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Dubai stocks enter bear market as conflict-driven selloff hits banks, property shares

March 16, 2026 at 4:21 pm

A view from the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) area after the United Arab Emirates’ Capital Market Authority (CMA) announced the suspension of trading on the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange and the Dubai Financial Market on March 2 and 3, 2026, to maintain market stability following escalating tensions triggered by US and Israeli strikes on Iran and subsequent retaliatory actions on March 03, 2026 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. [Stringer – Anadolu Agency]

Dubai’s main stock index slipped into bear-market territory on Monday after falling more than 20% from its February peak as escalating regional tensions triggered broad selling across banking, real estate and travel-linked shares, Anadolu reports.

The Dubai Financial Market General Index reached a recent high of 6,785.48 on Feb. 10 and later dropped to 5,391.98 on March 13, according to Dubai Financial Market data.

That represents a decline of about 20.5%, meeting the widely used definition of a bear market.

Selling pressure persisted Monday, with Reuters reporting that Dubai’s benchmark fell another 2%, led by a 3% drop in Emaar Properties and a 1.4% decline in Emirates NBD as investors reacted to rising geopolitical uncertainty in the Gulf.

The index has fallen more than 18% since the conflict began.

The downturn has been concentrated in sectors most exposed to domestic economic activity and investor sentiment, particularly banking and real estate, while aviation and tourism-linked stocks have also come under pressure as security concerns cloud the outlook for travel, trade and business activity.

Dubai’s market had already posted sharp losses earlier this month, including a 4.7% drop when trading resumed after a two-day halt and a further 3.2% decline later that week, with Emaar, Emirates NBD and Air Arabia among the main contributors to the fall.

Further weakness followed last week as the conflict deepened.

On March 13, Dubai’s index fell 1.7%, marking its second-largest weekly decline in six years, again led by losses in banking and property shares.