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Gulf Markets ease up on oil prices

The Gulf's major stock exchanges eased early on Tuesday as lower crude prices and concerns about oversupply and sluggish demand dominated the geopolitical tensions following the U.S. announcement that it would sell Venezuelan oil.

Oil prices, a key factor in the Gulf financial markets, fell as traders weighed geopolitical risk against fundamentals that were bearish.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark index dipped 0.1%, mainly due to a 0.6% drop in oil giant Saudi Aramco as well as a 0.1% decline in Al Rajhi Bank.

Dubai's main stock index fell 0.3%. Toll operator Salik?Co lost 0.6%, and top lender?Emirates NBD saw a 0.5% drop.

The Abu Dhabi Index bucked trend and rose 0.2%.

Reports indicate that Donald Trump, the U.S. president, may announce his choice for the new Federal Reserve Chair as early as this January.

Trump said last week that the Fed chair will be someone who is strongly in favor of "significantly lower interest rate".

The markets are pricing in two interest rate cuts for the U.S. in the next year, based on the expectation of a shift to dovish monetary policy.

The U.S. monetary policy changes have a major impact on the Gulf markets where the majority of currencies are pegged with the dollar.

The Qatari Index fell 0.2% and the Qatar Islamic Bank dropped 0.5%. (Reporting by Ateeq Shariff in Bengaluru; Editing by Harikrishnan Nair)

(source: Reuters)