Business And Markets
0

Tehran Bourse Outstrips Global Rivals

The stock market in Iran, for a long time dogged by US sanctions, has notched up a notable achievement: ranking among the world’s best performing over the past 12 months. 
A collapse in the rial against the dollar has triggered a huge spike in prices, with the official inflation rate at almost 43% in the year to September. Banks’ interest rates have not kept up, which analysts say has pushed Iranians into stocks to protect the value of their savings. 
This has triggered a big rally for the Tehran bourse, which had sold off in the final quarter of 2018 on fears of escalation of political tensions and economic stagnation, Financial Times reported. 
It is now up 73% in local currency terms over the past 12 months, outpacing any other global equity market tracked by Bloomberg. 
“Iran’s bourse showed it can hedge against foreign currency risks and is the best market to guarantee people’s money with high dividends,” said the manager of a Tehran-based asset management firm, who asked not to be named. 
The top 30 listed companies account for more than 60% of the stock exchange’s market cap, according to local analysts — including the country’s top exporters of petrochemicals, steel and copper.
These businesses generate foreign currency income, giving them protection from domestic economic stagnation.

 

Double in Dollar Terms

Though the combined market value of the Tehran Stock Exchange and Iran Fara Bourse — the over-the-counter trading venue — has doubled in dollar terms over the past year, this total is some way below its 2014 peak.
 At that point, Iran had made an initial agreement to sign a nuclear accord with western powers and hopes for the lifting of banking and oil sanctions had jumped. Analysts say the market is not yet at risk of crashing even though they expect some corrections in small- and medium-sized companies where price/earnings ratios have risen strongly.
 The SME segment tends to attract particular interest from ordinary Iranians looking to invest their savings. The sanctions have prevented any rise in foreign portfolio investment into Iran, which is estimated to have remained around $50m since 2018, down from 2009 when it exceeded $100m. 
Dividends from those investments are now mostly reinvested in the market, say analysts, because of sanctions which make taking money out of the country tricky for European investors in particular. 
There have been “almost no new foreign portfolio investments in the bourse since Trump swept to power”, said a manager of a local investment fund. “Iran’s capital market is for investors who have stamina, rather than those who see skyrocketing figures and dream of quick money.”

 

Add new comment

Read our comment policy before posting your viewpoints

Financialtribune.com