Friday, December 05, 2008

Important Story:Foreigners sell off Israeli securities

bloomberg , THE JERUSALEM POST

Foreigners sold a net $1.2 billion in Israeli stocks and bonds in October, more than double the previous month's level of $535 million, according to preliminary Bank of Israel figures.
. About $1.1 billion of the sales were equities traded on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange, compared with $595 million in September, with the rest coming from the sale of TASE-listed bonds and Israeli securities traded overseas, the Jerusalem-based central bank said in a statement today. Overseas investors made direct investments of $444 million in the month, down from $929 million in September, it said.
About $600 million of the equities sales were in chemicals companies and another $200 million in banks, extending a sell-off of the shares in September, the Bank of Israel said.
Foreigners were net sellers of $263 million in bonds, after buying a net $84 million the month before, it said.
The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange's benchmark TA-25 index fell 18 percent in October, bringing its decline in the first 10 months to 40%. Israel Chemicals Ltd., the country's biggest chemicals maker by market value, lost almost a third of its value. The TASE's banking index dropped 22% in October.
Foreign Investment Foreigners were net sellers of $1.5 billion of Israeli securities in the first 10 months of the year, after buying $2.16 billion in 2007, preliminary figures from the central bank showed.
Direct foreign investment in October was led by a $55 million investment in an unnamed medical company, it said.
FDI reached a preliminary $6 billion in the first 10 months, figures showed.
Israelis were net buyers of $1.22 billion in foreign securities in the October, after selling a net $704 million the month before, the central bank said. In October, Koor Industries Ltd., a holding company controlled by Nochi Dankner, bought $1.1 billion in Credit Suisse Group, Switzerland's second-largest bank, as part of the lender's recapitalization.
Direct investment overseas by Israelis reached $239 million in the month, down from $465 million in September, it said.
This article can also be read at http://www.jpost.com /servlet/Satellite?cid=1227702423053&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

Comment: The implications of this move is critical to Israel's economic health. We have prospered in large part due to the infusion of international investment. Our economy has been able to expand and create many new jobs. Should this trend continue we are in trouble. Not only economically but politicly as well. We will become even more under the influence of outsiders and certain policies will also be affected. This is an ongoing, emerging story.

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