The Tadawul All Share Index (TASI) on Monday edged down 0.1 percent as Saudi Kayan Petrochemical, which had soared to its 10 percent daily limit on Sunday after reporting better-than-expected quarterly earnings, fell back 4.1 percent.
Top petrochemical producer Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC) gained 1 percent, however; it was expected to release earnings after the close. Saudi Industrial Development, another producer, rose 0.4 percent after saying it had swung to a small net profit from a year-earlier loss.
Retailer Fawaz Abulaziz Alhokair climbed 3.1 percent to SR36.70 ($9.79) after it appointed a new chief executive, veteran Coca-Cola executive Atul Singh. Also, EFG Hermes raised its rating of the stock to “buy” from “neutral,” lifting its price target to SR44 from SR27.
Elsewhere, most Gulf stock markets rose on Monday with shares in health care and education investment company Amanat Holdings accounting for more than 40 percent of Dubai’s market volume with a 4.5 percent rise.
The Dubai index rose 0.8 percent with Amanat, the most active stock, seeing its heaviest trade since November.
The low-priced stock, which is sometimes the target of short-term speculation, will go ex-dividend on May 4.
Shares in Aramex lost 1.5 percent after the courier reported a 5 percent fall in quarterly profit due to a rise in provisions related to its incentive scheme. But Union Properties closed 3.9 percent higher, with a tussle over membership of the company’s board resulting in volatile trading.
The company said on Sunday that chairman Khalid Jassim bin Kalban and other directors had been replaced after stepping down, in the wake of a shareholder vote to ban board members from holding positions at competitors; bin Kalban is managing director at Dubai Investments.
But Union Properties then released a statement quoting the securities regulator as saying bin Kalban and other directors denied they had resigned. The company did not explain the contradiction with its earlier statements.
Dubai Investments, which has a joint venture with Union Properties, closed flat.
In Abu Dhabi, the index gained 0.8 percent as Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank added 1.5 percent. It posted an 8 percent rise in first-quarter profit.
Arkan Building Materials surged 3 percent after Al-Bayan newspaper quoted chairman Jamal Salem Al-Dhaheri as saying it was studying a merger with other companies, which he did not name.
Qatar’s index rose 0.5 percent as real estate firm Ezdan Holding jumped 6 percent after reporting a 62 percent surge in first-quarter net profit.
Petrochemical and metals producer Industries Qatar dropped 1.3 percent, however.
Markets in Egypt and Bahrain were closed for public holidays.

Source: Arab News