Foreigners Can Soon Buy Saudi Stock, But With Restrictions

International Business Times

Published Jul 22, 2014 09:29AM ET

Foreigners Can Soon Buy Saudi Stock, But With Restrictions

By Kathleen Caulderwood - Saudi Arabia’s $530 million stock exchange will become one of the last in the world to open itself up to foreign investment next year. But the largest economy in the Middle East, with attractive blue-chip offerings and strong growth, is doing so carefully, with major limitations on foreigners.

“The market will be open to eligible foreign financial institutions to invest in listed shares during the first half of 2015, with God’s permission,” the Capital Market Authority said in a statement on Tuesday.

Currently, the Saudi market is the second-largest in the world that’s closed to foreigners, topped only by China, and it's excluded from major global indexes like the MSCI.  

Though foreign investors aren’t technically allowed to invest directly, they’ve been able to buy Saudi stock through swaps with international banks and exchange-traded funds, which is cumbersome.

“We already invest in Saudi Arabia in our frontier fund, though we have to do it through things like participatory notes, so if they open the market up it will simplify the process,” said Allan Conway, head of emerging market equities at Schroder Investment Management Ltd., to the Wall Street Journal.

However, the new open market will have restrictions on foreign stockholders. For one thing, no institution can own more than five percent of a Saudi firm, and all foreigners combined can’t own more than a fifth.