UAE stocks were mixed on Thursday amid slow trade in the final day of a week when many traders were off on account of the Eid break.
Despite a tumultuous couple of days in global markets as major central banks announced intentions to raise interest rates following a record period of cheap money, sending equities worldwide rising, stocks in exchanges in Dubai and Abu Dhabi took different directions. Higher interest rates are good for banks but many listed lenders fell despite gains the industry made in European trading.
The Dubai Financial Market General Index rose 0.4 per cent to 3,392.00, led by the construction company Arabtec. Meanwhile the Abu Dhabi Securities Market Index fell 0.6 per cent to 4,425.40, dragged down by First Abu Dhabi Bank.
Arabtec rallied 4.4 per cent to Dh2.87. The company recently completed a Dh1.5 billion rights issue to shore up its finances.
First Abu Dhabi Bank, the biggest publicly traded lender in the UAE, decreased 1.4 per cent Dh10.5.
Some Dh217.0 million worth of shares changed hands on the Dubai Financial Market compared with the 50-day average of Dh373.4 million while on the Abu Dhabi Securities Market some Dh119.2 million of equities traded compared with the 50-day average of Dh175.7 million, according to Bloomberg.
Yesterday was the last trading day of the second quarter in the UAE. For the quarter, the Dubai index lost 2.5 per cent and the Abu Dhabi index 0.4 per cent. For the year, they are down 3.9 per cent in Dubai’s case and 2.7 per cent in Abu Dhabi’s.
Mark Carney, the governor of the Bank of England, said on Thursday that interest rates may need to start rising soon, prompting gains in stocks and other risky assets. Investors took the latest central bank comments as evidence the global economy remains on a firm enough footing to withstand a slow withdrawal of stimulus that underpinned growth for years.
mkassem@thenational.ae
