Funds increasingly bullish on Saudi Arabian equities - survey

* 53 pct expect to increase Saudi equity allocations * Saudi Arabia to open market to foreigners in coming months * Has benefitted from oil's rebound * Funds less optimistic on other stalled Gulf markets * Negative on Qatar as dividend season nears its end By Olzhas Auyezov DUBAI, Feb 26 (Reuters) - Middle East funds are increasingly positive towards Saudi Arabia's stock market as oil prices appear to be stabilising and the kingdom is preparing to open its bourse to direct foreign investment, a Reuters survey of regional asset managers shows.

With its main stock index up 11.2 percent year-to-date, Saudi Arabia has outperformed all other major bourses in the Middle East, whose returns are mostly in the low single digits.

In the February version of the monthly survey, 53 percent of respondents said they expected to increase their Saudi equity allocations in the next three months, while none intended to cut them. A month earlier, 40 percent planned to boost Saudi equity allocations and the rest expected them to be stable.

Saudi Arabia's Capital Market Authority has said it plans to open the stock market to direct investment by foreign institutions in the first half of 2015.

Analysts expect the opening to be gradual, with institutional investors permitted to enter into stages, so a sudden rush of funds into the market looks unlikely. But eventually the opening may help Saudi Arabia secure the status of an emerging market in global indexes, which could trigger heavy fund inflows.

Another positive factor is oil, which appears to have bottomed out at $45 per barrel of Brent in January and has hovered around $60 in the last few weeks. This is providing support to heavily weighted petrochemical stocks.

Although Saudi Arabia's state budget will be in deficit if oil stays at the current level, the government's fiscal reserves will allow it to keep spending heavily, as shown by King Salman's order late last month to pay two months' salary as a bonus to public servants. State-run companies have mirrored the move, prompting a rally in consumer-focused stocks.

Thanks to their high concentrations of interest-free deposits, profit margins at Saudi Arabian banks may benefit when U.S. interest rate hikes expected later this year prompt rate rises in the Gulf, where currencies are pegged to the dollar.

The Reuters survey of 15 leading Middle East investment professionals was conducted over the past 10 days.

http://link.reuters.com/vyp24w ----------------------------------------------------------> UAE, QATAR With all eyes on Saudi Arabia, fund managers are somewhat less optimistic about other Gulf stock markets and have become temporarily negative on Qatar.