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War hits the region

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WHAT WE’RE TRACKING TODAY

THIS MORNING: Int’l players assess UAE operations amid strikes + Opec to raise production in April

Good morning, everyone. We hope you’ve all been safe and doing well amid all that’s been happening here at home and across the region. Things have been almost eerily quiet from where we are in Dubai, with the occasional loud sounds outside our windows earlier in the night (which Dubai authorities have confirmed are the sounds of interceptions of missiles and drones in the air). Overnight, though, many have reported hearing military aircraft — still an unfamiliar sound in Dubai — overhead.

No safety alerts have been sent out to our phones since Saturday night, and those in Abu Dhabi were advised to “resume normal activities” yesterday after receiving earlier alerts to stay indoors. The videos on social media have not stopped circulating, however, with videos of smoke blowing out of various spots across Dubai and Abu Dhabi, drones hitting apartments, and more making their way across X and WhatsApp groups.

Many supermarkets and shops — though not all — have remained open, and delivery scooters are still to be found on the streets across the country, with home delivery accessible on all the popular delivery apps. Some people were panic-buying at supermarkets on Saturday, prompting the government toreassure residents of “ample supplies” and advise against stockpiling.

The situation in Abu Dhabi is also notably calm with the exception of ongoing sounds of missile interceptions and some cases of fallen debris, damage, and injuries, including a minor incident in the Etihad Towers yesterday afternoon.

Several tourist spots suspended operations yesterday as a precautionary measure, including Dubai’s Global Village and Dubai Parks and Resorts. Ras Al Khaimah’s Jebel Jais and Abu Dhabi’s Abrahamic Family House also closed temporarily.

At least there’s … not as much traffic in the streets? Expect the relative lack of gridlock to continue over the next few days. Schools will operate remotely until Wednesday and most people we’ve spoken to have heard from their employers about remote work plans for the week ahead.

The Human Resources and Emiratization Ministry advised companies to implement remote working for three days starting yesterday through Tuesday, 3 March, according to a post on X. The DIFC also advised the same for those who can work remotely.

Global banks and investors are assessing how to respond to the shocks. Bloomberg reports some hedge funds are already looking at business continuity plans, while banks like JPMorgan and Citigroup have instructed workers to work from home.

Others have acted fast at the first signs of distress: Japan’s top liquefied natural gas buyer, Jera, evacuated its staff in the Middle East, Bloomberg reports separately. Another report suggests that senior executives at some finance firms and high-net-worth individuals have left Dubai for Riyadh — which has the only operating airport in the region — in SUVs, before taking private charters out of the Saudi capital. Cue the price gauging…

One thing’s certain: The “safe haven” bubble that was the UAE — and its neighbors in the region — has burst for now. Previously glitzy and untouched places like Dubai’s hotels, residential towers and villas, and Dubai and Abu Dhabi’s airports have suffered unprecedented damage. And while most of it will likely be easily repaired, the fear that has shaken expats and tourists alike might leave a lasting imprint.

^^ We have more on the extent of the damage that has taken place over the weekend, and more importantly, what could be at stake for the macro forecast, for industries like tourism and aviation, and much more in this morning’s War Watch, below.

From The Dept. of Minor Inconveniences

Our website is down: EnterpriseAM.com is one of the many, many services hosted on Amazon Web Services out of the UAE. The data center that hosts our site — and the apps and websites of dozens of other brands you know — was damaged after “objects hit” it, reportedly starting a fire and leading to a power outage. Our site has been down since mid-afternoon on Sunday and we’re yet to hear from Amazon when we can expect it to be back up.


WEATHER- It’s going to get very hot before it gets cold. Expect the mercury to rise to a sweltering 35°C today, while Abu Dhabi will see an even higher peak of 36°C, before both cool to 22°C overnight. This comes before a cold wave is set to hit the country as of Wednesday, with rainfall also expected.

Watch this space

M&A — Emirates NBD encounters stiff competition in India’s biggest bank sale: Canada’s Fairfax Financial has emerged as the frontrunner to acquire a 61% stake in Indian state-owned IDBI Bank — a roughly USD 8.1 bn transaction at current prices and potentially the largest foreign investment in India’s banking sector, Bloomberg reports, citing people it says are familiar with the matter. Fairfax, led by Indian-born Canadian b’naire Prem Watsa, is said to be ahead in advanced talks, though no agreement has been signed.

REFRESHER- As we’ve previously reported, Emirates NBD had secured fit-and-proper clearance from India’s central bank in December. The Dubai lender is also working on its USD 3 bn RBL Bank acquisition, with plans to fold its Indian branches into RBL as it builds a longer-term platform in India’s expanding credit market, the sources said.

