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Gulf stocks nosedive after oil prices crash

By AFP - Mar 10,2020 - Last updated at Mar 10,2020

Traders follow financial markets at the Dubai Stock Exchange in the United Arab Emirates on Sunday

DUBAI — Stock markets in the energy-rich Gulf states were battered on Monday as a price war sent oil prices tumbling after crude producers failed to agree on output cuts.

All seven Gulf Arab bourses were in the red for the second day running, shedding hundreds of billions of dollars of market value.

The Saudi market, the largest in the region, dived 7.8 per cent over the day, with energy giant Saudi Aramco plunging by 10 per cent before recovering around half of that by close.

The biggest listed firm in the world has lost some $250 billion of its value over the past two days.

Its capitalisation stands at $1.51 trillion, way below the $2 trillion sought by the kingdom in last year’s initial public offering.

Dubai Financial Market dropped 8.3 per cent at close, its worst level in seven years, but authorities suspended trading in most leading stocks after they slumped the maximum daily limit of 10 per cent.

The Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange shed 8.1 per cent to a four-year low, while the Qatar Stock Exchange was down 9.7 per cent.

Kuwait’s Premier index tumbled 10.3 per cent, forcing a suspension of trading for the second day in a row. The country’s All-Shares Index lost 8.6 per cent.

The tiny bourses of Oman and Bahrain dipped 5.6 per cent and 5.8 per cent, respectively.

The seven bourses had taken an initial beating on Sunday, the first trading day of the week, shedding tens of billions of dollars as the Saudi market tumbled by 8.3 per cent.

Oil prices heavily impact markets in the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council region as exports generate between 70 per cent and 90 per cent of public revenues.

The crash in crude prices comes as all six member states — Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates — resort to austerity measures to rein in persistent budget deficits.

Oil prices crashed as markets opened on Monday, with the benchmark Brent crude diving to $36 a barrel.

That added to panic as investors hunkered down for a potentially long price war.

The message from Saudi Arabia is: “As long as it takes”, said Anas Al-Hajji, a Texas-based oil expert.

“Given the sharp price decline... it is hoped they will start cooperating again in May,” but the rout could last until the producers’ cartel OPEC meets in July, he said.

Currently, dealers are fleeing riskier assets and diving into safe havens such as gold and the yen. 

Saudi Arabia launched its assault on prices on Sunday with the biggest slash in two decades, Bloomberg News reported, after OPEC and other top producers failed to clinch a deal to reduce output.

The Saudis “are responding to Russia’s exit from output cuts by launching a price war,” Bill Farren-Price, director of Britain-based RS Energy, told AFP. 

Russia’s decision had already battered prices, and analysts have suggested they could head towards $20 if producers cannot cut a deal.

 

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