Most Gulf bourses rise; Egypt drops

12 May, 2024

Most stock markets in the Gulf ended higher on Sunday, amid rising oil prices, while the Saudi index slid after some weak corporate earnings.

Oil prices, a catalyst for the Gulf’s financial markets, rose on Friday on stronger Chinese economic data and the ongoing Middle East conflict, with Brent settling at $84.24 a barrel.

The Qatari benchmark index was up 0.1%, supported by a gain of 0.7% in Industries Qatar and a 0.8% rise in Qatar Islamic Bank.

Saudi Arabia’s benchmark index slipped for a second straight session and ended 0.6% lower, weighed down by losses in almost all sectors.

Major Gulf markets muted as Mideast conflict rages

ACWA slid 4.7%, after the private utility firm reported on Thursday a 54% decrease in its first quarter net profit sequentially. However, its quarterly profit inched up 9.8% year on year.

Among other fallers, Mobile Telecommunication Company Saudi Arabia known as Zain KSA, fell 1.5% after it posted a 94.1% decline in its quarterly net profit.

Outside the Gulf, Egypt’s blue-chip index dropped 3.3%, with most of its constituents posting losses, led by real estate, materials and healthcare stocks.

Talaat Mostafa Group slipped 6.3% and Abu Qir Fertilizers lost 5.2%. However, Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank Egypt gained 2.4% after it reported 110% surge in its quarterly net profit.

SAUDI ARABIA fell 0.6% to 12,217

KUWAIT rose 1.7% to 7,846

QATAR added 0.1% to 9,644

EGYPT dropped 3.3% to 25,156

BAHRAIN lost 0.4% to 2,024

OMAN gained 0.2% to 4,779

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