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Markets

Most Gulf bourses fall on US tariff concerns, weaker oil

Published July 22, 2025 Updated July 22, 2025 06:58pm
Photo: Reuters
Photo: Reuters
By

Most Gulf stock indexes dipped on Tuesday, as investors worried about fading prospects of the European Union’s trade deal with the United States ahead of a looming tariff deadline, with weak oil prices offsetting strong corporate earnings.

The EU is exploring broader counter-measures against the U.S. as prospects of an acceptable trade agreement with Washington wane, according to EU diplomats.

U.S. President Donald Trump’s imposition of tariffs around the world risks hurting global economic growth, and with it oil consumption.

Saudi Arabia’s benchmark index retreated 1.3%, after snapping its longest downturn in nearly two years in the previous session as broad sector declines and weaker oil prices outweighed upbeat corporate earnings.

Al Rajhi Bank dropped 1% and oil giant Saudi Aramco decreased 0.5%.

Oil prices declined for a third consecutive session on concerns that a brewing trade war between major crude consumers, the U.S. and the EU, will curb fuel demand growth by reducing economic activity.

Gulf markets mixed as strong earnings offset US tariff concerns

But Etihad Etisalat rose 1.9% after posting a 25% rise in second-quarter profit, while Saudi Automotive Services gained 1.5% following a more-than-twofold-jump in quarterly earnings.

Elsewhere, shares of Sport Clubs surged 24% on their market debut. Saudi Exchange allows 30% fluctuation limit for newly-listed stocks during their first three days of trading.

Dubai’s main share index eased 0.3%, marking the third straight session of losses as investors remained cautious ahead of key earnings and locked in profits following a multi-year rally.

Index heavyweight Dubai Islamic Bank dropped 1.2% while budget carrier Air Arabia fell over 3%, ending a five-session winning streak.

In Abu Dhabi, the index was under pressure as a wave of earnings releases this week kept many investors on the sidelines.

Qatar’s stock index reversed early losses to finish 1.1% higher, reaching its highest level in more than two and a half years, as nearly all sectors advanced.

Banking stocks led the advance, supported by strong earnings. Qatar Islamic Bank soared 6%, rising for a fourth straight session after reporting upbeat results.

Outside the Gulf, Egypt’s blue-chip index declined 1%, pulling back from a record high.

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 SAUDI ARABIA     retreated 1.3% to 10,843
 ABU DHABI        fell 0.6% to 10,179
 DUBAI            was down 0.3% to 6,025
 QATAR            gained 1.1% to 11,141
 EGYPT            declined 1% to 33,803
 BAHRAIN          added 0.4% to 1,945
 OMAN             advanced 0.7% to 4,777
 KUWAIT           dropped 0.2% to 9,281
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