Trade Jobs
 
   
  Featured Jobs of the Day
   
  Featured Jobs of the Week
   
Market Trends
 
 
Business Directory
  Search Directory
  Company Name
  Business Activity
 
 
 
   
News Categories
 

 

Results By

   
  Agriculture & Farming
Banking & Finance
Building & Construction
Capital Market
Defence & Security
Economy
Education, HR & Training
Energy, Oil & Gas
Environment & Water
Food & Catering
Government & Laws
Health
Industry
Interiors
IT & Telecommunications
Media & Promotions
Motoring
Property & Real Estate
Retail & Wholesale
Shipping & Transport
Tourism, Travel & Leisure
International News
Int. Business News
   
Tools
Country Briefings
Currency Conversion
Events
Calendar Of Events
Leisure, Lifestyle & Entertainment
 

   
   
B2B Marketplace, B2B Directory A B2B Portal for Buying & Selling Leads from worldwide importers exporters suppliers and wholesalers <more>
   
   
 
   
 
   
 
 NEWS > CAPITAL MARKET 
 
Search for: Results per page:

Match: any search words all search words
 

Gulf markets plunge on real estate worries
Dubai
 

Markets in the United Arab Emirates and Qatar plunged further on Sunday as concerns over their real estate sectors undermined investor sentiment.

Saudi Arabia's market continued to fall, a day after suffering its biggest one-day loss in six months.    Oman bucked the trend, after investor confidence was boosted following a meeting between the market regulator, the government and local pension funds.

In Dubai, shares in Emaar Properties <EMAR.DU> touched their lowest level in nearly 3-1/2 years, dragging down the benchmark <.DFMGI> 4.64 percent lower.

'Concerns in the (UAE) real estate sector are mostly to do with recent regulation limiting secondary sales in order to dampen speculation,' said Rami Sidani, head of Mena investment at Schroders Investment Management.

'I think these moves are exacerbated by Ramadan and through declines in global stock markets,' he said.   The real estate sector suffered in Abu Dhabi also, with  Aldar Properties and Sorouh Real Estate losing 8.77 percent and 8.48 percent respectively.

Banks led losses in Qatar as fears of a slowdown in the country's real estate market raised concerns over the future of consumer loans, said Amro Motasim, chief trader at Ahli Bank.

'There are worries that there will be a slowdown in the coming months in Qatar's real estate sector as there are rumours of new laws prohibiting big price moves,' he said.

Commercial Bank of Qatar and Qatar Islamic Bank ended down 5.41 per cent and 4.1 per cent respectively.-Reuters


 
   
 
     
 
PAGES  1 |  2 |  3 |  4 |  5 SEARCH ARCHIVES
       
 

 
Today's Poll
Do you think the U.S. and world economic outlook will improve during the first 100 days of the Barack Obama presidency?
Yes
Somehow
No
Don't know

 

 
 

Advertising | Contact | Feedback | Privacy Statement | Terms of Service | Web Feeds
Copyright (c) 2008, Al Hilal Publishing & Marketing Group