Egypt nudges off 29-month low
Egypt's benchmark index nudged up following a tumble to a 29-month low last week after Ezz Steel dipped in the wake of its former chairman being sentenced to jail for graft and the firm having two of its licences withdrawn, traders say.
Shares in Ezz Steel were suspended last week shortly after the stock lost almost 9 per cent following the court ruling against Ahmad Ezz, a former senior official in ousted Hosni Mubarak's party.
The shares are still suspended after the stock exchange requested information from the firm in light of the ruling.
Ezz shares last traded at 7.81 Egyptian pounds (Dh4.80) on Thursday before being suspended. CI Capital Research reduced its valuation for the firm to 8.80 pounds from 12 pounds, but due to a drop in share prices, its recommendation for the stock shifted to ‘hold' from ‘sell', CI director Hany Samy said.
"Because the drop in the stock market was much higher, that is why we consider it a hold," Samy said. "These licences are related to future expansion, they are not going to affect the current operations of the company."