The bigger picture? Gulf capital is leaning further into Indian finance. Abu Dhabi’s IHC acquired a controlling stake in Sammaan Capital for USD 1 bn last year, signaling a regional appetite for the sector. Separately, the UAE and India signed new agreements this year targeting USD 200 bn in bilateral trade by 2032, while India and the GCC formally launched negotiations last month toward a trade pact.


M&A — Dubai’s USD 3.5 bn swing at Morocco’s refinery hits regulatory wall. A Casablanca court declared inadmissible an offer by Dubai-based MJM Investments for Morocco’s only refinery, Samir, which has been under judicial liquidation since 2016, Asharq Business reports, citing documents it has seen. The country-appointed receiver met the bidders, but the paperwork didn’t clear the bar.

Documentation gaps stall Dubai’s bid: MJM submitted an expression of interest and a letter from an international bank signaling intent to finance, but fell short of the full documentation required under liquidation rules — including bank backing and a comprehensive technical and financial package. Projections, funding structures, acquisition price mechanics, and performance assurances are mandatory for a sale order to proceed. For UAE investors eyeing complex industrial turnarounds, this serves as a reminder of the rigorous rules of engagement in cross-border insolvency.

BACKGROUND- Samir has been in court-led liquidation for a decade after debts topped USD 4 bn, and roughly 40 local and foreign offers have come and gone without closing. Before shutting down in 2015, Samir covered 64% of Morocco’s refined fuel needs.


TRANSPORT — Abu Dhabi spearheads regional autonomous freighter launch: The Integrated Transport Center (ITC) launched the region’s first pilot project for autonomous trucks within Khalifa Economic Zones Abu Dhabi (Kezad). ITC — in partnership with autonomous vehicle developer Autotech and AD Ports Group — is supervising test runs along dedicated industrial routes to evaluate AI-based driving systems in real-world logistics environments.

Why it matters: ITC is moving beyond autonomous passenger transport to tackle the local logistics spine. By using AI to understand local road requirements, the regulator is building the dataset needed to draft the commercial policies that will eventually allow operators to scale these fleets across the emirate’s economic zones.

What’s next: The pilot will continue to assess the technology’s readiness for full-scale commercial deployment.

PSA

March sees oil price hike: The fuel price committee increased fuel prices across the board for March, with rates climbing as much as 8%, according to an Emirates Petroleum Company post on X. This marks the end of a brief period of lower pump prices, after costs dropped in both January and February.

Here’s the new breakdown per liter:

  • Super 98 is now AED 2.59, up from AED 2.45 in February (+5.7%);
  • Special 95 is AED 2.48, up from AED 2.33 (+6.4%);
  • E-Plus 91 is AED 2.40, up from AED 2.26 (+6.2%);
  • Diesel is AED 2.72, up from AED 2.52 (+7.9%).

The big story abroad

The global front pages are all about the regional war and its impact on markets this morning. Between soaring oil prices and a strengthening USD, markets, currencies, and commodities are seeing massive fluctuations as investors look for safety amid all the uncertainty.

Worth reading: The Financial Times is out with a piece looking at what this all means for theglobal economy, while the Wall Street Journal dives into what a post-Khamenei Iran could look like.

From stocks to oil and logistics, we dive into what this all means for us at home in the news well, below.

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Market watch

Opec+ is adding barrels to global supply in April: Opec+ agreed to resume production increases next month, with key members agreeing to 206k bbl / d after pausing hikes in 1Q, according to a statement. This comes as turmoil rattles the Middle East, regional output faces threats, traffic in Hormuz is halted, and talk of oil reaching triple digits surfaces. Middle Eastern leaders have warned the US that a war on Iran could push oil prices above USD 100 / bbl, RBC’s Helima Croft told Reuters, with Barclays analysts penciling in the same level.

Abu Dhabi is already leaning in, with more Murban heading to the market in April, Bloomberg reports, citing anonymous sources. Adnoc offered additional volumes to partners in the onshore concession — some of which have already flipped extra cargoes into the spot market. The exact size and distribution of the incremental supply remain unclear.

A supply flex, but with limits? Key members had paused a series of hikes earlier this year before restarting them now — and some, including Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, and the UAE, already began ramping up exports last month. Formal quotas may not capture the full response. The group’s spare capacity sits largely with Saudi and the UAE, totaling some 2.5 mn bbl / d. Some analysts argue that even that cushion may be overstated.

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2

THE BIG STORY TODAY

No trading today as regulatory body assesses the situation

It’s early to talk about fallout and what the attacks mean for business, but we have thoughts, from capital markets to tourism and the wider economy.

UP FIRST- The stock market. The ADX and DFM are both closed today and tomorrow: “The [UAE Capital Market Authority] will continue to monitor developments in the region and assess the situation on an ongoing basis, taking any further measures as necessary,” state news agency Wam reports.

