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All seven bourses in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states closed in the red, on the first trading day since the death of powerful military commander Qasem Soleimani.
All six member states – Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates – are US allies and lie on the opposite side of the narrow Gulf, making them easy targets for the Islamic Republic.
Some of the GCC members, notably Kuwait, Qatar and Bahrain, are home to major US military bases while Washington maintains hundreds of troops in Saudi Arabia.
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Dubai Financial Market, the Gulf stock exchange most exposed to global markets, slumped 3.1 per cent while its sister bourse Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange dropped 1.4 per cent.
Trading in the Muslim Gulf nations takes place from Sunday to Thursday and the bourses were closed on Friday when Soleimani was killed by a US airstrike in Baghdad.
Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul market, the largest in the region and one of the world’s top 10, was trading 2.4 per cent down with most shares in the red.
Saudi Aramco, the world’s biggest listed firm, shed 1.7 per cent to trade at 34.55 riyals and its capitalisation now stands at USD 1.84 trillion – well under the USD 2.0 trillion sought by Saudi rulers.
Aramco had priced its landmark initial public offering at 32 riyals (USD 8.53) per share and it soared the maximum limit to 35.2 riyals on its December 11 market debut.
The decline in Gulf shares comes despite a surge in oil prices, on which all six GCC nations rely heavily for public revenues.
“It’s certainly due to fears of a possible US-Iranian conflict breaking out in the Gulf,” said Mohammed Zidan, market strategist at Thinkmarket in Dubai.
“I think the decline will continue for some time and especially as long as tensions and the threat of an armed conflict continue,” Zidan told AFP.
Qatar Exchange dropped 2.1 per cent – Doha maintains good relations with Iran but at the same time it houses the largest US airbase in the region.
The normally dormant bourse of Bahrain, home to the US Fifth fleet, fell 2.3 per cent.
The small bourse of Oman dropped by just 0.3 per cent. Muscat maintains strong ties with Iran and the United States and its oil exports do not have to pass through the strategic – and vulnerable – Strait of Hormuz.