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Investors wait for US-Iran developments to ease up on major Gulf markets

Investors wait for US-Iran developments to ease up on major Gulf markets
Investors wait for US-Iran developments to ease up on major Gulf markets

Investors adopted a cautious stance in the early hours of trade on Thursday, as they awaited a third round U.S. - Iran nuclear talks scheduled for Geneva later in the day. Saudi Arabia's benchmark index fell 0.5% as its losses grew due to the Kingdom's increased budget deficit.

The losses were widespread, with financial stocks leading. These included a 0.6% decline?in Al Rajhi Bank - the largest Islamic lender in the world - and a 1.4% drop in Saudi National Bank - the largest lender of the country by assets. Saudi Aramco's shares fell 0.7% and are on course to continue a two-day decline, after the energy giant confirmed damage at its Juaymah Terminal, resulting in delivery cancellations. Saudi Arabia has reportedly stepped up its oil production and exports to prepare for a possible U.S. attack on Iran.

Banking stocks weighed down the main index in Dubai by 0.5%. Emirates NBD Bank dropped by over?3% while Emaar Properties, a blue-chip developer of real estate, lost nearly 1%. The UAE Central Bank announced plans to create a sovereign cloud financial infrastructure on Wednesday in collaboration with G42 subsidiary Core42.

Alpha Dhabi Holding and Aldar Properties both fell 0.6% and 0.5% respectively. Bloomberg reported that Shell was in discussions with ADNOC, among others, regarding the sale?of its stake in an Australian LNG project.

Qatar's stock market index fell?0.3% due to a broad-based decline. Qatar National Bank, which is the largest lender in the region, fell by 0.3% while Qatar Aluminum Manufacturing Co dropped by 3.1%. (Reporting and editing by Sharon Singleton; Amna Mariyam)

(source: Reuters)