Good morning, friends. We have a mixed bag of news for you this morning, but the headline stories are outlook pieces, as analysts look into their crystal balls for what’s to come in 2026.
First off: Dubai’s property market looks like it’s (finally) headed towards normalization, with ValuStrat forecasting 10% capital gains, and rents expected to stay flat for the first time in a long time.
Plus: Regional national oil firms are set to spend more than their international counterparts as they continue to expand production and diversify into more low-carbon alternatives.
ALSO- Earnings season has officially kicked off, and as usual, it’s the banks that have gotten us started. We unpack Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank and Commercial Bank of Dubai’s financials in the news well, below.
Happening today
It’s Davos week: World leaders, bankers, and global business leaders are in Switzerland this week for the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting, which runs through tomorrow. You can go deeper on the meeting’s microsite here.
The UAE is sending what it says is the fifth biggest delegation at Davos this year, with some 100 officials, ministers, and senior executives from major private companies set to attend, according to Wam. Dubai Culture and Arts Authority Chairwoman Latifa bint Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum is leading the delegation.
Besides a pavilion that is set to host a series of sessions, meetings, and media engagements, several officials are taking the stage for panels throughout the week. Keep an eye out for Damac’s Founder and Chairman Hussain Sajwani, who takes the stage alongside other regional leaders today for a session focused on the “Prosperity Agenda for the Middle East.”
Also happening today:
- Umex Abu Dhabi, which wraps today at Adnec Center Abu Dhabi;
- The Abu Dhabi Department of Economic Development-led delegation to Italy, which also wraps up today;
- The Sharjah Real Estate Exhibition (also known as Acres), which runs until Saturday at Expo Center Sharjah.
WEATHER- Is this what winter’s like? We’re continuing a run of cooler weather, with the mercury reaching a high of just 20°C in Dubai, with a chilly overnight low of 13°C, while Abu Dhabi will see temperatures peak at 23°C with an overnight low of 12°C.
DEBT — Middle East bonds have not been immune to this week’s bond rout. A rapid sell-off in Japanese and US government bonds earlier this week has left regional markets momentarily oversupplied as global yields spike, with yields on UAE 2034 USD-denominated government bonds rising 5 bps to 4.385% overnight, according to an Emirates NBD research note (pdf). Saudi and Turkish bonds also saw yields rise, while a GCC-wide index tracking regional credit is down 0.4% YTD, exceeding the 0.3% drop seen in broader emerging markets.
The underperformance is primarily a supply story rather than a signal of deteriorating credit health, Emirates NBD explains. The GCC primary market has been exceptionally active, issuing USD 28.4 bn in new debt in the first three weeks of 2026 — which already represents 15% of the total volume issued in 2025.
Strong fundamentals mean that the overall credit position of countries like the UAE and Saudi Arabia remains a buffer against further dips, with investors expected to pivot back to the GCC’s high yields and strong credit, keeping spreads near record lows as conditions normalize.
Plus: Yields on US debt are already falling as geopolitical tensions seem to be easing, with US President Donald Trump saying he’s reached a framework agreement on Greenland (read more below).
IN OTHER DEBT NEWS- HSBC topped the MENA debt capital market leagues in 2025 for the second consecutive year, snapping up an 11% market share of bond bookrunning for the year, Zawya reports, citing LSEG data. The bank’s performance was anchored by its role in sovereign, Public Investment Fund, and corporate transactions in a year where the UAE trailed only Saudi Arabia as the world’s most active jurisdiction.
What to look for this year: HSBC expects Abu Dhabi and Sharjah to drive the 2026 pipeline alongside Saudi Arabia. “Dubai appears to be focused on deleveraging and is unlikely to tap the market in the near term unless it shifts its capex program toward a more expansionary stance,” Samer Deghaili, HSBC co-head of capital markets and advisory in MENAT, is quoted as saying.
Watch this space
AGRITRADE — Al Dahra focuses on production as it retires trading business: ADQ-backed agribusiness Al Dahra is looking to refocus its efforts on its European, US, and African farming operations as it plans to withdraw from the third-party grains and oilseeds trading market, Bloomberg reports, citing an emailed statement from the company. Cultivating and selling produce from its 250k acres of farmland is now a main priority as the firm — like other regional players in the sector — looks to secure food supply chains.