You can expect to see some “orderly repricing rather than a sharp, panic-driven gap down” when markets do open, CFI Financial Market Analyst Christy Achkar told EnterpriseAM. While some expect a sea of red, Achkar argues that the UAE’s unique market architecture — characterized by heavy institutional anchors and sovereign-linked entities — acts as a natural circuit breaker on extreme volatility.

Unlike more retail-driven markets, the UAE’s “strong institutional participation” helps limit irrational selling. Plus, the geopolitical risk premium often comes with a silver lining for the Emirates: higher oil prices. “For the UAE, higher oil prices translate into stronger government revenues, improved fiscal surpluses, and greater system liquidity,” Achkar said. This creates a cushion that supports public spending and maintains confidence even when headlines turn sour.

IN CONTEXT- Saudi’s Tadawul was down nearly 2.2% yesterday, while the EGX30 in Egypt was off 2.5% at the close.

The sectors to watch: Expect “high-beta real estate and financial stocks” to feel the initial heat. Banks and property names are sentiment-sensitive and often serve as the first exit point for investors reducing exposure to growth. Airlines, airports, and tourism look most exposed to cancellations, ins. costs, and confidence shock, Rawad Kassouf, Arqaam Capital head of ECM execution and syndicate, told us.

The safe harbors: Defensive sectors like utilities and energy-related names should remain relatively stable, especially if crude prices remain elevated. Kassouf shared the same opinion, saying that “telecoms and regulated utilities are typically the closest defensives on stable cashflows and dividends, while energy producers offer oil leverage; however, their exports and critical infrastructure could be impacted.”

What’s next: “Clarity matters more than valuation” amid geopolitical tensions, Achkar said. Investors will likely adopt a wait-and-see approach, monitoring global futures and oil before deploying capital.

Watch the first hour of trading after markets open: If the index recovers early losses on steady volume, it signals domestic liquidity is absorbing the shock. “If external conditions stabilize, selective dip-buying could emerge later in the session, supported by domestic liquidity,” Achkar added. “However, continued escalation would likely keep investors defensive and focused on reducing higher-beta exposure.”

BACKGROUND- UAE markets have had a good start to the year: The ADX closed last month up 1.7%, having gained 4.6% YTD, while DFM gained 1.1% in February and 7.5% YTD. Pundits say GCC markets could drop by 3-5% if hostilities continue — the prospect of higher oil prices will likely be insufficient to calm investors’ nerves as regional instability weighs heavier.

The impact on the wider economy will take longer to assess: “The economic fallout from the attacks by the US and Israel on Iran […] will depend on how long the conflict lasts, the scale of Iranian retaliations and the spillovers to the oil market,” Capital Economics Chief Emerging Markets Economist William Jackson said in a note out just after the initial attacks on Iran began.

What to watch: Aviation and tourism

Perhaps the biggest negative impact for the UAE will be on tourism, a mainstay of the economy. The UAE has long been seen as a safe destination with a plethora of luxury attractions for high-net-worth individuals and others who want to take a break from cold winters and seek the sunny beaches of the UAE, especially this time of year.

Widespread airspace closures and massive flight disruptions spread through the region and hit the UAE over the weekend. Iran, Israel, Iraq, Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait completely shut their skies to commercial traffic, while the UAE, Syria, and Oman severely restricted flights.

The world’s busiest airport, Dubai International Airport, sustained “minor damage” to a concourse, according to Dubai Media Office, while videos circulated of smoke and fallen debris inside its Terminal 3 on Saturday night. Zayed International Airport in Abu Dhabi was also hit the same night, with one fatality reported and seven injuries.

The airline situation:

  • Emirates suspended all flights until today 3pm Dubai time, while Etihad suspended all flights to and from Abu Dhabi until 2pm;
  • International airlines including Turkish Airlines, Air India, Lufthansa, British Airways, KLM, and more canceled or suspended flights to the UAE and other points in the region for several days;
  • Saudia canceled all flights to Amman, Kuwait, Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Doha, Bahrain, Moscow, and Peshawar until midnight Monday, 2 March;
  • Flynas and Flyadeal also asked passengers to check their apps for cancellations.

Authorities in Abu Dhabi and Dubai are trying to make it up to tourists stuck here due to the airspace situation as much as possible, with both emirates instructing hotels to allow guests to stay beyond their planned bookings. Abu Dhabi is also footing the bill for hotel extensions.

What to watch: Oil

If the conflict remains a “limited set of strikes” — which we’ve likely already surpassed — Capital Economics’ Jackson sees oil reaching USD 80 / bbl, up from the USD 73 that Brent crude was selling at before markets closed for the weekend. But with Iranian strikes on American bases in the region and rhetoric from the White House suggesting American aggression will only end with full regime change, we are likely looking at a “longer conflict that causes disruptions to supply” and “could send prices much higher — with a material effect on global inflation.”

