.07 times the amount of securities sold. The bills were
sold at a price of 99.802, have a yield of 0.794% and will settle on
March 31. (Bloomberg)
Bahrain’s real GDP ‘to grow by 2.55% this year’ – Bahrain’s real
GDP will grow by 2.55% this year, well above the 1.4% growth
forecast for the GCC region as a whole, predicts a new report.
‘Economic Update: Middle East Q1 2021’, compiled by Oxford
Economics and commissioned by the Institute of Chartered
Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW), expects the rollout
of coronavirus vaccines should allow a return to relative
normality in the Middle East in the second half of 2021, while
much of the region’s economies will benefit from higher
commodity prices and stronger external demand. Overall,
according to ICAEW, the GCC GDP is estimated to have
8. Page 8 of 9
contracted 5.4% in 2020. The Middle East’s GDP forecast for this
year stands at 2.5%, similar to the average pace from 2010 to
2019 (2.6%), whereas the region’s unprecedented decline in 2020
is projected at 5.2%. (Zawya)
Bahrain sells BHD70mn 91-day bills; bid-cover at 1.03x – Bahrain
sold BHD70mn of 91-day bills due on June 30. Investors offered
to buy 1.03 times the amount of securities sold. The bills were
sold at a price of 99.721, have a yield of 1.11% and will settle on
March 31. (Bloomberg)
9. Contacts
QNB Financial Services Co. W.L.L.
Contact Center: (+974) 4476 6666
info@qnbfs.com.qa
Doha, Qatar
Saugata Sarkar, CFA, CAIA Shahan Keushgerian Mehmet Aksoy, PhD
Head of Research Senior Research Analyst Senior Research Analyst
saugata.sarkar@qnbfs.com.qa shahan.keushgerian@qnbfs.com.qa mehmet.aksoy@qnbfs.com.qa
Disclaimer and Copyright Notice: This publication has been prepared by QNB Financial Services Co. W.L.L. (“QNBFS”) a wholly-owned subsidiary of Qatar National Bank (Q.P.S.C.). QNBFS is
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Page 9 of 9
Rebased Performance Daily Index Performance
Source: Bloomberg Source: Bloomberg
Source: Bloomberg Source: Bloomberg (*$ adjusted returns; Market was closed on March 29, 2021)
60.0
80.0
100.0
120.0
140.0
160.0
Feb-17 Feb-18 Feb-19 Feb-20 Feb-21
QSE Index S&P Pan Arab S&P GCC
1.4% 1.3%
(0.2%)
(1.0%)
(0.5%)
1.2%
2.1%
(1.2%)
0.0%
1.2%
2.4%
Saudi
Arabia
Qatar
Kuwait
Bahrain
Oman
Abu
Dhabi
Dubai
Asset/Currency Performance Close ($) 1D% WTD% YTD% Global Indices Performance Close 1D%* WTD%* YTD%*
Gold/Ounce 1,712.20 (1.2) (1.2) (9.8) MSCI World Index 2,811.53 (0.1) (0.1) 4.5
Silver/Ounce 24.66 (1.6) (1.6) (6.6) DJ Industrial 33,171.37 0.3 0.3 8.4
Crude Oil (Brent)/Barrel (FM Future) 64.98 0.6 0.6 25.4 S&P 500 3,971.09 (0.1) (0.1) 5.7
Crude Oil (WTI)/Barrel (FM Future) 61.56 1.0 1.0 26.9 NASDAQ 100 13,059.65 (0.6) (0.6) 1.3
Natural Gas (Henry Hub)/MMBtu 2.44 0.0 0.0 2.7 STOXX 600 427.61 0.0 0.0 3.2
LPG Propane (Arab Gulf)/Ton 90.00 0.4 0.4 19.6 DAX 14,817.72 0.3 0.3 3.5
LPG Butane (Arab Gulf)/Ton 94.50 0.5 0.5 26.0 FTSE 100 6,736.17 (0.2) (0.2) 5.2
Euro 1.18 (0.2) (0.2) (3.7) CAC 40 6,015.51 0.3 0.3 4.4
Yen 109.81 0.2 0.2 6.4 Nikkei 29,384.52 0.7 0.7 0.7
GBP 1.38 (0.2) (0.2) 0.7 MSCI EM 1,310.11 0.2 0.2 1.5
CHF 1.06 (0.0) (0.0) (5.8) SHANGHAI SE Composite 3,435.30 0.1 0.1 (1.7)
AUD 0.76 (0.1) (0.1) (0.8) HANG SENG 28,338.30 (0.0) (0.0) 3.8
USD Index 92.94 0.2 0.2 3.3 BSE SENSEX#
49,008.50 0.0 0.0 3.3
RUB 75.66 (0.0) (0.0) 1.7 Bovespa 115,418.70 0.3 0.3 (12.8)
BRL 0.17 (0.4) (0.4) (10.1) RTS 1,468.14 1.3 1.3 5.8
125.3
120.7
97.4