ghazi52
THINK TANK: CONSULTANT
WHAT SATURDAY CHANGED
But vulnerabilities have remained. The Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly a fifth of the world's seaborne crude oil passes, runs through Dubai's backyard. Iran, a country with both the motive and the capability to destabilise Gulf commerce, sits directly across the water.
The physical damage over the weekend was stark. Dubai International Airport was hit, a berth at Jebel Ali Port caught fire and the Burj Al Arab sustained damage from interceptor fragments. Three people were killed and 58 injured, according to the UAE Ministry of Defence.
"People are afraid of what's happening. It's the first time they have to hide in underground places. Dubai airport, one of the biggest in the world, has to shut down for a few days," said Nabil Milali, multi-asset portfolio manager at Edmond de Rothschild Asset Management. He reduced the firm's exposure to stocks globally last week to prepare for the possibility of an attack on Iran.
"There's a 70% probability we will keep a geopolitical risk premia (on the region) for a long time."
A source at a UAE-based mid-sized investment firm said their company had begun preemptively planning layoffs and halted fundraising. Demand for gold bars surged, a jewelry industry source said. International private banks, which had been expanding advisory operations in the emirate, may also reassess the scope of their presence, according to a private banker.
Firms may begin to rethink serving clients locally versus from another location, the banker said.
"Historically, markets like the UAE have demonstrated resilience d
uring crises, including COVID, supported by strong policy response and governance," said Madhur Kakkar, founder and CEO of Elevate Financial Services.
"At this stage, a broad structural reallocation of institutional capital away from the UAE or the wider Gulf appears unlikely unless tensions escalate materially or persist for an extended period."
There is no data yet on capital outflows. The suspension of trading on the Abu Dhabi and Dubai stock exchanges on March 2 and 3 marks an unprecedented step for UAE regulators.
But vulnerabilities have remained. The Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly a fifth of the world's seaborne crude oil passes, runs through Dubai's backyard. Iran, a country with both the motive and the capability to destabilise Gulf commerce, sits directly across the water.
The physical damage over the weekend was stark. Dubai International Airport was hit, a berth at Jebel Ali Port caught fire and the Burj Al Arab sustained damage from interceptor fragments. Three people were killed and 58 injured, according to the UAE Ministry of Defence.
"People are afraid of what's happening. It's the first time they have to hide in underground places. Dubai airport, one of the biggest in the world, has to shut down for a few days," said Nabil Milali, multi-asset portfolio manager at Edmond de Rothschild Asset Management. He reduced the firm's exposure to stocks globally last week to prepare for the possibility of an attack on Iran.
"There's a 70% probability we will keep a geopolitical risk premia (on the region) for a long time."
A source at a UAE-based mid-sized investment firm said their company had begun preemptively planning layoffs and halted fundraising. Demand for gold bars surged, a jewelry industry source said. International private banks, which had been expanding advisory operations in the emirate, may also reassess the scope of their presence, according to a private banker.
Firms may begin to rethink serving clients locally versus from another location, the banker said.
"Historically, markets like the UAE have demonstrated resilience d
uring crises, including COVID, supported by strong policy response and governance," said Madhur Kakkar, founder and CEO of Elevate Financial Services.
"At this stage, a broad structural reallocation of institutional capital away from the UAE or the wider Gulf appears unlikely unless tensions escalate materially or persist for an extended period."
There is no data yet on capital outflows. The suspension of trading on the Abu Dhabi and Dubai stock exchanges on March 2 and 3 marks an unprecedented step for UAE regulators.







