Saudi Shares Outperform on $1.3 Trillion Private Investment Push

Saudi Arabia’s stock market rose sharply on Wednesday, after the country announced a huge investment push led by Aramco and SABIC. (Reuters file photo)
Saudi Arabia’s stock market rose sharply on Wednesday, after the country announced a huge investment push led by Aramco and SABIC. (Reuters file photo)
TT

Saudi Shares Outperform on $1.3 Trillion Private Investment Push

Saudi Arabia’s stock market rose sharply on Wednesday, after the country announced a huge investment push led by Aramco and SABIC. (Reuters file photo)
Saudi Arabia’s stock market rose sharply on Wednesday, after the country announced a huge investment push led by Aramco and SABIC. (Reuters file photo)

Saudi Arabia’s stock market rose sharply on Wednesday, after the country announced a huge investment push led by Aramco and SABIC, while other major Gulf markets were mixed.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman said oil firm Aramco and petrochemical firm SABIC would lead 5 trillion riyals ($1.3 trillion) of investments by the local private sector by 2030 under a program announced on Tuesday for economic diversification.

This is part of 12 trillion riyals worth of investments planned by 2030, Crown Prince Mohammed said in televised remarks.

Saudi Arabia’s benchmark index advanced 2.8%, its biggest intraday gain since April last year, as all its banking shares traded higher except for one.

Al Rajhi Bank leapt 5.1%, while Saudi Basic Industries Corp (SABIC) climbed 5.6%. Saudi Aramco closed 2.7% higher.

In Dubai, the benchmark index eased 0.3%, hit by a 0.8% fall in blue-chip developer Emaar Properties and a 2.4% slide in DAMAC Properties.

The Qatari index added 0.2%, with Commercial Bank rising 3.2%.

However, Aamal Company declined over 5%, as the stock went ex-dividend.

Outside the Gulf, Egypt’s blue-chip index fell 1.6%, as most of the stocks on the index retreated including Commercial International Bank, which was down 1.6%.



EUROPE GAS-Prices Continue to Decline

Model of natural gas pipeline and Gazprom logo, July 18, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
Model of natural gas pipeline and Gazprom logo, July 18, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
TT

EUROPE GAS-Prices Continue to Decline

Model of natural gas pipeline and Gazprom logo, July 18, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
Model of natural gas pipeline and Gazprom logo, July 18, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

Dutch and British wholesale gas prices continued to declined on Tuesday morning on milder weather forecasts for next week, high wind speeds and stable supply.

The benchmark front-month contract at the Dutch TTF hub was down 0.61 euros at 46.65 euros per megawatt hour (MWh) at 0947 GMT, according to LSEG data.

The contract for March was down 0.52 euro at 46.63 euros/MWh.

In Britain, the front-month contract fell by 2.04 pence to 116.76 pence per therm.

In north-west Europe, although another cold snap is forecast from Friday over the weekend, the latest forecasts are showing milder temperatures than yesterday from Jan. 15, according to LSEG data, Reuters reported.

Wind speeds are expected to remain quite strong today, limiting gas demand.

However, in north-west Europe, gas-for-power demand is expected 36 million cubic metres (mcm) per day higher at 78 mcm/day on the day-ahead.

"Wind speeds are expected still high today, before dropping sharply tomorrow with the cold spell arriving," said LSEG gas analyst Saku Jussila.

In Britain, Peak wind generation is forecast at around 15.1 gigawatts (GW) today and 14.7 GW tomorrow, Elexon data showed.

Analysts at Engie EnergyScan said EU net storage withdrawals have slowed due to a more comfortable spot balance but the storage gap compared to last year remains high. On 5 January, EU gas stocks were 69.94% full on average, compared to 84.96% last year.

Looking further ahead, analysts at Jefferies expect a tight year for global gas markets due to project delays and higher-than-expected demand.

"European and Asian LNG spot gas prices in 2025 could surpass those of 2024, driven by Europe's increased gas injection needs and the loss of Russian exports outpacing the expected growth in global LNG supply," they said.

"Post 2025, the market is expected to loosen with an additional 175 million tonnes of new supply coming online between 2026 and 2030, primarily from the US and Qatar," they added.

In the European carbon market, the benchmark contract was down 0.91 euro at 73.45 euros a metric ton.