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Gulf markets benefit from early optimism about Middle East resolution

Investor confidence was boosted by the opening of most major Gulf exchanges on Monday. Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said that the United States would start efforts on Monday morning to help ships stuck in the Strait of Hormuz. He did not give any details of his plan. Iran's military warned U.S. troops on Monday to avoid entering the Strait of Hormuz, after President Donald Trump announced that the United States was going to start helping free ships stranded by the U.S. and Israeli war against Iran. He did not provide any details of the plan.

Trump's priority is to secure a nuclear deal with Tehran, but Iran wants the talks to be delayed until after the war. It also wants rival blockades against Gulf shipping to be lifted first.

Dubai's main stock index rose 1.2%. This was led by the 3.2% increase in blue-chip developer Emaar Properties, and a 1.6% rise in toll operator Salik Co.

In Abu Dhabi, the index grew 0.6%. This was boosted by an increase in stocks of companies linked to Abu Dhabi National Oil Company.

ADNOC Drilling jumped by 4.6%, ADNOC Gas grew by 0.9% and ADNOC Logistics & Services grew by 3%. United Arab Emirates left OAPEC on Sunday after announcing in April that it would also quit OPEC+ and OPEC to increase output.

The UAE's withdrawal from the cartel could also?allow for the Gulf State to increase production when exports resume since?it wouldn't be bound by OPEC quotas.

Speculations that the UAE might leave OPEC have been going on for years. It can remain profitable even in periods of prolonged low prices, thanks to its vast reserves and among the lowest production costs in the world.

The Qatari Index rose by 0.3%.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark indices fell by 0.5%, mainly due to a drop of 3.8% in Saudi Arabian Mining Co.

Saudi Aramco, the oil giant, also slipped 0.2%.

Brent crude futures dropped 6 cents or 0.1% to $108.11 per barrel at 0400 GMT, after falling $2.23 Friday.

(source: Reuters)