Gulf markets were mostly firm on Tuesday but Saudi Arabia’s shares fell amid concern that international outrage over the disappearance of dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi will hurt foreign investment.
After half an hour, the Saudi index was down 3.0 per cent, partly reversing its 4.1 per cent rebound on Monday. The market has been extremely volatile for several days because of the Khashoggi affair.
Some regional fund managers said stocks had rebounded on Monday because government-linked funds intervened to support the market, as they did late last year when a corruption inquiry unsettled investors, reports Reuters.
Fund buying has not so far appeared in large volumes on Tuesday morning. That has left the way clear for selling by nervous retail investors, who account for most activity in the Riyadh bourse, to push the market down.
Saudi Arabia’s biggest bank, National Commercial Bank, plunged 4.7 per cent. The top petrochemical firm, Saudi Basic Industries, lost 2.9 per cent.
Other major Gulf stock markets were firm. Qatar’s index was up 0.7 per cent after a 1.2 per cent gain by Industries Qatar.
The Dubai index inched up 0.3 per cent as real estate and telecommunications firms gained. Du rose 2.0 per cent and DAMAC Properties jumped 2.7 per cent.
The Abu Dhabi index was up 0.1 per cent, aided by a 2.3 per cent rise in Eshraq Properties, which received regulatory approval to proceed with its share buy-back programme on Monday.