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Friday, December 05, 2025 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Tag Results for "trading" (32 articles)

Gulf Times
Business

Real estate trading exceeds QAR 767 million last week

The volume of real estate trading in sales contracts at the Department of Real Estate Registration at the Ministry of Justice during the period from Nov. 16-20, 2025 reached QAR 714,376,122.Meanwhile the total sales contracts for residential units in the Real Estate Bulletin for the same period is QAR 52,770,085, bringing the total trading value for the week to approximately QAR 767.146 million.The weekly bulletin issued by the Department shows that the list of real estate properties traded for sale has included vacant land plots, houses, residential buildings, residential complexes, an office building, residential buildings, a mixed-use commercial-residential building, a commercial building (market), administrative buildings, an apartment-hotel building, and residential units.Sales were concentrated in the municipalities of Al Rayyan, Doha, Al Wakrah, Umm Salal, Al Daayen, Al Shamal, and Al Khor and Al Dakhira, as well as in the areas of Al Wukair, The Pearl, Lusail 69, Al Khuraij, Dafna 60, Al Sakhama, and Al Mashaf.The volume of real estate transactions in sales contracts registered with the Real Estate Registration Department at the Ministry of Justice reached more than QAR 506 million during the period from Nov. 09 to Nov. 13. 

Gulf Times
Business

QSE index opens lower at start of trading

The Qatar Stock Exchange (QSE) general index declined by 6.16 points, or 0.06%, to 10,683 points at the start of trading on Thursday, compared with the previous session's close.Market data showed gains in the Insurance sector by 0.61%, Consumer Goods and Services by 0.41%, Industrials by 0.38%, Real Estate by 0.27%, and Transportation by 0.04%. However, the index was weighed down by losses in Banks and Financial Services by 0.37% and Telecoms by 0.71%.By 10:00 am, QSE reported a turnover of QR 100.171 million from 59.023 million shares traded across 4,114 transactions.

Gulf Times
Business

Real estate trading exceeds QAR 810 million last week

The volume of real estate trading in sales contracts at the Department of Real Estate Registration at the Ministry of Justice during the period from Nov. 2-6, 2025 reached QAR 762,952,804.Meanwhile the total sales contracts for residential units in the Real Estate Bulletin for the same period is QAR 48,009,657, bringing the total trading value for the week to approximately QAR 810.962 million.The weekly bulletin issued by the Department shows that the list of real estate properties traded for sale has included vacant lands, houses, residential buildings, a residential complex, a commercial building, and residential units.Sales were concentrated in the municipalities of Al Shamal, Al Rayyan, Doha, Al Wakrah, Umm Salal, Al Daayen, and Al Khor and Al Dakhira, and in the areas of Lusail 69, Al Wukair, The Pearl, Al Khuraij, Al Sakhama, and Al Mashaf.The volume of real estate transactions in sales contracts registered with the Real Estate Registration Department at the Ministry of Justice reached more than QAR 426 million during the period from Oct. 26 to Oct. 30.

Gulf Times
Business

QSE index loses 0.09 percent at beginning of trading

Qatar Stock Exchange (QSE) index lost 0.09 percent at the beginning of Monday's trading, dropping by 9.40 points to reach the level of 11,038 points compared to the previous session's close, under pressure from three sectors.QSE data showed positive performance for Transportation by 0.65 percent, Telecoms by 0.54 percent, Insurance by 0.39 percent, and Consumer Goods and Services by 0.23 percent. Meanwhile, the performance was negative for Real Estate by 0.16 percent, Banks and Financial Services by 0.29 percent, and Industrials by 0.37 percent.At 10:00 AM, QSE recorded 2,138 transactions worth QAR 33.621 million, distributed over 10.917 million shares.

