Most stock markets in the Gulf ended higher on Sunday as trading resumed after the Muslim Eid al-Adha holidays, with the Qatari index registering the strongest performance.
Solely aggregation of news articles, with no opinions expressed by this service since 2009 launch on this platform. Copyright to all articles remains with the original publisher and HEADLINES ARE CLICKABLE to access the whole article at source. (Subscription by email is recommended,with real-time updates on LinkedIn and Twitter.)
Sunday, 2 July 2023
#Qatar leads most Gulf markets higher after Eid | Reuters
Qatar leads most Gulf markets higher after Eid | Reuters
Most stock markets in the Gulf ended higher on Sunday as trading resumed after the Muslim Eid al-Adha holidays, with the Qatari index registering the strongest performance.
Most stock markets in the Gulf ended higher on Sunday as trading resumed after the Muslim Eid al-Adha holidays, with the Qatari index registering the strongest performance.
Oil Traders Transfixed as Activity Jumps on Key Mideast Platform - Bloomberg
Oil Traders Transfixed as Activity Jumps on Key Mideast Platform - Bloomberg
The trading of Middle Eastern oil derivatives on a closely-watched platform that helps set crude benchmarks and shape real cargo flows has soared this month, highlighting a spike in activity that’s captivated traders.
A total of more than 1,700 derivative contracts of Dubai and Oman on a pricing window run by S&P Global Commodity Insights traded this month. As a result, just six months into the current year, the tally for 2023 already surpasses the full-year figures since 2015, according to Platts, as the pricing agency is better known.
The surge in activity matters to global oil markets because it’s contributed to the relative strength in Dubai pricing against other international benchmarks, helping to shape global crude flows as cargoes get shifted between regions. The aggressive activity has both puzzled traders and made it harder to determine whether Middle Eastern markets have actually tightened as OPEC+ members including Saudi Arabia pledged supply curbs in a bid to revive prices.
This month, a total of 1,732 Dubai and Oman so-called partials changed hands, more than triple the monthly average from January to May, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Each partial, which represents a transaction for 25,000 barrels, helps set the price of Middle Eastern markers such as Dubai, which form the basis of most crude exports from the Persian Gulf.
The trading of Middle Eastern oil derivatives on a closely-watched platform that helps set crude benchmarks and shape real cargo flows has soared this month, highlighting a spike in activity that’s captivated traders.
A total of more than 1,700 derivative contracts of Dubai and Oman on a pricing window run by S&P Global Commodity Insights traded this month. As a result, just six months into the current year, the tally for 2023 already surpasses the full-year figures since 2015, according to Platts, as the pricing agency is better known.
The surge in activity matters to global oil markets because it’s contributed to the relative strength in Dubai pricing against other international benchmarks, helping to shape global crude flows as cargoes get shifted between regions. The aggressive activity has both puzzled traders and made it harder to determine whether Middle Eastern markets have actually tightened as OPEC+ members including Saudi Arabia pledged supply curbs in a bid to revive prices.
This month, a total of 1,732 Dubai and Oman so-called partials changed hands, more than triple the monthly average from January to May, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Each partial, which represents a transaction for 25,000 barrels, helps set the price of Middle Eastern markers such as Dubai, which form the basis of most crude exports from the Persian Gulf.