The Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange plans to launch a tradeable version of the FTSE FADX 15 Index this year. Photo: ADX
The Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange plans to launch a tradeable version of the FTSE FADX 15 Index this year. Photo: ADX
The Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange plans to launch a tradeable version of the FTSE FADX 15 Index this year. Photo: ADX
The Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange plans to launch a tradeable version of the FTSE FADX 15 Index this year. Photo: ADX

Abu Dhabi bourse aims to top 2021's record listings this year, CEO says


Sarmad Khan
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The Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange expects to match or exceed the record number of listings it achieved in 2021 as it continues to add new products and expand its investor base, its managing director and chief executive said.

The bourse's benchmark FTSE ADX General Index was among the best-performing exchanges worldwide last year, having rallied more than 62 per cent in 2021. It is the best-performing bourse in the GCC this year, having climbed about 14 per cent since January.

Its market value was up about 25 per cent so far this year at more than Dh2.015 trillion ($549 billion) as of Monday 12.53pm UAE time, making it the Middle East and Arab world’s second-largest exchange.

“We are confident that the listing this year will not be less than what we have seen last year,” Saeed Al Dhaheri told The National.

“We are very optimistic. We are seeing the appetite from so many companies to come to Abu Dhabi and list … whether they are UAE companies or companies that are in the GCC, Europe, the US, Africa and Asia,” he said, when asked if the bourse could top its 2021 performance.

The ADX has a “good pipeline” of initial public offerings, with healthcare and FinTech companies among others expressing an interest in listing on the exchange this year, Mr Al Dhaheri said.

“We have a mix of pipeline GREs [government-related entities], we have family businesses … it is a mix of everything,” he said.

There were nine listings on the exchange last year, including the initial public offerings of Adnoc Drilling, which raised $1.1bn in October, and Fertiglobe, the world’s largest seaborne exporter of urea and ammonia combined, which reaped about $795 million.

The ADX has carried the IPO momentum into 2022. Abu Dhabi Ports Group, the operator of industrial cities and free zones in the emirate, began trading on the ADX in February.

Borouge, the joint venture between Adnoc and Austrian chemicals producer Borealis, successfully closed its $2bn IPO, the biggest share sale on the ADX, in a deal that was about 42 times oversubscribed.

The ADX could host 13 more listings before the end of this year as it seeks to reach a market value of Dh3tn, Mohammed Al Shorafa, chairman of the Abu Dhabi Economic Development Department, told Sky News Arabia in March.

The new listings will include four companies from outside the UAE, while others will be government and family companies, he said at the time.

Abu Dhabi is investing in five to 10 companies a year through its Dh5bn IPO fund to encourage the listing of private companies on the ADX, officials said last year.

“We have seen great listings contributing to the story of reaching [the] Dh2tn [mark] … adding new products has contributed to that [as well] and us changing some of regulations to provide good access to companies listed in Abu Dhabi,” Mr Al Dhaheri said.

“But for me, the goal is continuing. We are not stopping because we have [reached] a specific target or not.”

The value of stocks traded on the exchange in the first quarter of this year climbed 87 per cent a year to Dh202bn. The market value of shares owned by foreign investors in the first three months of the year jumped 163 per cent to Dh131bn, according to ADX data.

The value of stocks traded on the exchange in the first quarter of this year climbed 87 per cent year on year. Photo: ADX
The value of stocks traded on the exchange in the first quarter of this year climbed 87 per cent year on year. Photo: ADX

Last week, the exchange concluded its investor roadshow in London, with senior executives from nine listed companies and the leadership of the ADX courting international investors to boost capital flows to the UAE.

The delegation, led by Mr Al Dhaheri, included the top management of Adnoc Distribution, Adnoc Drilling, Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank, Agthia, Aldar Properties, Al Yah Satellite Communications Company, Etisalat, First Abu Dhabi Bank and Fertiglobe.

The investor response was positive, Mr Al Dhaheri said.

“They like what the exchange has done in the past one year and a half in terms of … new listings, new products like Spacs [special purpose acquisition companies] and derivatives, and the rebranding of the second market,” he said.

The exchange listed its first Spac — the ADC Acquisition Corporation that seeks to acquire fast-growing technology companies — in May, and has received interest from other Spac sponsors that are interested in listing on the ADX.

A Spac is a vehicle with no commercial operations and is formed with the intention of raising funds through an IPO and then acquiring an existing company.

Spacs have lighter disclosure requirements than IPOs and have been increasingly used over the past two years to take fast-growing companies public quickly.

The ADX will add new products this year including more single-stock futures on its derivatives market, Mr Al Dhaheri said.

It may introduce between three to five futures this year and launch a tradeable version of the FTSE FADX 15 Index, most likely by the end of June.

“What is important to us also is to provide easy access to international institutional investors and retail investors to the ADX,” said Mr Al Dhaheri. “This is something that is very close to my heart.”

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Some of the biggest listings in UAE since 2021 - in pictures

Tearful appearance

Chancellor Rachel Reeves set markets on edge as she appeared visibly distraught in parliament on Wednesday. 

Legislative setbacks for the government have blown a new hole in the budgetary calculations at a time when the deficit is stubbornly large and the economy is struggling to grow. 

She appeared with Keir Starmer on Thursday and the pair embraced, but he had failed to give her his backing as she cried a day earlier.

A spokesman said her upset demeanour was due to a personal matter.

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Blockchain is a form of distributed ledger technology, a digital system in which data is recorded across multiple places at the same time. Unlike traditional databases, DLTs have no central administrator or centralised data storage. They are transparent because the data is visible and, because they are automatically replicated and impossible to be tampered with, they are secure.

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The internal combustion engine is facing a watershed moment – major manufacturer Volvo is to stop producing petroleum-powered vehicles by 2021 and countries in Europe, including the UK, have vowed to ban their sale before 2040. The National takes a look at the story of one of the most successful technologies of the last 100 years and how it has impacted life in the UAE. 

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