Gulf inventory markets closed combined on Tuesday, with Oman main regional positive factors, Saudi regular, and Qatar, Kuwait, and Bahrain ending decrease
Gulf inventory markets delivered a combined efficiency on Tuesday, with Oman main regional positive factors and Qatar recording the steepest decline, whereas Saudi Arabia and Kuwait posted marginal will increase.
Saudi Arabia
The Saudi Inventory Change Primary Index (TASI) rose by 4.31 factors to shut at 11,596 factors, supported by buying and selling price SR5.8bn ($1.55bn).
The Saudi Parallel Market Index (NOMU) fell by 113.9 factors to 25,689.28 factors, with greater than 4 million shares traded for a complete worth of SR39m ($10.4m).
Kuwait
The Kuwait Bourse All Share Index gained 18.51 factors, or 0.21 per cent, to achieve 8,858.82 factors.
Buying and selling quantity stood at 769.6m shares price KWD 158m ($483m) throughout 36,887 transactions.
The Premier Market Index superior 49.39 factors (0.53 per cent) to 9,391.46, whereas the Primary Market Index slipped 1.18 per cent to eight,478.29.
The Primary 50 Index edged down 0.15 per cent to eight,853.77.
Qatar
The Qatar Inventory Change (QSE) Index fell 90.03 factors, or 0.83 per cent, to shut at 10,745.92 factors.
Complete buying and selling quantity reached 117.7m shares, valued at QAR 371m ($101.8m) throughout 22,553 transactions.
Shares of 11 firms superior, 33 declined, and eight remained unchanged, with complete market capitalisation standing at QR643.45bn ($176.8bn).
Oman
The Muscat Inventory Change (MSX 30 Index) superior 47.4 factors, or 0.91 per cent, to shut at 5,240.08 factors, posting the area’s strongest positive factors.
Turnover surged 67.9 per cent from the earlier session to OR60.65m ($157.5m), whereas market capitalisation elevated 0.305 per cent to about OR30.51bn ($79.3bn).
Non-Omani buyers recorded a web influx of OR1.46m ($3.8m), reflecting continued worldwide participation.
Bahrain
The Bahrain All Share Index slipped 0.21 factors to 1,970.96 factors, weighed down by declines within the monetary and supplies sectors.
The Bahrain Islamic Index fell 0.52 factors to 940.05 factors.
A complete of 91 transactions had been executed, with 3.99m shares traded, valued at BD 797,589 ($2.11m).
Buying and selling remained concentrated within the monetary sector, accounting for 91.48 per cent of complete turnover.
Regional snapshot
Total, GCC buying and selling mirrored muted investor sentiment as world oil costs and US market cues formed regional efficiency.
Oman’s positive factors stood out amid robust overseas inflows, whereas Qatar’s broader declines weighed on the area’s composite momentum.