Al Dahra has been dipping out elsewhere: The shift follows the company’s recent exit from Romania’s grain trading market, a trading hotspot for Al Dahra following struggles amid increasing competition for a shrinking grain supply in the Black Sea market, in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The Emirati player posted three consecutive years of financial losses, opting to withdraw from trading in Romania while keeping its in-country farming and fertilizer business.
A good time to get out? Trading conditions in the region continue to fluctuate as Ukraine’s grain exports declined sharply in December, with volumes dropping 16% y-o-y due to a major escalation in Russian strikes on its main port infrastructure.
INVESTMENT — Abu Dhabi is corralling its mobility plays: The UAE has folded state-owned mobility investor Cyvn Holdings into its newest sovereign platform, L’imad Holding, consolidating high-profile stakes — including McLaren Racing and Chinese EV manufacturer Nio — under one umbrella, Bloomberg reports, citing people familiar with the matter.
Cyvn brings real heft: As we’ve reported, Cyvn took full control of McLaren Racing alongside Bahrain’s Mumtalakat in a transaction valuing the team at more than GBP 3 bn last year, and holds an 18% stake in Nio, which established the UAE as its MENA base in 2024.
This fits L’imad’s mandate: When the fund appointed its board earlier this month, it named urban mobility as a priority sector alongside infrastructure and real estate, financial services, advanced industries, and smart cities.
AND- Mubadala is aiming to ramp up its investments in AI and robotics, Reuters quotes CEO Khaldoon Al Mubarak as saying. The fund is keen on ventures involving both sectors, as well as their application in industry and manufacturing, he said. It will also focus on other sectors including biotech, healthcare, and life sciences, while expanding its Africa portfolio, which includes an Africa-focused joint venture capital fund with France’s Bpifrance.
The focus is on the here and now, with rapid developments in the sector making it tricky to see just five years ahead, where once the fund opted for a 10-year strategy, he added.
The proof is in the paper trail. The sovereign fund was the largest state-owned spender on AI in 2025, with about USD 4.9 bn deployed. The fund has made more recent plays into energy, oil and gas, North American financial services and assets, and private equity and credit.
INDIA — The UAE government and the Indian state of Telangana have agreed to collaborate on the development of Bharat Future City, a planned greenfield urban project near Hyderabad, according to a post on X by the Telangana Chief Minister’s Office.
Project scope: Telangana has positioned Bharat Future City as a net-zero greenfield smart city spread across about 30k acres, with planned zones covering technology, education, healthcare, industry, and residential development. Discussions with the UAE included a proposal to form a joint task force to support implementation.
UAE-India relations are set to deepen after a visit by President Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan to New Delhi this week culminated in a commitment to double trade and ramp up investments, including across AI, space, and defense. The UAE is already set to be involved in the development of the Dholera Special Investment Region, a smart city development in Gujarat.
BANKING — Two pieces of FAB news are making the rounds:
#1- FAB now has a fitness tracking payment ring: First Abu Dhabi Bank is launching its own answer to wearable payments tech with a new fitness payment ring, in partnership with Mastercard, French defense tech and cybersecurity firm Thales, and Hong Kong-based wearable payment tech firm Tappy, according to a press release (pdf).
How it works: The ring allows users to tokenize their FAB-Mastercard debit and credit cards for tap-to-pay transactions. It uses a miniaturized secure chip from Thales to replace sensitive card details with Tappy’s tokenization technology for security.
#2- FAB opened a representative office in Istanbul, joining other UAE lenders like Emirates NBD, Mashreq, and Dubai Islamic Bank in expanding there, Bloomberg reports. Tolga Kisakurek (LinkedIn), who was formerly executive vice-president at Istanbul-based Dogan Investment Bank and has held director roles at HSBC and Citigroup, was tapped as managing director of the representative office.
Background: FAB had been trying to venture into Turkey through the acquisition of a majority stake in Turkish bank Yapi Kredi, but talks fell through last year due to disagreements over pricing.