Are we headed to USD 100 oil? Despite the buildup of American forces in the region, which has led to a “political risk premium baked into the oil price,” disruptions to oil flows out of the region could see us hit USD 100 / bbl for the first time since 2022. “This move would reflect not only the probability of physical disruption but also the extreme uncertainty surrounding maritime flows, retaliation dynamics, and political escalation,” Rystad Energy’s Jorge Leon tells EnterpriseAM.

A prolonged Hormuz closure could make it difficult to get oil shipments to major markets in Asia. Routing through the Red Sea could also prove difficult if Houthis ramp up attacks, GlobalSource Partners’ Gulf Analyst Justin Alexander tells us.

Maintaining recent revenue levels will be difficult even if oil is priced much higher, which could widen the deficit in the short term, Alexander added. Even if Hormuz returns to business as usual, “prices might remain elevated for some time given the risk of further conflict,” depending on developments on the ground in Iran and reduced Iranian exports.

Opec+ is looking to add supply to the market next month, as we’ve reported in What We’re Tracking Today above, abandoning its previous strategy of modest 137k bbl / d increments, which was due to be resumed after a freeze of supply hikes through the first quarter.

A supply increase won’t necessarily solve the problem: “If crude cannot physically exit the Gulf due to Hormuz constraints, incremental production increases will have limited immediate market impact. In such a scenario, the constraint is not upstream supply capacity but export routes and maritime transit,” Leon tells us.

What to watch: The economy

The UAE’s fiscal exposure remains limited given its “strong sovereign balance sheets, low public debt relative to GDP, and substantial sovereign wealth buffers,” banking and financial consultant Amjad Naser told EnterpriseAM. Higher oil prices could again potentially be a boon, with upward pressure likely strengthening fiscal and external accounts, Naser said.

The UAE is coming into this on a firm footing. Its macro fundamentals are solid, with “sustained non-oil growth, disciplined fiscal management, strong foreign reserves, and continued structural reform initiatives aligned with long-term development strategies,” Naser said. The UAE was forecast to be the fastest-growing economy in the Gulf region this year, according to Oxford Economics. Emirates NBD and the IMF see growth coming in at 5.0%, while the World Bank expects 4.8% growth, driven by broad-based momentum in non-oil activities and a gradual improvement in oil output.

“The banking sector is also well-capitalized, with strong capital adequacy ratios and robust regulatory oversight,” Naser said. In fact, the UAE has historically been a haven for capital inflows during periods of uncertainty in the region, supported by “institutional credibility and policy stability,” he added.

What to watch: Trade and logistics

Three ships were struck yesterday, including one hit by an unidentified projectile northwest of the UAE’s Mina Saqr in Ras Al Khaimah. A second strike reportedly hit a vessel near Sharjah, though its crew was all found to be safe, CNBC Arabia reports. Another incident took place near Oman as a small tanker, Skylight, which appears to be under US sanctions, was hit off its northern coast, with one crew member killed.

The big question is whether Hormuz remains open. We’re already seeing tankers avoid the strait, with Iran’s Tasnim News Agency reporting it is “effectively” closed, although no formal announcement has been made by Tehran. Some ships reported receiving a radio broadcast — reportedly from the Iranian navy — instructing them to leave the waterway as passage is banned.

Iran’s broadcast warnings and the resulting pullback by some traders are a bid to disrupt the flow without the need for formal closure, by “causing enough ambiguity to create a de facto chokepoint shock,” Wolfgang Lehmacher, a supply chain and logistics strategist, tells EnterpriseAM. Whether you’re talking geopolitical risk or investor confidence, that blurs the line between “normal” tension and crisis, forcing a persistent risk premium into energy contracts, shipping equities, and port projects linked to Gulf exports, Lehmacher added.

Pundits think the strait won’t be closed off for long: “If the Strait of Hormuz were to close, the most likely scenario is that it would be temporary, potentially lasting one to two weeks,” Leon said, adding that a prolonged closure would carry severe geopolitical consequences and likely provoke a rapid international response. “That said, even a short-lived disruption would create a significant logistical backlog.”

A full Hormuz closure would be very painful. About 30% of the world’s daily oil supply and 20% of global LNG trade pass through the strait. The UAE moves about 1.5 mn bbl / d of its 2.8 mn bbl / d exports through the strait, Mees reported earlier last year. The UAE currently only has one option for bypassing the strait: the Adcop — or the Habshan-Fujairah pipeline — which connects Adnoc’s Habshan crude oil processing plant in Abu Dhabi with the nation’s Fujairah export terminal on the Indian Ocean. The pipeline has a capacity of 1.8 mn bbl / d — about 67% of the 2.85 mn bbl / d of crude oil exported from the Emirates this year. It does, however, still leave offshore-sourced crude reliant on the strait — about 1.5 mn bbl / d worth — exposed to any prolonged closures

The Houthis are in, too: The Yemeni rebel group signaled its intention to resume missile and drone attacks, making the Red Sea a standing variable in Tehran’s escalation toolkit. That will ensure any additional strikes resonate beyond the Bab El Mandeb, shaping perceptions of risk from Suez to Hormuz and forcing carriers to recalibrate already thin buffers in global container and tanker fleets, Lehmacher said.