State-owned Abu Dhabi National Oil Co sees trading as a way to capture greater value from selling fuels produced in the emirate and elsewhere, says Ahmed bin Thalith, chief executive officer of its oil trading unit.
Business

Abu Dhabi’s oil trading arm plans rapid international expansion

Abu Dhabi’s five-year-old oil trading arm plans to boost the volume it handles by two thirds in the next few years as it expands internationally, its CEO said.State-owned Abu Dhabi National Oil Co sees trading as a way to capture greater value from selling fuels produced in the emirate and elsewhere, said Ahmed bin Thalith, chief executive officer of the unit. The next phase of Adnoc Global Trading’s expansion will be an office in Houston in 2027, he said.“In only five years, we’ve established offices in Singapore, in Geneva and, soon to come, in the US,” bin Thalith said in an interview at the company’s office in Abu Dhabi. “This will put us on the global map and this will increase our footprint.” AGT is handling the equivalent of about 1.1mn to 1.2mn barrels of oil a day and aims to expand that to about 2mn barrels a day, he said.Middle Eastern oil producers have for decades dominated global crude markets, traditionally selling their cargoes on long-term contracts. More recently, companies like Adnoc and Saudi Aramco have been setting up and expanding trading operations as growing domestic refining capacity gave them access to higher-value products such as diesel that can be sold into new markets like Europe.Expanding to the US with a Houston office in 2027 will help achieve its volume targets, bin Thalith said. AGT has started a petrochemicals trading desk and will expand it as Adnoc builds its presence in that industry internationally and with plants on the US Gulf coast, he said.“Once you tap into a market such as the US where most of the products are exported, then that will give you a big boost,” he said.AGT is a joint venture between Adnoc, Italy’s Eni SpA and Austria’s OMV AG. Those partners also operate the emirate’s refinery at Ruwais on the Arabian Gulf coast, with capacity to process more than 900,000 barrels of crude a day. Some of the refinery’s gasoline, diesel and jet fuel is used domestically, but the majority goes for export.“We own the full value chain, from the well all the way to the distribution, and trading comes in and takes advantage of the whole operation,” bin Thalith said. “When you have one of the biggest refineries in the world behind you, that’s a very good thing to start with” and helped the trader be profitable “from day one,” he said.Adnoc and Saudi Aramco are both expanding their trading units in an effort to maximise profits and replicate the success of international firms such as Shell Plc and BP Plc. Another business called Adnoc Trading that’s wholly owned by the Middle Eastern producer, deals in crude oil and liquefied natural gas.International oil companies have long profited from selling on the open market crude from fields they operate and fuels from their own refining networks. That business, known as trading the system, gives the oil companies a base around which to buy and sell fuels produced by others, create hedges and react to market opportunities, a model the Middle Eastern producers are seeking to follow.“If you look at other companies that have those mega systems, they have a ratio of one system barrel to three non-system barrels,” bin Thalith said. “So we’d like to reach that point.” Regional rival Aramco Trading moved 7.3mn barrels a day of crude oil and refined products in 2024. Vitol Group the world’s largest independent trader, had a similar volume last year.Some traders have struggled make money this year due to price volatility caused by geopolitics rather than pure market fundamentals.“People confuse volatility with uncertainty and they’re not the same,” bin Thalith said. “Uncertainty is something like sanctions, like trade wars, that you don’t know when it’s going to end and it impacts you in a way that is different than the normal movement of the market.”

Gulf Times
Business

QSE Index rises 0.14% at start of trading

The Qatar Stock Exchange (QSE) index opened Thursday's trading higher by 0.14%, adding 15.73 points to reach 10,866 points, compared to the previous session's close, supported by most sectors.Figures from QSE showed positive performances in the Transportation sector by 0.61%, Insurance by 0.52%, Industrials by 0.27%, Consumer Goods and Services by 0.07% and Banking and Financial Services by 0.02%.Meanwhile, Telecoms saw negative performance by 0.32% and Real Estate by 0.08%.At 10:00 AM, QSE recorded 2,998 transactions worth QAR 48.618 million, distributed over 21.028 million shares.

