
Reuters
Gulf stocks were mixed on Tuesday, with the Saudi market up on steady oil prices. Outside of the Gulf, Egypt’s index continued to climb, reaching an all-time high as it benefits from the central bank’s decision to cut interest rates in February, the first time it has done so since letting the currency float freely in 2016.
The Egyptian exchange closed at 16,012.66 points, up 1.99 percent, fuelled by gains in the consumer and real estate sectors.
Stronger global stocks on Tuesday— with US President Donald Trump facing increasing pressure to pull back from a proposed increase in steel and aluminium tariffs—had a positive effect on the Saudi market, which was also boosted by gains in the petrochemical sector due to steady oil prices.
The Tadawul climbed 0.96 percent, with petchem companies such as Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (Sabic) gaining 1.5 percent and Saudi International Petrochemical Co up 0.9 percent.
Banks were also all up, with Al Rajhi Banking & Investment Corporation seeing the highest trading volumes in the sector and climbing 1.32 percent, while Arab National Bank was the top gainer, jumping 3.7 percent.
“Global markets have improved and the Saudi market is already balanced, so people are optimistic and the bet is still on leading stocks and banks,†said Mazen Al Sudairi, head of research at Rajhi Capital.
The Qatar market lost 0.29 percent, despite initial gains. Vodafone Qatar was the worst performer, losing 3.76 percent. The real estate sector also weighed on the index, with United Development Company and Barwa Development Company losing 1.79 percent and 0.88 percent respectively.
The Dubai exchange was broadly flat, losing only 0.05 percent.