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Oil prices in the Gulf are up, and US rates may be cut.

The major Gulf stock markets rose early on Thursday. This was due to rising oil prices, and the anticipation of the U.S. Federal Reserve's meeting next week. Investors are looking for more information on the direction the central bank will take with interest rates.

The oil prices rose after Ukrainian attacks on Russia’s oil infrastructure indicated potential supply constraints. Stalled peace talks dampened expectations that a deal would restore Russian oil to global markets. However, weak fundamentals limited gains.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark Index gained 0.5%. Saudi Arabian Mining Company rose 1%, while oil giant Saudi Aramco increased 0.4%.

A survey released on Wednesday showed that the non-oil sector of the private sector in Saudi Arabia expanded at its highest rate in 10 month in November. This was driven by increased hiring and robust demand, but new orders grew slower than in previous months.

Dubai's main stock index grew 0.3%. This was largely due to a 1.9% increase in the blue-chip developer Emaar Properties, and a 1% rise in top lender Emirates NBD.

In Abu Dhabi the index increased by 0.4%.

ADP's report on Wednesday showed that private payrolls in the United States fell by 32,000, which was the largest decline in over two and a half years. The still low layoff rates suggest that this may not be a true reflection of the strength of the labour market.

CME FedWatch predicts that there will be an easing of interest rates at the December 9-10 Meeting. Major brokerages also expect this.

AlRayan Bank's gains of 1.6% and 0.2% on the Qatari index are notable.

(source: Reuters)