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Gulf corporate earnings slide 8% in H1

By AFP - Sep 04,2016 - Last updated at Sep 04,2016

Low oil prices have hit profits of Gulf-listed companies (AFP file photo)

Kuwait City — The earnings of Gulf-listed firms dropped 8 per cent in the first half of 2016 due to low oil prices and a lack of liquidity, a report said on Sunday.

Net profits of over 650 firms on the region's bourses reached $32.8 billion in the six months against $35.6 billion for the same period of 2015, said Kuwait Financial Centre Markaz.

All posted drops except those on the stock market in Oman, where net earnings rose by 7 per cent, the investment firm said in a report.

Stock exchanges in members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) were hit hard last year and in the first few months of 2016 as a result of the sharp fall in oil revenues.

They recovered some of the losses in the second quarter as crude prices rose to around $50 a barrel from under $30.

"Persisting lower oil prices, liquidity squeeze and sedate global growth led to decline in GCC corporate earnings during the first half period of 2016, compared with the corresponding period a year back," said the report.

"During the first half of 2016, corporate earnings in the GCC fell by 8 per cent over the same period in 2015."

The GCC groups Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which together pump around 18 million barrels of crude oil daily.

In its report, Markaz projected the earnings of companies in the GCC would end the year down 4 per cent.

Profits of companies with medium- and small-sized capitalisation fell by 38 per cent and 22 per cent respectively, while net earnings of large corporates dropped by just 5 per cent, it said.

The drop was attributed to the fall in earnings of commodities, real estate and construction sectors. Banks' earnings remained flat while telecoms and financial services increased, said Markaz.

 

Profits of firms listed on the Saudi stock market, the largest bourse in the Middle East, dropped 7 per cent with the real estate sector down by 50 per cent, it said.

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