Strong global markets may give Gulf bourses an upward bias on Sunday, although moderate trading volumes in recent days suggest any gains may not be large.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 1.39 percent on Friday while Brent oil climbed on the last two days of the week, closing at $67.31 a barrel.
Among corporate earnings announcements, Saudi Kayan Petrochemical swung to a fourth-quarter loss of 220 million riyals ($58.7 million) because of scheduled maintenance at its plants. That was larger than the 90 million riyal loss forecast by SICO Bahrain but much smaller than the 417 million riyal loss predicted by NCB Capital.
Abdulmohsen Al Hokair Group for Tourism and Development may see selling after reporting that annual net profit shrank to 8.7 million riyals from 126.3 million riyals; it cited low demand from individuals and corporates due to a decline in state spending and private sector demand for conferences. The figures implied a 23.1 million riyal loss in the fourth quarter.
Dubai’s DP World said late on Thursday that it would take legal action after Djibouti ended a contract with the company to run its Doraleh Container Terminal, a move which DP World called an illegal seizure.
DP World did not give an estimate of the financial impact but the news may have little effect on its share price, as Djibouti was only a small part of its large and diversified global portfolio. Source: Reuters