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Shares of UAE companies continue to fall as the Middle East conflict intensifies

The UAE stock exchanges fell on Thursday morning, continuing losses from the previous day after the reopening of the bourses following the two-day trading suspension triggered by Iran’s 'unprecedented barrage' of missiles and drones that targeted the Emirates.

After a two-day suspension of trading, the?UAE stock markets opened on Wednesday following Iran's drone and missile attacks against the Gulf state.

Investors waited to learn more about the extent of damage caused by the weekend attacks that hit airports, ports and residential neighborhoods in both emirates.

Both exchanges have announced that they will temporarily lower the price limit on securities by 5%. The U.S. - Iran war intensified on Wednesday, after a U.S. sub sank a naval?vessel of Iran off Sri Lanka and killed at least 80 people. NATO 'air defenses' shot down an Iranian ballistic missile heading toward Turkey.

Dubai's main stock index fell more than 4% as stocks declined across the board. Top lender Emirates NBD, and blue-chip developer Emaar Properties, both lost 4.9%.

Air Arabia.DU>, a budget airline, also declined by 4.9%.

Utility firm Dubai Electricity &?Water Authority grew by 4.4%.

First Abu Dhabi Bank, the largest lender in the country, fell 4.9%, while?Aldar Properties dropped 5%.

Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank was among the other banks to fall, with a?5% drop.

Qatar National Bank, the Gulf's largest lender in terms of assets, rose 1.7%, bucking the trend. Qatar, the largest liquefied gas producer in Gulf, declared "force majeure" on Wednesday. According to sources, it may take a minimum of a month for production levels to return back up. Prices of oil jumped more than 3% on Wednesday, as fears grew over the potential disruptions in Middle East oil and natural gas supplies due to an escalating U.S./Israeli conflict with Iran.

(source: Reuters)