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Gulf markets stable amid mixed earnings and muted response to EU-US Trade Deal

Gulf stocks were little changed early on Tuesday, as investors cautiously welcomed a new trade agreement between the U.S.A. and the European Union. However, disappointing earnings for the second quarter weighed on the sentiment.

In the framework deal that was announced at the weekend, the U.S. will impose a 15% tariff on the majority of EU products. This is the best the EU could hope for, according to Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission.

The initial relief that President Donald Trump was able to reach a deal, despite threatening to levy 30% on the goods, quickly turned to disappointment when compared to the 1%-2% tariffs in place prior to Trump's return to the White House. Trump's tariffs continue to raise concern over global growth. Any slowdown in consumption or trade threatens energy demand, and any fiscal stability of oil dependent Gulf economies.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark stock index fell 0.3% as a result of a series of disappointing earnings in key sectors.

Arabian Drilling's shares fell by more than 9% following a dramatic drop in its second-quarter profits, which was well below analyst expectations. The company announced that it would suspend cash dividends until 2025.

Arabian Pipes' shares fell more than 6.6% as a result of missing its quarterly targets, and Jamjoom Pharmaceuticals' shares dropped by over 3.5% after they began trading without dividends.

Dubai's benchmark stock index rose by 0.3%, reaching a record high of 17-1/2 years. It is now poised to gain for the fifth straight session. The rally was led by a 2.4% increase in Emirates Central Cooling Systems. Dubai Taxi Company rose nearly 6% following its second-quarter results that exceeded market expectations.

The Abu Dhabi Index was flat, as mixed corporate earnings offset the optimism that had been generated by the strong performance of last week.

Aldar Properties fell nearly 3% following a marginal decline in second-quarter revenues, despite reporting an order backlog record of 62.3 billion Dirhams at the end of June. Multiply Group, owned by IHC, dropped more than 4% after its second-quarter profits were halved compared to last year.

Qatar's benchmark stock index fell 0.2% as traders took profits after a recent rally. Most sectors were in the red with Qatar Islamic Bank leading the way at 1.4%. (Reporting from Amna Mariyam, Bengaluru. Editing by Hugh Lawson.)

(source: Reuters)