ArabianBusiness.com - Middle East Business News
Wednesday, 03 December 2008 04:56 UAE time

YOUR DIRECTORY /

Print this page Print this page | Email this to a friend Email this to a friend | Discuss this article (0 Comments) |

Gulf markets fall after pull-out

by This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it  on Thursday, 04 September 2008

Gulf Arab stocks plunged on Thursday as weaker oil prices and tensions with Iran compounded a broad selloff in emerging markets, sending some indices down as much as 4 percent and erasing all the gains of 2008.

Oman's blue chip index closed 3.88 percent lower, falling 27 percent from its lifetime high set in June.

Investors selling broad emerging markets portfolios have been forced to offload Gulf shares as well, even though oil revenues assure sustainable growth in the region, said Yazan Abdeen, fund manager at ING Investment Management in Dubai.

Story continues below
advertisement

“The only reason for the fall in the market is that all this bad news globally is contagious. The local investor has taken refuge by not investing, taking out liquidity, while there is at the same time a seller,” Abdeen said.

Qatar's main index closed 2 percent lower. The Doha benchmark has fallen 23 percent since reaching a 2-1/2-year high on June 11, meaning that it now joins the markets of Oman, Dubai and Saudi Arabia in bear territory.

Kuwait's index closed 0.86 percent lower, having fallen 11 percent since reaching an all-time high on June 25.

“This is a much needed correction that market makers can no longer postpone,” said Naser Al-Nafisi, general manager at Al-Joman Center for Economic Consultancy.

Restrictions on consumer loans introduced by Kuwait's central bank in March and the recent fall in oil prices have had a negative effect on investor sentiment, he said.

Analysts said that local support is likely to return at the end of September, when the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan ends and many investors return to the market.

The Muscat benchmark closed 3.88 percent lower at 8,832 points. The index has fallen more than 27 percent since reaching an all-time high on June 12.

Oman Telecommunications and Bank Muscat fell 3.64 percent and 2.42 percent respectively.

The Qatari benchmark declined 2.07 percent to 10,032 points. It is down 23 percent since reaching a 2-1/2-year high on June 11.

Qatar National Bank and Industries Qatar lost 3.35 percent and 2.96 percent respectively.

Dubai's main index closed 1.25 percent lower at 4,689 points. The benchmark has closed lower for the fifth time in six trading days.

Emaar Properties shed 3.31 percent. The Abu Dhabi index eased 0.76 percent to 4,311 points, the fifth trading day in a row the index has ended lower.

First Gulf Bank shed 4.42 percent. Kuwait's main index ended 0.86 percent lower at 13,961 points, having fallen 11 percent since reaching an all-time high on June 25.

The Bahraini index closed down 0.37 percent at 2,627 points, its fifth loss in as many trading days. Gulf Finance House lost 3.9 percent.

Print Print | Email Email | Discuss this article |


READERS' COMMENTS



Click here to post a comment


Add your Comment
All posts are sent to the administrator for review and are published only after approval. ArabianBusiness.com reserves the right to remove any comment at any time for any reason. Please keep your responses appropriate and on topic.
Name *
Remember me on this computer
Email *
(Your email address will not be published)
City
Country
Subject *
Comment *
Notify me of further comments
Security Code * Code


Please click post only once - your comment will not be published immediately.


MORE FROM ARABIANBUSINESS.COM

more » MIDDLE EAST MARKETS DATA

ADX

Last Price:

2,754.48

-21.37-0.77%

1 Dec 2008 10:00 GMT
(Market Closed)

CURRENCY CONVERTOR

RELATED STORIES

Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange (ADX)
| 155 stories
  1. Mixed fortunes for Gulf markets ahead of holidays
  2. Gulf bourses rise on Saudi surge
  3. Arabtec shares soar for third successive day
Bahrain Stock Exchange
| 110 stories
  1. Mixed fortunes for Gulf markets ahead of holidays
  2. Gulf bourses rise on Saudi surge
  3. Arabtec shares soar for third successive day
Doha Securities Market (DSM)
| 111 stories
  1. Mixed fortunes for Gulf markets ahead of holidays
  2. Gulf bourses rise on Saudi surge
  3. Kuwait market closes lower after gov't walkout
Dubai Financial Market (DFM)
| 225 stories
  1. Mixed fortunes for Gulf markets ahead of holidays
  2. Gulf bourses rise on Saudi surge
  3. Arabtec shares soar for third successive day
Kuwait Stock Exchange
| 142 stories
  1. Kuwait 'approves $7.2bn fund to boost bourse'
  2. Mixed fortunes for Gulf markets ahead of holidays
  3. Gulf bourses rise on Saudi surge
Muscat Securities Market
| 109 stories
  1. Mixed fortunes for Gulf markets ahead of holidays
  2. Gulf bourses rise on Saudi surge
  3. Arabtec shares soar for third successive day
Saudi Stock Exchange
| 117 stories
  1. Saudi index falls over US economy concerns
  2. Mixed fortunes for Gulf markets ahead of holidays
  3. Gulf bourses rise on Saudi surge

 EMAIL ALERTS

  1. Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange (ADX)

  2. Bahrain Stock Exchange

  3. Doha Securities Market (DSM)

  4. Dubai Financial Market (DFM)

  5. Kuwait Stock Exchange

  6. Muscat Securities Market

  7. Saudi Stock Exchange

  8. Financial Markets



EMIRATES ID DOWNLOAD

READER COMMENTS

Read all user comments >

BUSINESS FEATURES

Banks hoard Fed cuts

Regional mortgage lenders are refusing to pass falling US interest rates on to customers in the emirates.

JSW Steel's stock-for-land deal turns sour for India's farmers

The shock wave from the collapse of Bear Stearns and Lehman is hitting an illiterate farmer in India.

Global debt goes Islamic

Despite a slowdown in the Islamic bond market, firms around the globe are turning to Islamic issuances.

BUSINESS INTERVIEWS

Nasdaq comes to Dubai

Nasdaq OMX's CEO on what the new brand brings to the Gulf, and why the exchange model remains robust.

MORE FROM ARABIANBUSINESS.COM