Change to logistics routes could be even more widespread in the long term: Repeated stress on the Suez Canal and Hormuz could catalyze a new MENA-doctrine-proof corridor mix. “We are likely to see faster development of African Atlantic and Indian Ocean gateways, greater use of alternative Eurasian and intra‑regional routes, and selective upgrading of Gulf and Eastern Mediterranean ports as contingency hubs for rerouting cargo and services when doctrines or security conditions change,” Lehmacher tells us. Ins., finance, and development capital will follow, with more granular, corridor-specific pricing that rewards better security and governance in other routers.

Operational disruptions also followed for UAE trade hubs, including DP World suspending all operations at Jebel Ali Port as a precautionary measure, halting all activities across the port’s terminals, Bloomberg reports.

Short-term disruptions likely won’t have a major long-term impact, pundits say. “The UAE’s diversified economic base — particularly in financial services, technology, aviation, and re-export trade — significantly mitigates concentration risk,” Naser told us.

What to watch: Diplomacy

The UAE has closed its embassy in Iran and pulled its ambassador from Iran, in a major setback for UAE-Iran relations that had only recently thawed, according to a Foreign Affairs Ministry statement. It also condemned the “hostile attacks against civilian sites, including residential areas, airports, ports, and service facilities,” in the UAE, which it said “endangered innocent civilians in a serious and irresponsible escalation and constitute a flagrant violation of national sovereignty, as well as a clear breach of international law and the Charter of the United Nations.”

President Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan spoke with a long list of leaders over the past hours, including US President Donald Trump. His calls with neighboring leaders focused on the latest regional developments and reiterated the need to halt escalatory actions and return to diplomatic solutions.

3

WAR WATCH

War hits the region

The regional security and economic landscape lurched over the weekend as the US and Israel launched a sweeping attack on Iran and its leadership, prompting Iran to retaliate with drone and missile strikes on both Israel and Arab countries across the region.

Where do things stand this morning? Here’s what we know as of dispatch time this morning:

  • Top Iranian military and political officials, including the defense minister and commander of the Armed Revolutionary Corps, were killed in Saturday’s strikes alongside Supreme Leader Khamenei;
  • A three-man council including Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian will run the country during a transitional period until a new supreme leader is chosen;
  • Strikes on Iran will continue “throughout the week or as long as necessary,” US President Donald Trump said, adding he “agreed to talk” to the new Iranian leadership;
  • Oman has been dragged into the conflict after its Duqm port was hit by drones;
  • Israel targeted Beirut earlier today after Hezbollah fired several missiles at Israel on Sunday.
  • A number of commercial vessels around the Strait of Hormuz were attacked yesterday, prompting ships and tankers to stay away for the time being;
  • The UK has agreed to let the US use British military bases for “defensive” strikes on Iranian missile sites;
  • European powers Germany, France, and the UK have affirmed their readiness to target Iran’s missile and drone launch capabilities;
  • Three US troops were killed and five wounded, reportedly in Kuwait, while a missile struck a bunker in Israel, killing at least nine and wounding dozens.

What happened: Joint US-Israeli strikes shook Tehran starting around 9am Saturday, targeting the highest senior Iranian officials, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Both Tehran and Washington confirmed his death Saturday night.

The UAE Defense Ministry said it has intercepted a total of 165 ballistic missiles, two cruise missiles, and 541 Iranian drones as of yesterday afternoon, the majority of which were destroyed upon interception or have fallen into the sea. Most sounds heard in Dubai are a result of successful interception operations, Dubai Media Office confirmed.

The message from UAE officials: The UAE wants to avoid getting dragged into the war, but it won’t “sit idly by” amid attacks on its soil, State Minister for International Cooperation Reem Al Hashimy told CNN. “The ball is in Iran’s court about how they want to [engage] with a neighborhood and neighbor that has been traditionally a very fair and good neighbor to them,” she added.

“We are prepared to [defend ourselves]. We hope it doesn’t come to it, but […] we’re not going to sit idly by as we continue to be recipients of such a barrage of attacks,” the state minister added. Anwar Gargash, the president’s diplomatic advisor, struck a similar tone of threat and caution in a post on X addressing Iran and saying its aggression on the Gulf “missed its target and isolated Iran at its critical moment,” calling on the country to “[engage] with your neighbors with reason and responsibility before the circle of isolation and escalation widens.”

The GCC made a similar statement: Gulf countries have affirmed their “right to respond” to Iran’s strikes, following a meeting of the GCC’s Ministerial Council. The bloc emphasized that it is prepared to take necessary measures to safeguard its sovereignty.

