Dubai’s stock market fell nearly 5% as trading resumed on Wednesday after a rare two-day closure triggered by Iranian missile and drone strikes. The benchmark indexDubai’s stock market fell nearly 5% as trading resumed on Wednesday after a rare two-day closure triggered by Iranian missile and drone strikes. The benchmark index

Dubai's Stock Market: Down 5% After a Two-Day Closure

2026/03/04 20:57
3 min read
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Dubai’s stock market fell nearly 5% as trading resumed on Wednesday after a rare two-day closure triggered by Iranian missile and drone strikes. The benchmark index slid 4.9% in early trade, marking its steepest intraday decline since May 2022. Abu Dhabi’s main index dropped more than 4%, while the Nasdaq UAE 20 fell 4.3%.

Investors returned to screens after authorities paused trading on March 2 and March 3 to assess damage from attacks that targeted airports, ports, and residential areas. When markets reopened, sellers moved quickly. Was this pent-up pressure from two days of global volatility? Trading action suggested exactly that.

Dubai's Stock Market: Down 5% After a Two-Day Closure

To manage swings, both exchanges temporarily adjusted lower price limits to -5% per security. Regulators aimed to contain disorderly moves while allowing price discovery to resume.

Banks and Property Stocks Take the Hit

Financial and property names led declines across the UAE. Emirates NBD dropped over 5% in Dubai, while Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank slid nearly 5% after restoring services disrupted during the crisis. First Abu Dhabi Bank also fell around 5%.

Real estate developers faced heavy pressure. Emaar Properties declined close to 5%, and Aldar Properties lost a similar margin in Abu Dhabi. Analysts warned that escalation in the Middle East conflict could prolong for some time.

This could affect earnings-per-share growth for major developers and lenders. They highlighted increased equity risk premiums as a key factor weighing on valuations.

Insurance and investment firms saw even steeper losses. Al Buhaira National Insurance fell nearly 10%, and Umm Al Qaiwain General Investments dropped close to 9%. Broad-based declines reflected investor reassessment of geopolitical exposure across sectors.

Air Arabia slid about 5% as airspace closures led to thousands of flight cancellations. More than 20,000 flights faced disruption across the region, putting airlines and tourism-linked businesses under pressure. With Dubai International Airport reporting damage, travel stocks bore immediate strain.

Energy Firms and Market Cap Under Pressure

Energy-related stocks also weakened despite rising oil prices. Dana Gas and TAQA each lost around 5% in Abu Dhabi. ADNOC-linked companies across drilling, fuel distribution, and logistics segments faced selling as investors weighed operational risks.

The combined market cap of companies listed on the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange and Dubai Financial Market stands near $1.1 trillion. Wednesday’s decline erased billions in equity value within hours. The Abu Dhabi exchange instructed listed firms to assess financial and operational exposure and disclose material developments.

Elsewhere in the Gulf, Saudi Arabia’s benchmark index rose about 1%, extending earlier gains. Al Rajhi Bank advanced, and Saudi Basic Industries Corp climbed despite reporting a large annual net loss linked to asset impairments abroad. Qatar’s main index edged higher, while Oman, Bahrain, and Kuwait posted modest losses.

So What Next?

Global markets continue to react to the expanding U.S.-Iran conflict. Asian equities resumed selling on Wednesday morning, while European stocks opened higher after two sessions of declines. U.S. futures pointed to a weaker open following losses across major averages.

Oil prices gained roughly 3% as disruptions threatened Middle East supply routes, though gains slowed after comments about potential naval escorts through the Strait of Hormuz. That added another layer to investor calculations.

Now, we watch how the UAE markets stabilize. Whether the reopening follows Saudi Arabia’s recovery, or will this persist as new headlines emerge.

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