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The Gulf countries retreat over geopolitical issues

The major stock markets of the Gulf region fell on Thursday morning amid uncertainty over the U.S. move to remove personnel from the Middle East in advance of the nuclear talks with Iran.

Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said that U.S. personnel was being removed from the Middle East on Wednesday because it "could be a dangerous area." He added that the United States wouldn't allow Iran to possess a nuclear device.

According to U.S. sources and Iraqi ones, it was reported on Wednesday that due to increased security risks in the Middle East the U.S. will be preparing to evacuate its Iraqi Embassy and allow dependents of military personnel to leave certain locations throughout the Middle East.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark stock index fell 1.3%, as all of its constituents were in the negative zone including Al Rajhi Bank which was down by 0.6%.

Saudi Aramco, the oil giant, was among other losers. Its shares fell by 0.4%.

The U.S. decision to evacuate personnel occurs at a time of high tension in the region. Trump's attempts to reach a deal on a nuclear weapon with Iran seem to have hit a deadlock. U.S. Intelligence indicates that Israel is preparing for an attack against Iran's nucleus facilities.

Aziz Nasirzadeh, the Iranian Minister of Defence, said that on Wednesday if Iran were to be attacked it would respond by attacking U.S. bases located in the area.

Dubai's main stock index fell 1.7% intraday, its largest fall since April. Losses across sectors were to blame, but the blue-chip developer Emaar Properties was at the forefront of this decline, with a 3% drop.

ADNOC Gas' 2% drop in price caused the index to fall 1% in Abu Dhabi.

The Qatari Index traded 0.8% lower with the petrochemical manufacturer Industries Qatar falling 1%.

(source: Reuters)