Gulf Times
Business

Dollar declines, Yen rises amid market volatility

The US dollar index edged lower on Wednesday after a three-day rally, as the greenback retreated during Asian trading amid market volatility triggered by a sharp fall in gold prices, which rebalanced flows across safe-haven assets. The dollar was last down 0.1% at 151.74 yen, after data showed that Japan's exports rose in September for the first time in five months. The dollar index, which measures the performance of the US currency against six major peers, stood at 98.84, down 0.1%. The euro rose 0.1% to $1.1613, while the pound sterling was steady at $1.3379. The Australian dollar gained 0.2% to $0.6503, and the New Zealand dollar also advanced 0.2% to $0.5753.

Gulf Times
Business

QSE Index down 0.31% at market open

The Qatar Stock Exchange (QSE) general index declined 33.99 points, or 0.31%, at the beginning of Wednesday's trading session, falling to 10,787 points compared to the previous session's close. The decline was mainly driven by losses across four sectors. Leading the downturn was the transportation sector, which fell 0.93%, followed by Banks and Financial Services (-0.53%), Telecoms (-0.37%), and Real Estate (-0.16%). In contrast, gains were recorded in the Consumer Goods and Services sector (+0.48%), Industrials (+0.11%), and Insurance (+0.02%). By 10:00 am, QSE reported a turnover of QR 46.826 million, with 23.107 million shares traded across 2,914 transactions.

Gulf Times
Business

QSE Index opens higher

The Qatar Stock Exchange (QSE) general index rose 0.11% at the start of trading on Monday, gaining 11.55 points to reach 10,848, compared to the previous session's close. Market data showed gains in Consumer Goods and Services (+0.49%), Transportation (+0.17%), and Banks and Financial Services (+0.13%), while declines were recorded in Insurance (-0.34%), Real Estate (-0.26%), Telecoms (-0.06%), and Industrials (-0.05%). By 10:00 am, QSE reported a turnover of QR 34.360 million from 14.811 million shares traded across 2,659 transactions.

Gulf Times
Business

QSE Index starts week higher

The Qatar Stock Exchange (QSE) general index started the week higher on Sunday, gaining 35.61 points, or 0.33%, to reach 10,886 points at the opening of trading.The increase was driven by gains across five sectors. Transportation led the advance with a rise of 0.97%, followed by Industrials (+0.69%), Real Estate (+0.56%), Consumer Goods and Services (+0.35%), and Banks and Financial Services (+0.13%). In contrast, Insurance edged down 0.01%, while Telecoms slipped 0.43%. By 10:00 am, QSE reported a turnover of QR 63.086 million from 30.289 million shares traded across 2,948 transactions.

Gulf Times
Business

Muscat Stock Exchange records 26.2% surge in weekly trading value

The Muscat Stock Exchange recorded its highest weekly trading volume of the year last week, driven by increased activity in bank stocks and other leading companies, as most public joint-stock companies concluded the release of their preliminary Q3 financial results. Trading value rose to OMR 240.9 million, up from OMR 190.8 million the previous week, marking a 26.2 percent increase. The number of executed transactions also climbed from 19,529 to 25,171. The main index gained 40 points to close at 5,289, while the financial sector index rose by 169 points to 8,923. The industrial sector index added 32 points, and the services sector index increased by 4 points. Meanwhile, the Sharia index declined by 4 points to close at 461. According to trading data released by the Muscat Stock Exchange, the total market capitalization of listed securities fell to OMR 30.596 billion, reflecting weekly losses of OMR 108.5 million, impacted by a drop in the market value of bonds and sukuk, which fell below the OMR 5 billion threshold.During the week, prices rose for 38 securities, while 30 declined and another 30 remained unchanged.

Gulf Times
Business

QSE Index rises 0.18% at start of trading

The Qatar Stock Exchange (QSE) index rose at the beginning of Thursday's trading by 0.18%, gaining 19.29 points to reach 10,712 points, compared to the previous session's close, backed by four sectors. Market data showed gains in Banks and Financial Services (+0.20%), Industrials (+0.17%), Transportation (+0.09%), and Insurance (+0.08%). Meanwhile, the performance was negative for Consumer Goods and Services (-0.13%), Real Estate (-0.17%), and Telecoms (-0.27%). By 10:00 am, QSE reported a turnover of QR 45.349 million from 16.695 million shares traded across 3,124 transactions.