The damage so far

  • Three people have been confirmed killed in the UAE as a result of fallen debris across the country, while 58 minor injuries were reported ;
  • The Fairmont in Palm Jumeirah was damaged on Saturday night as a projectile hit the hotel, causing fire near its entrance, while the facade of the Burj Al Arab was also hit by fallen debris after an interception;
  • A berth at Dubai’s Jebel Ali Port caught fire, also the result of falling debris;
  • Al Salam naval base in Abu Dhabi was damaged by two Iranian drones, which resulted in a fire;
  • Debris falling from an intercepted drone struck an embassy complex in Abu Dhabi where the Israeli embassy is also located. The fallout injured a woman and her child, Reuters reported;
  • Amazon’s data center in Dubai was also “hit” by an “object,” sending many websites and online services offline, including EnterpriseAM.com.

4

ECONOMY

Abu Dhabi inflation ticks up to 1.6% in January

Abu Dhabi’s annual inflation accelerated slightly to 1.6% in January, up from 1.5% in December, according to the latest data (pdf) from the Abu Dhabi Statistics Center. On a monthly basis, however, the consumer price index declined 0.1%, reversing a 0.4% increase the previous month, according to separate data (pdf).

Housing and food led the charge: The primary upward pressure on the annual figure remains the housing, water, electricity, and gas sector, which holds the biggest weight on the index, surged 4.5% y-o-y in January — marking its highest growth rate since January 2022. Other notable annual increases include the food and beverages sector, which accelerated sharply to 1.7%, up from 0.6% in December, and the restaurants and hotels category also climbed 1.9% y-o-y. Recreation and culture saw a significant turnaround, swinging from a 5.0% contraction to a 0.9% increase. Other sectors showing a cooling trend include communications, which slowed to a near-flat 0.2%, and tobacco, which eased slightly to 0.6%.

“This inflationary trend may be partially driven by a surge in demand-pull inflation, resulting from the significant momentum in new company formations and broader economic activity in Abu Dhabi, particularly throughout 2025. However, I believe supply-side shocks remain the primary drivers,” MENA Economist Hamzeh Al Gaaod tells EnterpriseAM.

While the annual headline figure rose, several sectors showed cooling trends or monthly volatility, with the clothing and footwear category jumping 4.4% m-o-m, despite being down 8.4% on an annual basis. Conversely, transport — the second-largest component of the basket — fell 4.0% m-o-m and was down 2.6% y-o-y. Monthly increases were also seen in recreation and culture (+1.4%), food and beverages (+1.0%), and personal care (+0.6%).

5

DEBT WATCH

EGA locks in USD 5 bn refinancing ahead of its potential IPO

Emirates Global Aluminum (EGA) closed a USD 5 bn, multi-tranche debt refinancing facility to roll over existing debt and open up balance sheet capacity, it said in a press release. The oversubscribed facility features both conventional and shariah-compliant tranches, consisting of term loans and revolving credits with maturities of up to five years.

The industrial giant may be clearing its decks for a long-awaited ADX IPO. EGA was said to be gauginginvestor appetite last month for a listing that could value the company at USD 10-15 bn. EGA has also recently sold its power and water assets in Al Taweelah for USD 1.9 bn to move to an asset-light model.

ICYMI- The firm has other big plans in the pipeline: At the start of the year, EGA said it was building a new primary aluminum smelter in the US. Previous reports noted the facility could cost between USD 5-6 bn and would be part of the UAE’s USD 1.4 tn investment pledge to the US. Once up and running, the plant will more than double the US’ current primary aluminum output, freeing up supply for the country, which currently imports 85% of its total requirements. EGA has also said it is expecting demand to outpace supply, setting the stage for tighter markets ahead.

6

Banking

Credit demand grew in 4Q as SMEs’ demand hits decade high

Credit conditions in the UAE remained robust throughout 2025 on the back of a historic surge in SME demand and a property sector that continues to outpace the broader market, according to the Central Bank of the UAE’s (CBUAE) 4Q 2025 Credit Sentiment Survey (pdf). While overall momentum showed slight signs of cooling in some segments, the structural appetite for investment-led credit remains at multi-year highs, according to the survey.

The most striking development in 4Q is the renaissance of SME credit. Demand from small- and medium-sized enterprises reached its highest level since 2014. This was followed by healthy demand from large firms and government-related entities.

Business loan demand also strengthened over the fourth quarter, posting a net balance of +24.8 percentage points. More than half of the financial institutions surveyed (52.4%) reported an increase in demand, driven primarily by favorable macroeconomic conditions, a conducive investment environment, and increased working capital needs. The Northern Emirates saw the strongest demand for business loans, followed by Abu Dhabi and Dubai.

