logo
Mideast Stocks: Gulf bourses end mixed in cautious trade ahead of Fed's symposium

Mideast Stocks: Gulf bourses end mixed in cautious trade ahead of Fed's symposium

Zawya2 hours ago
Gulf stock markets ended mixed on Thursday, with higher oil prices lending some support and investors in cautious mood ahead of U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's speech at the Jackson Hole symposium on Friday.
Crude prices, a catalyst for the Gulf's financial markets, rose with Brent up 0.3% to $67.07 a barrel by 1250 GMT, buoyed by signs of firm U.S. demand and uncertainty about the prospects of a deal to end the Ukraine war.
The Qatari benchmark index pared early losses to close up 0.3%, driven by broad-based gains. Qatar Islamic Bank added 1.3% and Qatar Gas Transport advanced 1.2%.
Despite Thursday's gain, the index saw its first weekly decline after an eight-week winning streak.
Dubai's benchmark stock index edged up 0.1%, supported by a 1.0% gain in toll operator Salik and a 3.1% rise in Dubai Financial Market. Blue-chip developer Emaar Properties fell 0.7%, while Gulf Navigation lost 1.4%.
"The market continues to consolidate near current levels after a prolonged period of gains. A correction is possible if the market cannot find sufficient support to break through the key resistance level around 6,200 points," said Hani Abuagla, senior market analyst at XTB MENA.
Saudi Arabia's benchmark stock index slipped 0.1%, weighed by declines across most sectors. Saudi Awwal Bank fell 3.7%, and Saudi Aramco lost 0.7%. Meanwhile, Saudi crude exports in June fell to a three-month low, data from the Joint Organisations Data Initiative showed on Wednesday.
The Abu Dhabi benchmark index was marginally lower, with First Abu Dhabi Bank down 0.5% and Lulu Retail off 1.6%, while Abu Dhabi National Energy Company (TAQA) gained 0.9%.
The state-owned firm said it had secured an 8.5-billion-dirham ($2.3-billion) term loan to bolster liquidity and support growth. Investors across the region are focused on the Fed's annual research conference in Jackson Hole, running Thursday to Saturday, awaiting Powell's speech on Friday for clues on a potential rate cut as soon as next month. Monetary policy shifts in the U.S. have a significant impact on Gulf markets, where most currencies are pegged to the dollar.
Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index fell for a second session, ending down 0.3% as most constituents declined. Commercial International Bank slipped 0.5% and Arabian Cement dropped 2.5%.
SAUDI ARABIA down 0.3% to 10,867
KUWAIT lost 0.2% to 9,282
QATAR up 0.3% to 11,343
EGYPT fell 0.3% to 35,622
BAHRAIN lost 0.1% to 1,931
OMAN rose 0.5% to 4,961
ABU DHABI ended flat at 10,200
DUBAI added 0.1% to 6,123
(Reporting by Md Manzer Hussain; Editing by Helen Popper)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

You get a better lifestyle and safety in UAE, says Moldovan expat
You get a better lifestyle and safety in UAE, says Moldovan expat

Khaleej Times

timean hour ago

  • Khaleej Times

You get a better lifestyle and safety in UAE, says Moldovan expat

Dubai-based CEO Elvira Jain has been in the UAE for 12 years and like most expatriates, says time flies in the Gulf. After a high-flying career as a fashion model, Moldovan-born Jain now runs a communications agency, Ellyse Management. During her career she has boasted collaborations with prestigious brands such as Gucci, Dior and Armani, and now, she's turning her hand to entrepreneurship in the Gulf's fashion capital. If you had to use one word to describe money what would it be? Opportunity. If you had to write a letter to money, what would you say? Due to money we can have the possibility of travelling and having better education and health. It's not the same everywhere but in Dubai you need resources to survive. How would you describe your relationship to money? I respect money. You need to use money smartly. I don't waste money and I calculate well. I do have an economics background, so I try not to overspend. Sometimes it is tricky, because I do like to spend, but I think money comes to people who also respect it and use it in the right direction. Also having a business and having created it by myself, I calculate everything and make projections and budget. How do you think this relationship was formed? When I was in school, aged 7-8, my parents used to pay me for every highest mark I used to get at school and I used to keep the money in a book, so I was really motivated to get better marks and more money. I was also one of the best in class. What good or bad lessons about money management did you learn from your mother? My mom sometimes tends to overspend and sometimes not spend much on unnecessary things so I try to also evaluate if it's worth to spend or not but sometimes is difficult. Who do you speak to about money matters and is it something you consider 'taboo'? I don't consider it a taboo. I can speak to my parents, my husband, and my kids . It cannot be a taboo since it is part of our daily life. Who has taught you the most about financial management? I learned a lot from my parents and from my husband. What do you think has been the most profound experience you've had so far in relation to money, good or bad, and what has it taught you since? When I used to travel as a model in different countries, they gave you a weekly allowance and you had to manage it. This taught me to spend only on what I really needed to. How do you think living in the UAE has changed your relationship with and perception of money? I can say that to live well you need money. The equation of money and income (in the UAE) is different compared to European countries. You get a better salary but then you also have to spend more on rent and monthly expenses. But of course, you get a different, better lifestyle and most of all, the UAE is the safest country to live in. If you could give your child or your younger self one piece of advice about money now what would that be and why? Spend only on what you really need because money comes to those who respect it. What do you value spending money on? It depends on what I need at that moment. I do like to pamper myself so there are also some spendings that we can't avoid as ladies. Do you long-term plan your finances, and if so, how? I like investing in real estate. What is your long-term goal or dream which is pegged to your finances? I wish to have a lot of properties in different parts of the world How much do you save each month? Since I'm a business owner, the income might vary, so savings are different. But I try to have a savings account and a different current account. How much do you plan to have by the time you are 65? I can't give a number because depreciation of money is real, so what might seem a lot now might be much less in the future. I try to think 100 times before investing so it's tough to say.

