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Gulf shares fall after new attacks rattle truce

Stock markets in 'the Gulf' fell on Tuesday morning, after fresh attacks from Iran and the United States deepened the battle for the Strait of Hormuz. This was a key global energy chokepoint.

Washington wants to reopen Strait of Hormuz in order to relieve the strain on the global energy supply after Iran closed the passage after the U.S.-Israel war began on February 28, 2008.

The UAE has confirmed that there have been Iranian missile and drone attacks in the UAE. One of these strikes allegedly caused a fire to break out at the main oil port, Fujairah.

Fujairah was critical to UAE oil exports in the Iran War as it is located at the end of a pipeline that carries crude oil from inland fields into the Gulf of Oman without going through the Strait of Hormuz.

Dubai's main stock index fell 1.5% due to a 2.2% decline in the Salik Company, and a 1.8% drop in blue-chip developer Emaar Properties.

Air Arabia, a budget airline, lost 2.8%.

Aldar Properties fell 2% in Abu Dhabi. The benchmark index dropped 0.7%.

The UAE authorities issued mobile phone alerts on Monday in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, warning of the possible occurrence of missile attacks.

A survey revealed that the Iran 'war' has affected shipping, tourism and sales, as well as exports.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark Index fell 0.4%. Al Rajhi Bank dropped 0.5%, and Saudi Arabian Mining Company declined 1.1%.

Brent?oil for July futures fell?51cents, or 0.5% to $113.93 a barrel at 0622 GMT, after closing up 5.8% Monday.

The Qatari Index fell by 0.4%.

(source: Reuters)