Most Gulf Arab markets slid, tracking declines on global markets over the weekend as weak US jobs data spooked investors.
Egypt's index climbed 1.6 percent to 5,445 points. Pioneers Holding surged 8.4 percent. Palm Hills rose 2.8 percent and Orascom Construction gained 2.1 percent.
The benchmark made its largest drop in six weeks on Thursday after the government announced a 10 percent tax on capital gains and a 5 percentage point increase in the income tax levied on corporations and individually owned companies.
"It seems that trading activities shall not be included in the capital gains tax — I think that's a relief for retail clients and short-term speculators," said a Cairo trader.
After market hours, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) agreed a $3 billion financing deal with Egypt and praised the policies of an interim government struggling to stabilize the economy after the popular uprising.
Qatar's measure fell 1 percent to 8,157 points — an 11-week low. Al-Khaliji Commercial Bank fell 7.1 percent, slumping to a 2011 low after the lender said a proposed merger with International Bank of Qatar (IBQ) would not proceed. IBQ is not listed.
Heavyweights Qatar National Bank and Industries Qatar each slipped 0.9 percent.
"We are frontier emerging markets and risk comes off when global markets are negative," said Ibrahim Masood, senior investment officer at Mashreq Bank. "The international backdrop doesn't look very pretty. We have already seen activity drop.
"A sluggish, negative week unfortunately is what we are looking out for, but we don't see any big reason for panicking."
Elsewhere, Kuwait's index fell 0.8 percent to 6,290 points — its lowest close since April 3.
National Bank of Kuwait and National Mobile Telecommunications Company (Wataniya) dropped 1.7 and 3.1 percent respectively.
Oman's index halted a four-session winning streak, ending an early-June rebound after dropping 5.2 percent in May. The measure slipped 0.6 percent to 6,043 points.
Renaissance Services fell 1.4 percent and telecoms operator Nawras shed 1 percent.
The Abu Dhabi index eased 0.2 percent to 2,666 points. The Dubai index edged up 0.02 percent to 1,567 points.
In Saudi Arabia, the Tadawul All-Share Index (TASI) gained 0.03 percent to 6,627 points. The value of Saudi traded shares reached SR5.45 billion on Sunday.
The Bahrain stock index slipped 0.1 percent to 1,337 points.
TASI up slightly; most Gulf markets dip
Publication Date:
Mon, 2011-06-06 02:16
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