Kuwait's merged Warba-Gulf Bank can grow for 10 years without capital hike, CEO says
Kuwait's merged Warba-Gulf Bank can grow for 10 years without capital hike, CEO says

Zawya

time2 hours ago

  • Zawya

Kuwait's merged Warba-Gulf Bank can grow for 10 years without capital hike, CEO says

The new Islamic banking entity resulting from the merger of Kuwait's Warba Bank and Gulf Bank will be able to grow for about ten years without raising capital, Warba's chief executive said. Shaheen al-Ghanem told Reuters that Gulf Bank's 7 billion dinars ($22.9 billion) in assets would grow significantly once brought under the Islamic banking framework. "This gives us a larger market share in Kuwait," he added. Warba Bank, which has assets of about 6 billion dinars, acquired a 32.75% stake in Gulf Bank in April for about $1.63 billion, and the two began initial steps the following month towards a merger. Kuwait's central bank on Monday gave Gulf Bank preliminary approval to convert into a sharia-compliant bank. Al-Ghanem said that the merger with Warba would speed up Gulf Bank's process of converting into an Islamic lender, as systems, procedures, a sharia board, products and staff were already in place. Warba, meanwhile, is set to gain from Gulf Bank's strong retail business and its more than 50 branches, taking the combined network to about 70 and creating what al-Ghanem said was an institution with the largest branch network in Kuwait. He said that Gulf Bank has yet to use its capacity to issue Tier 1 or Tier 2 instruments, a "hidden advantage" that the new entity must use to issue sukuk after the merger. Kuwait hosts ten local banks – five conventional, four Islamic and one specialised lender - and local branches of foreign banks. Al-Ghanem expects there to be more mergers among Kuwaiti banks, something he views as a healthy development. "Many bank owners are currently thinking about their next move: remain independent or merge," he said. In 2024, Kuwait Finance House, Kuwait's largest Islamic bank, merged with Bahrain's Ahli United Bank, which also owns a Kuwaiti subsidiary of the same name. (Reporting By Ahmed Hagagy, editing Federico Maccioni, Kirsten Donovan)

Mideast Stocks: Gulf bourses end mixed in cautious trade ahead of Fed's symposium
Mideast Stocks: Gulf bourses end mixed in cautious trade ahead of Fed's symposium

Zawya

time2 hours ago

  • Zawya

Mideast Stocks: Gulf bourses end mixed in cautious trade ahead of Fed's symposium

Gulf stock markets ended mixed on Thursday, with higher oil prices lending some support and investors in cautious mood ahead of U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's speech at the Jackson Hole symposium on Friday. Crude prices, a catalyst for the Gulf's financial markets, rose with Brent up 0.3% to $67.07 a barrel by 1250 GMT, buoyed by signs of firm U.S. demand and uncertainty about the prospects of a deal to end the Ukraine war. The Qatari benchmark index pared early losses to close up 0.3%, driven by broad-based gains. Qatar Islamic Bank added 1.3% and Qatar Gas Transport advanced 1.2%. Despite Thursday's gain, the index saw its first weekly decline after an eight-week winning streak. Dubai's benchmark stock index edged up 0.1%, supported by a 1.0% gain in toll operator Salik and a 3.1% rise in Dubai Financial Market. Blue-chip developer Emaar Properties fell 0.7%, while Gulf Navigation lost 1.4%. "The market continues to consolidate near current levels after a prolonged period of gains. A correction is possible if the market cannot find sufficient support to break through the key resistance level around 6,200 points," said Hani Abuagla, senior market analyst at XTB MENA. Saudi Arabia's benchmark stock index slipped 0.1%, weighed by declines across most sectors. Saudi Awwal Bank fell 3.7%, and Saudi Aramco lost 0.7%. Meanwhile, Saudi crude exports in June fell to a three-month low, data from the Joint Organisations Data Initiative showed on Wednesday. The Abu Dhabi benchmark index was marginally lower, with First Abu Dhabi Bank down 0.5% and Lulu Retail off 1.6%, while Abu Dhabi National Energy Company (TAQA) gained 0.9%. The state-owned firm said it had secured an 8.5-billion-dirham ($2.3-billion) term loan to bolster liquidity and support growth. Investors across the region are focused on the Fed's annual research conference in Jackson Hole, running Thursday to Saturday, awaiting Powell's speech on Friday for clues on a potential rate cut as soon as next month. Monetary policy shifts in the U.S. have a significant impact on Gulf markets, where most currencies are pegged to the dollar. Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index fell for a second session, ending down 0.3% as most constituents declined. Commercial International Bank slipped 0.5% and Arabian Cement dropped 2.5%. SAUDI ARABIA down 0.3% to 10,867 KUWAIT lost 0.2% to 9,282 QATAR up 0.3% to 11,343 EGYPT fell 0.3% to 35,622 BAHRAIN lost 0.1% to 1,931 OMAN rose 0.5% to 4,961 ABU DHABI ended flat at 10,200 DUBAI added 0.1% to 6,123 (Reporting by Md Manzer Hussain; Editing by Helen Popper)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store