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Major Gulf markets combined in the middle of Middle East stress, Fed outlook

Major stock exchange in the Gulf were combined in early trade on Thursday amidst tensions in the Middle East following the killing of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Iran, while expectations of rate cuts in the United States raised financier belief.

Haniyeh's death came less than 24 hr after the most senior military leader of Lebanon-based Hezbollah was killed in an Israeli strike in Beirut. The killings fuelled concern that the 10-month-old war in Gaza between Israel and Hamas was turning into a wider Middle East dispute.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark index eased 0.1%, with aluminium products producer Al Taiseer Group down 0.2%.

The kingdom's real gross domestic product (GDP) diminished 0.4%. year-on-year in the second quarter, initial information by the. government's statistical authority revealed on Wednesday, driven. by a 8.5% decline in oil activities which has actually restricted in general. development for a number of quarters.

Nevertheless, the Saudi share index's losses were restricted by a 3%. jump in petrochemical maker Saudi Basic Industries Corp. after the company reported an 85% surge in. second-quarter earnings.

Dubai's main share index got 0.4%, with. blue-chip home designer Emaar Properties rising. 1.5% and sharia-compliant lending institution Dubai Islamic Bank. getting 1.7%.

In Abu Dhabi, the main share index added 0.4%.

The U.S. Federal Reserve held rate of interest stable. over night however opened the door to a cut in September.

Monetary policy in the six-member Gulf Cooperation Council. ( GCC) is usually assisted by the Fed's decisions as a lot of local. currencies are pegged to the U.S. dollar.

The Qatari criteria fell 0.3%, hit by a 1.1% drop in. petrochemical firm Industries Qatar.

(source: Reuters)