(Bloomberg) -- Record foreign selling of Saudi Arabian stocks in the wake of last month’s killing of government critic Jamal Khashoggi put the breaks on a 10-month streak of international investments in the Middle East’s five biggest stock markets.
Net foreign outflows from Saudi Arabia were $1.7 billion, while most other markets had inflows, according to a report by Mohamad Al Hajj, a strategist at the research arm of EFG-Hermes Holding SAE in Dubai. Total outflows from the region were $1.4 billion.
Volatility in the main Saudi stock gauge surged last month after Khashoggi’s murder at the kingdom’s consulate in Istanbul, and net sales by foreign investors were the highest since the local exchange started providing the data in 2015. Foreigners also exited Kuwait’s market, but at a much slower rate. By contrast, they were were net buyers in Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt, Al Hajj wrote.
Here’s more from the EFG-Hermes report:
- Investors from the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council, which compose a separate category, were also net sellers of MENA stocks, with the exception of Qatar’s market
- Year-to-date, GCC investors remain net buyers of Saudi stocks by $225 million
- Qatar National Bank, Emirates Telecommunications Group Co., Emaar Properties PJSC and First Abu Dhabi Bank PJSC were the most popular stocks among foreign investors in October, attracting combined net inflows of $195 million
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