Monday, 27 March 2023

Mideast Stocks: Gulf markets mostly subdued despite rising oil prices

Mideast Stocks: Gulf markets mostly subdued despite rising oil prices


Gulf stock markets were mostly subdued on Monday, with banking shares taking the biggest hit across the markets as investors in the region were cautious despite some gains in oil prices and an easing of global banking stability fears.

Sentiment among investors remained pessimistic as concerns around the banking sector’s woes remain in investors’ minds, said Fadi Reyad, Chief Market Analyst at CAPEX.com MENA.

Oil prices - a key catalyst for Gulf financial markets - rose on Monday after a halt to oil exports from Iraqi Kurdistan via Turkey and moves to contain a potential banking crisis, with Brent crude futures gaining $1.16, or 1.6%, at $76.15 a barrel by 1210 GMT.

Abu Dhabi's share index dropped 0.8%, in its third day in the red, dragged down by a 0.3% decline in UAE's largest lender First Abu Dhabi Bank.

Dubai's main share index declined 0.7%, extending losses to a second consecutive session, led by drops in its financial stocks, with Emirates NBD Bank, UAE's largest lender, decreasing 1.9% and Dubai Islamic Bank tumbling 2.1%.

The Qatari benchmark index also fell 0.3%, ending a four day rally, weighed down by a 1.2% dive in Qatar National Bank, the Gulf's biggest bank by assets, and a 0.8% retreat in chemical makers Industries Qatar.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark index closed flat, as heavy losses in material sectors were capped by gains in healthcare stocks, with Dr. Sulaiman Al-Habib Medical Services gaining 3.8% but Sabic Agri-Nutrients, which was trading ex-dividend, recorded its sharpest intraday decline in over three years, to close 8.3% lower. Index heavyweight Saudi Aramco also fell 0.2%. Aramco said on Monday it has raised its multi-billion dollar investment in China by finalising and upgrading a planned joint venture in northeast China and acquiring an expanded stake in a privately controlled petrochemical group.

Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index, closed 0.2% lower, with index heavyweight Commercial International Bank Egypt shedding 0.4% and EFG Hermes Holdings losing 2.9%. The country's lone cigarette maker, Eastern Company , however, surged 7.4% after on Sunday it revised the price of some products.

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