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Saudi Arabia's earnings are weak and most Gulf markets follow Asian stock prices higher

On Tuesday morning, most Gulf stock markets were up, following the Asian benchmarks. This was due to a possible easing in U.S. China trade tensions. Saudi Arabia's index, however, fell because of disappointing corporate earnings.

Dubai's main stock index rose by 0.3% with the top lender Emirates NBD advancing 1.9%.

RBL announced on Saturday that ENBD would buy 60% of the Indian private lender RBL Bank, the largest acquisition of its kind in India's finance sector.

The index in Abu Dhabi rose 0.3%. This was due to a 0.3% increase by investment company Multiply Group after the board of its parent company International Holding Company approved a plan for it to acquire 2PointZero, an investment platform, and food firm Ghitha Holding via a share exchange.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark stock index fell 0.6% due to a 9.6% drop in Yamama Cement Company after a 63% fall in profit for the third quarter. The stock of the company is set to experience its biggest intraday drop since May 2020.

Al Rajhi Bank, the largest sharia compliant lender, fell by 0.5%, despite recording a solid third-quarter result, even though its quarter-onquarter profit growth was only in the single-digits.

Oil prices, which are a major component of Gulf economies, fell for the second day, as fears about the supply and the risks to demand resulting from the trade conflict between the U.S., and China - the two largest oil consumers in the world - weighed heavily on the markets.

The Qatari Index was up by 0.2% and Qatar Islamic Bank gained 0.8%. (Reporting by Ateeq Shariff in Bengaluru; Editing by Harikrishnan Nair)

(source: Reuters)