Sector-wide growth: Loan demand rose across all economic sectors, with property development recording the largest increase, followed by construction and the transport, storage, and communications sector.

Personal loan demand continued to grow, albeit with slightly less momentum than in 3Q, supported by rising household incomes, optimism regarding the broader economy, and a lower interest rate environment following cuts to the CBUAE base rate to 3.65% from 4.4% during the quarter.

Once again, it’s all about property: Housing-investment loans reached their highest level on record. Other housing categories — such as owner-occupier loans, refinancing, and renovations — also remained strong, tracking near record highs, according to the report.

Looking ahead: Financial institutions enter the new year with a positive outlook, expecting credit demand to strengthen further. Anticipated business loan demand is set to rise to a net balance of +33.8 percentage points. Personal loan demand is also expected to accelerate significantly to a net balance of +31.3 percentage points, led by owner-occupier housing loans, credit cards, and personal (other) loans.

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ALSO ON OUR RADAR

Aramex takes over Irish logistics player

Logistics firm Aramex acquired 100% of Ireland-based freight forwarder Hawthorne Logistics Solutions for EUR 2.5 mn, buying out individual shareholders Martin Cunningham and Terrance John Allen, according to a DFM disclosure (pdf). The fully equity-financed transaction carries a potential earnout of up to EUR 1.7 mn.

This is less about scale and more about stitching routes: The acquisition bolsters Aramex’s European freight footprint and deepens its cross-border play, with management pointing to synergies, efficiency gains, and cross-selling upside. The impact should start flowing through as early as 1Q results, they said.

8

PLANET FINANCE

Haven first

As tensions flare across the Middle East, investors are rotating into safe-haven assets like Treasuries, gold, and the CHF, ditching the reflex to buy the dip in equities, Bloomberg reports.

The playbook is explicit: “Haven first, ask questions later,” said Natixis’ John Briggs, pointing to a larger-than-expected escalation. Meanwhile, Barclays strategists cautioned against rushing to buy equities on weakness, arguing the risk-reward “doesn’t seem compelling” yet.

Emerging markets could fall out of favor, after briefly being a major wager for the world’s largest asset managers, who wished to rotate away from the USD and developed-market assets as policy uncertainty clouds the US outlook.

Some expect Treasuries to rally and yields to fall on safe-haven demand. However, a sustained oil spike could complicate the Fed’s path by stoking inflation and prompting a more cautious stance on rate cuts.

Oil is the swing factor: Traders are watching energy markets — especially the Strait of Hormuz — as strategists warn that if shipping is disrupted, “all [wagers] are off” for risk assets. Even the threat of prolonged turmoil is enough to push money managers toward safety.

Asia may feel the shock first: Saxo Bank’s Charu Chanana expects a risk-off open, with pressure on airlines, cyclicals, and trade-exposed sectors, while energy, mining, and defense could prove more resilient, according to an emailed note seen by EnterpriseAM. Higher crude prices, she notes, reflect the cost of moving barrels just as much as fuel prices themselves, with war-risk premia and ins. repricing keeping prices sticky.

Gold is another clean hedge in the crossfire: It can act as both geopolitical ins. and an inflation buffer — and, as Saxo notes, it can rise alongside a firm USD in classic risk-off fashion. Chanana also pointed to defense and other security-linked industries as essential classes, along with gold, to hedge against ever-increasing geopolitical risks.

MARKETS THIS MORNING-

Asia-Pacific markets are starting off the week in the red as investors ditch their stocks for safe-haven assets as the escalating regional war shows little signs of calming down. The Hang Seng is looking at the steepest losses in early trading this morning. Over on Wall Street, it’s more or less the same, with futures down. Gold futures, meanwhile, are up.

ADX

10,454

-1.3% (YTD: +4.6%)

DFM

6,504

-1.8% (YTD: +7.6%)

Nasdaq Dubai UAE20

5,341

-3.1% (YTD: +9.3%)

USD : AED CBUAE

Buy 3.67

Sell 3.67

EIBOR

3.4% o/n

3.8% 1 yr

TASI

10,476

-2.2% (YTD: -0.1%)

EGX30

47,984

-2.5% (YTD: +14.7%)

S&P 500

6,879

-0.4% (YTD: +0.5%)

FTSE 100

10,911

+0.6% (YTD: +9.9%)

Euro Stoxx 50

6,138

-0.4% (YTD: +6.0%)

Brent crude

USD 72.87

+2.9%

Natural gas (Nymex)

USD 2.86

+1.1%

Gold

USD 5,248

+1.0%

BTC

USD 65,760

-2.1% (YTD: -25.2%)

Chimera JP Morgan UAE Bond UCITS ETF

AED 3.71

-1.1% (YTD: +1.1%)

S&P MENA Bond & Sukuk

153.89

+0.1% (YTD: +1.3%)

VIX (Volatility Index)

19.86

+6.6% (YTD: +32.8%)

THE CLOSING BELL-

The DFM fell 1.8% on Friday on turnover of AED 2.1 bn. The index is up 6.9% YTD.

