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Saudi stock market tumbles 4% in one day

Impact of Syria crisis caused the kingdom’s biggest drop since August 2011

The Saudi Tadawul All Share Index tumbled more than 4 percent in response to the possibility of international intervention in Syria, the kingdom’s biggest stock market drop since August 2011.

The slump put a dent in the kingdom’s stocks, which had previously been up 18.43 percent over the last year.

The biggest Saudi losers were the Saudi Fransi Cooperative Insurance Company, which fell 9.93 percent in one day and the Saudi Transport and Investment Company, which tumbled 9.17 percent in just 24 hours.

As markets across the region fell off a cliff face, Dubai’s market suffered its largest one-day slump since the emirate’s November 2009 corporate debt crisis, as the threat of international military action against Syria prompted jittery retail investors to dump shares.

Dubai’s index tumbled 7.0 percent to close at 2,550 points, cutting its year-to-date gains to 57.7 percent. Many analysts had said the market’s sharp rise earlier this year left it vulnerable to fierce bursts of profit-taking.

It is not clear, however, that the market is starting an extended downtrend; the local and Gulf economies are strong, and Dubai’s real estate sector has been recovering from a crash.

Dubai led losses across Middle East bourses and sharply underperformed emerging market losses globally – MSCI’s emerging market index was down 1.3 percent.

“Politically, the region is a mess and concerns of war in Syria are high,” said Yassir Mckee, wealth manager at Qatar’s Al Rayan Financial Brokerage.

“But the extent of the drop doesn’t make sense and people are over-reacting because local fundamentals are strong and even if there is a war, I don’t see it significantly impacting Gulf countries.”

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