GCC stock markets in 2026 are not moving together — and for investors who understand the divergence, that creates specific opportunities. Dubai’s Financial Market (DFM) delivered a 17.2 per cent gain through 2025, closing the year at 6,047 points — driven by real estate sector strength, financial services earnings, and a surge in UAE-listed tourism and hospitality stocks. Abu Dhabi’s Securities Exchange (ADX) added 6 per cent for the year. Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index (TASI), by contrast, fell 13 per cent — the worst annual performance in a decade — closing at 10,490 points as oil revenue concerns and international investor caution weighed on sentiment. By early 2026, TASI had declined further to around 10,214 points — its lowest level since March 2023.
Tadawul 2026: Why Saudi Arabia’s Market Is Under Pressure
The TASI’s underperformance relative to Gulf peers reflects a combination of factors that are specific to Saudi Arabia’s current economic moment. The Kingdom’s fiscal deficit is widening — projected at around 5.6 per cent of GDP in 2026 — as Vision 2030 spending accelerates even as oil revenues face headwinds from the OPEC+ production adjustment cycle. International institutional investors, who had been increasing Saudi allocation following the country’s inclusion in major emerging market indices, have trimmed positions amid uncertainty about the regional geopolitical situation and its impact on oil supply dynamics.
Within Tadawul, the banking sector has shown relative resilience — Saudi banks benefit from high interest rates, strong loan growth in the consumer and mortgage segments, and growing fee income from capital market transactions. Saudi Aramco, the exchange’s largest constituent by market capitalisation, has been a mixed picture: high oil prices have supported earnings, but the company’s commitment to an $85 billion annual dividend programme weighs on free cash flow perception among growth-oriented investors.
DFM 2026: What Drove Dubai’s Market Higher
Dubai’s DFM outperformance in 2025 was driven primarily by real estate, banking, and logistics sector earnings that reflected the UAE’s broader economic strength. The emirate’s non-oil GDP growth of above 6 per cent, the continued boom in real estate transactions, and the strength of Emirates airline as a bellwether of Dubai’s international connectivity all contributed to listed company earnings that exceeded analyst expectations across multiple quarters.
In 2026, the DFM has faced some headwinds from the softening in real estate transaction values — particularly in the secondary market — but the underlying corporate earnings picture remains solid for diversified financial, logistics, and consumer-facing businesses listed on the exchange. The DFM’s relatively low valuations compared to European and US equivalents, combined with the UAE’s zero per cent personal capital gains tax environment, continue to attract retail and institutional investors seeking income and modest growth.
Abu Dhabi ADX: Sovereign-Backed Resilience
The ADX benefits from the Abu Dhabi government’s strategy of listing subsidiaries of its major sovereign entities — including ADNOC, First Abu Dhabi Bank, and Mubadala-linked companies — which gives the exchange a base of well-capitalised, government-backed issuers that provide earnings stability. ADX-listed companies in the energy sector have benefited from sustained oil prices above $90 per barrel, while Abu Dhabi’s sovereign investment push into AI and global technology has created optimism around the long-term earnings potential of government-linked technology entities.
Qatar Exchange and Smaller GCC Markets
Qatar’s Stock Exchange (QSE) recorded a 1.8 per cent gain through 2025 — a modest performance that reflects the market’s heavy weighting toward the energy sector, whose earnings trajectory is tied closely to LNG prices and production volumes. With the North Field expansion expected to begin delivering incremental production in the second half of 2026, the QSE’s energy-sector constituents could see a meaningful earnings uplift in the second half of the year that is not yet fully priced in.
Where GCC Equity Value Sits in June 2026
For investors assessing GCC equity exposure in June 2026, the Tadawul’s underperformance relative to its 2024 levels creates selective value opportunities in Saudi banking, consumer, and logistics sectors for investors with a 12-to-24-month horizon and tolerance for continued near-term volatility. The DFM and ADX, while more fully valued after 2025’s gains, offer income-generating exposure to UAE corporate earnings that reflect one of the Gulf’s most resilient economic environments. Qatar’s LNG production uplift is a potential catalyst for QSE performance in the second half of 2026 that merits monitoring by investors with emerging market equity exposure in the region.



