Most Gulf currencies are pegged to the U.S. dollar, while Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar usually mirror U.S. monetary policy changes.
The Qatari Stock index rose 1%, extending its previous session gains with all sectors in the positive territory, led by industry and finance. The index heavyweight Islamic banks Qatar Islamic Bank and Qatar International Islamic Bank added 0.7% and 1.5% respectively, while conglomerate Industries Qatar climbed 5.2%.
In Abu Dhabi, the index rose 0.6%, snapping two sessions decline, supported by a 5.4% jump in ADNOC Gas and a 2.8% rise in Alpha Dhabi Holding. The United Arab Emirates' biggest lender, First Abu Dhabi Bank and third-largest bank Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank climbed 1.6% and 2.5% respectively.
Dubai's benchmark index extended its previous sessions rally and ended 0.4% higher. The index was lifted by gains in most sectors with Emaar Properties rising 1.6% and cooling solutions provider Emirates Central Cooling adding 2.5%. The emirate's largest bank Emirates NBD gained 0.8%.
Saudi Arabia's benchmark index dropped 0.1%, ending three sessions gains. The index dragged down by losses in materials, health and finance sectors with Dr Sulaiman Al-Habib Medical shedding 1.9% and Saudi Basic Industries losing 1.2%. Al Rajhi Bank , the world's largest Islamic bank by assets, slid 2%, the steepest intraday fall in a month as it was trading ex-dividend. Shares of Mouwasat Medical Services shot up 10%, the highest intraday rise since March 2020. The healthcare service provider reported on Wednesday a rise in full-year net profit, beating analysts' expectations.
Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index fell 0.5%, snapping two sessions gains with almost all sectors in the red with Fawry Banking dropping 2.8% and Telecom Egypt losing 4.2%%. Meanwhile, Egypt has decided to suspend the sale of a stake in state-controlled telecoms services provider because of market conditions.
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