
Mideast Stocks: Most Gulf bourses fall on US tariff concerns, weaker oil
The European Union is exploring broader counter-measures against the U.S. as prospects of an acceptable trade agreement with Washington fade, according to EU diplomats.
U.S. President Donald Trump's imposition of tariffs around the world risks hurting global economic growth and oil consumption.
Saudi Arabia's benchmark index retreated 0.3%, pressured by broad sector declines and falling oil prices, after snapping its longest downturn in nearly two years in the previous session.
Oil behemoth Saudi Aramco slid 0.5%.
Oil - a key catalyst for Gulf markets - fell on concerns that the brewing trade war between major crude consumers, the U.S. and the EU, will curb fuel demand growth by dampening economic activity.
Dubai's main share index slipped 0.5%, on track for a second straight session of losses as investors remained cautious ahead of key earnings and locked in profits following a multi-year rally.
Dubai Islamic Bank, the index heavyweight, dropped 1% and budget carrier Air Arabia fell over 2.5%, 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 pulled back from near a two-year peak, weighed down by a 0.4% decline in AlRayan Bank.
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UAE Moments
4 hours ago
- UAE Moments
Dubai Police Promotes First-Ever Female Brigadier
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Khaleej Times
4 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
Trump, EU chief seek deal in transatlantic tariffs standoff
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Zawya
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- Zawya
Gulf Craft becomes first MENA shipyard to accept regulated crypto-to-fiat payments
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