In the green: BHM Capital Financial Services (+14.7%), Sukoon Takaful (+4.2%), and Emirates Reem Investments Company (+3.2%).

In the red: International Financial Advisors Holding Company (-7.9%), Agility The Public Warehousing Company (-6.1%), and Emirates NBD (-5.2%).

Over on the ADX, the index fell 1.3% on turnover of AED 3 bn. Meanwhile, Nasdaq Dubai was down 3.1%.


MARCH

19-20 March (Thursday-Friday): Eid Al Fitr, public holiday.

31 March - 2 April (Tuesday-Thursday): Arab Media Summit, Dubai.

26-28 March (Thursday-Saturday): Social Capital Conference, Dubai.

28-29 March (Saturday-Sunday): Emirates International Congress on AI & Visionary Leadership in Transforming Healthcare, Adnec Center Abu Dhabi.

30 March - 2 April (Monday-Thursday): IAAPA Middle East Exhibition and Conference, Adnec Center, Abu Dhabi.

31 March-2 April (Tuesday-Thursday): Investopia, Abu Dhabi.

APRIL

6-9 April (Monday-Thursday): Dubai AI Week, Dubai.

7-8 April (Tuesday-Wednesday): Dubai AI Festival, Dubai World Trade Center, Dubai.

7-9 April (Tuesday-Thursday): Future Health Summit, Adnec Center Abu Dhabi.

7-9 April (Tuesday-Thursday): Middle East Energy, Dubai World Trade Center, Dubai.

13-15 April (Monday-Wednesday): AIM Congress, Dubai World Trade Center.

13-15 April (Monday-Wednesday): The International Glass Manufacturing Show, Dubai.

14-16 April: (Tuesday-Thursday): International Property Show, Sheikh Zayed Rd, Dubai.

21-23 April (Tuesday-Thursday): UITP Public Transport Summit, Dubai.

28-29 April (Tuesday-Wednesday): Innovation Summit Middle East & Africa, Abu Dhabi.

29 April (Wednesday): Digital Transformation Summit, Sofitel, Abu Dhabi.

MAY

4-8 May (Wednesday-Saturday): Make It in the Emirates, Adnec Center, Abu Dhabi.

8-24 May (Saturday-Sunday): Dubai Esports and Games Festival, Dubai.

11-15 May (Monday-Friday): Dubai Future Finance Week, Dubai.

11-13 May (Monday-Wednesday): AI Everything Global, Adnec Center, Abu Dhabi.

12-14 May (Tuesday-Thursday): Airport Show, Dubai World Trade Center, Dubai.

19-20 May (Tuesday-Wednesday): Capital Market Summit, Madinat Jumeirah, Dubai.

19-22 May (Tuesday-Friday): Abu Dhabi Water and Energy Week, Adnec Center, Abu Dhabi.

20-21 May (Wednesday-Thursday): Arab Competition Forum, Dubai.

JUNE

3-4 June (Wednesday-Thursday): Annual MENA Investor Conference, Ritz-Carlton DIFC, Dubai.

15 June - 15 September (Monday-Thursday): Dubai Mallathon, Dubai.

JULY

31 July (Friday): Large businesses achieving annual revenues equal to or above AED 50 mn must appoint an accredited service provider for e-invoicing implementation.

Signposted to happen sometime in October 2026:

  • Abu Dhabi Space Week, Abu Dhabi.

NOVEMBER

9-10 November (Monday-Tuesday): Annual government meetings, Abu Dhabi.

OCTOBER

4-10 October (Sunday-Saturday): World Space Week, Abu Dhabi.

NOVEMBER

10-12 November (Tuesday-Thursday): Dubai International Electric Vehicle Exhibition & Conference, Dubai World Trade Center.

DECEMBER

2-4 December (Wednesday-Friday): UN Water Conference, UAE.

Signposted to happen in 2026:

Signposted to happen sometime in 2027:

  • 1-3 February (Monday-Wednesday): World Governments Summit.
  • 31 March: Small businesses with annual revenues of less than AED 50 mn are obliged to contract with an accredited service provider for e-invoicing implementation;
  • 31 March: Government entities are required to appoint an accredited service provider for e-invoicing implementation;
  • 1 July: Deadline for small businesses to implement e-invoicing;
  • 1 October: Deadline for governments to implement e-invoicing;
  • Abu Dhabi’s solar and battery energy facility, combining 5.2 GW of solar capacity and 19 GWh of battery storage, is set for commissioning.

Signposted to happen sometime in 2028:

Signposted to happen sometime in 2029:

  • Sibos 2029 organized by the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT), Dubai;
  • The commissioning of the seventh phase of Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Park.
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