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Gulf markets plunge on U.S.-Iran tensions, Aramco at lowest since IPO

Published 2020-01-05, 10:40 a/m
Updated 2020-01-05, 10:40 a/m
© Reuters. Investors monitor a screen displaying stock information at the Saudi Stock Exchange (Tadawul), in Riyadh

DUBAI (Reuters) - Kuwaiti and Saudi stocks led Gulf stocks sharply lower in late afternoon trade on Sunday in the wake of a U.S. drone strike in Baghdad that killed Iran's military commander.

Shares of oil giant Saudi Aramco (SE:2222) fell 1.7% to their lowest level since listing last month in a record initial public offering (IPO).

Aramco shares dropped to 34.55 riyals a share, the lowest level since it started trading last month.

Iranian military commander Qassem Soleimani, the architect of Tehran's overseas military operations was killed on Friday in a U.S. drone strike on his convoy at Baghdad airport.

The Kuwaiti index, the best performer in the region in 2019, was down nearly 4.1%, while Saudi stocks (TASI) plunged 2.2%.

Dubai stocks (DFMGI) were down 3.1% with property firm Emaar Properties (DU:EMAR) falling 3.7%. The Abu Dhabi index (ADI) fell 1.41%.

Banks also took a beating, with Al Rajhi Bank (SE:1120) down 2% and Samba Financial Group (SE:1090) down nearly 3%.

"A U.S.-Iran war could shave 0.5 percentage points or more off global GDP, mainly due to a collapse in Iran’s economy, but also due to the impact from a surge in oil prices," Jason Tuvey, senior emerging markets economist at Capital Economics, said in a note last week.

Saudi credit default swaps , which investors buy as protection against default, rose by more than 13% on Friday following Soleimani's killing, Refinitiv data showed.

Regional bond spreads are expected to widen on Monday, when international debt markets open, because of increased political risk, a debt banker said.

© Reuters. Investors monitor a screen displaying stock information at the Saudi Stock Exchange (Tadawul), in Riyadh

Oil prices (LCOc1) jumped to $63.05 a barrel on Friday, their highest level in more than three months, after Soleimani's killing sparked fears that conflict in the region could disrupt global oil supplies.

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