Friday, 29th March 2024
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Gulf stocks fall on Brexit vote

Stock markets in the energy-rich Gulf states dropped Sunday in the first trading session after Britain voted to leave the European Union.
The Saudi Tadawul All-Shares Index, the largest in the Arab world, dipped 3.3% to close on 8,119.08 points, a 12-month low (AFP Photo/Fayez Nureldine)

The Saudi Tadawul All-Shares Index, the largest in the Arab world, dipped 3.3% to close on 8,119.08 points, a 12-month low (AFP Photo/Fayez Nureldine)

Stock markets in the energy-rich Gulf states dropped Sunday in the first trading session after Britain voted to leave the European Union.

All seven Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) stock markets were closed for the Muslim weekend on Friday when the result of the British referendum was announced.

Share prices in most Gulf markets dropped sharply at the start of trading on Sunday, but later recovered some of the losses.

The Dubai Financial Market began the day by sliding 5.0 percent, but an hour later the index — the Gulf bourse most exposed to international markets — was trading down 3.0 percent.

At one stage, investment companies fell 8.0 percent and real estate dropped 5.0 percent.

Saudi stocks dropped 4.1 percent at the opening but were trading 2.7 percent down half an hour later. All 15 sectors were in negative territory.

The Qatar Exchange fell 1.8 percent and the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange dropped 2.3 percent.

The tiny bourses of Oman and Bahrain were little affected.

The six GCC states — Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates — have hundreds of billions of investments in Britain and members of the European Union.

They have large interests in the British real estate market and thousands of Gulf citizens own homes in Britain.

Britain also has sizable real estate interests in Dubai and more than a million British tourists visit the UAE annually.

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