BANKING — Another African lender is planting a flag in Dubai: CRDB Bank, Tanzania’s largest bank, opened a representative office in Dubai International Financial Center (DIFC), aiming to channel trade finance and investment flows between East and Central Africa and the Gulf.
We knew this was coming: CRDB secured approval from the Dubai Financial Services Authority in November, after quietly setting up its Dubai presence a month earlier as it courted Emirati capital.
CRDB joins a growing African banking cluster in Dubai: As we’ve reported, South Africa’s third largest bank Absa’s corporate and investment banking arm plans to open a representative office in 1Q 2026, while South African bank Investec established a DIFC office in 2024. Standard Bank, Rand Merchant Bank, and Nedbank are already on the ground — cementing Dubai’s role as a financial gateway to Africa.
Bigger picture: The banking inflow mirrors a fast-deepening UAE-Africa trade and investment corridor. This week, the UAE signed 16 MoUs with the Democratic Republic of Congo across mining, energy, infrastructure, agriculture, and digital transformation, following a newly inked trade partnership with Nigeria.
Data point
AED 65.6 bn — that was the total trading value of Sharjah’s real estate sector in 2025, surging 64.3% y-o-y, Wam reports. The growth marks the highest annual performance, underpinned by a 26.3% increase in total transaction volumes to 132.7k. Sharjah’s 2024 transactions came in at AED 40 bn overall.
The breakdown: Sales were up 38.4% y-o-y on the back of high demand for residential units, stable prices, and competitive rental yields. Mortgage values also rose 45.1% y-o-y to reach AED 15.5 bn, while ownership certificate transactions were up 17.6% y-o-y to 47.5k. While UAE nationals dominated the market, accounting for AED 33.6 bn in sales, some AED 18.5 bn came in from non-Arab investors, and non-Emirati Arab nationals accounted for AED 9.8 bn in sales.
The big story abroad
US President Donald Trump’s about-turn on Greenland and a potential detente between the US and the EU is dominating headlines everywhere, after he said the US has agreed on a framework for a future deal on the Danish country after meeting with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte. Trump had earlier threatened to impose tariffs on eight European countries who had opposed his plans to take over Greenland, and the EU bloc was mulling ways to retaliate.
Market reax: US stocks rallied on the news, while the USD recovered from an earlier slump this week.
ALSO- More Middle East countries have joined the US’ Board of Peace, following the lead of the UAE, including Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Turkey, Jordan, Kuwait, and Qatar. The board is set to begin executing Trump’s 20-step Gaza peace plan, and then reportedly address other global conflicts. (Reuters)
In AI news, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has been meeting with investors in the Middle East, including state-backed funds in Abu Dhabi, ahead of a new investment round that could see the ChatGPT maker raise up to USD 50 bn, Bloomberg reports.
ALSO- Siri is set to be revamped and turned into an AI chatbot as Apple looks to move ahead in the AI race. (Bloomberg)
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Market watch
The International Energy Agency (IEA) sees global oil demand rising further this year to 930k bbl / d, up from 850k bbl / d in 2025, with growth coming from non-OECD markets as global economic conditions normalize following last year’s tariff-induced volatility, according to its monthly oil report. The pickup reflects normalization after last year’s tariff shock. On the supply side, the IEA projects a 2.5 mn bbl / d rise to 108.7 mn bbl / d in 2026, down from the 3 mn bbl / d increase seen in 2025. Non-Opec+ delivers 1.3 mn bbl / d of this year’s growth.
The gap: The IEA now expects global supply to exceed demand by 4.25 mn bbl / d in 1Q, when refinery maintenance curbs crude runs and seasonal demand softens, according to Reuters ’ calculations. For the full year, the agency sees an implied surplus of 3.69 mn bbl / d, slightly narrower than the 3.84 bbl / d penciled in last month’s report.
Opec still holds its no surplus argument: Opec expects global oil demand to rise by 1.39 mn bbl / d this year, while demand for Opec crude looks stable at 43 mn bbl / d. If Opec holds this rate through 2026, supply would sit some 170k bbl / d below demand.
IEA has not published its 2027 forecast yet — it will do so in April’s edition, per the agency’s timetable.
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