05 July 2026
6 minute read

Iridium IR Brief No. 455 - What's Next for GCC Markets - 5 July 2026

Iridium IR Brief No. 455 - What's Next for GCC Markets - 5 July 2026
30% read

2Q earnings season kicks off as GCC markets reassess oil, interest rates and foreign flows

The Week Ahead

Regional markets – 2Q 2026 earnings begin as oil supply improves

The week ahead brings the first 2Q earnings read-through just as oil supply conditions begin to improve. OPEC+ meets today to decide August output targets, after Gulf oil exports recovered in June and tanker flows through Hormuz improved. Lower oil prices reduce the immediate supply-shock concern, but they also shift attention to realised volumes, pricing, margins and fiscal sensitivity across the region. The earnings cycle begins with Al Anwar Investments, Almarai, Dukhan Bank and QNB, offering investors the first management commentary since the US-Iran MOU. Saudi industrial production on Thursday will add a macro read on non-oil activity and export momentum.

Global markets – Fed minutes and services data to guide rate expectations

Global markets will focus on Fed minutes after softer US labour data and lower oil prices reduced near-term rate fears, but long-term yields remain elevated. Investors will look for how divided the FOMC was in June, how Chair Kevin Warsh frames inflation risk, and whether officials see lower energy prices as enough to pause further tightening. US ISM Services PMI, trade data, consumer inflation expectations, wholesale inventories and consumer credit will add a read on demand and price pressure. In Europe, ECB meeting accounts, Euro Area retail sales, German factory orders and industrial production will update the weak growth debate. In Asia, China inflation and Japan household spending will provide the main data input, while Delta and PepsiCo begin the early 2Q earnings cycle.

Note to Management – Foreign buyers edge back into GCC equities in June

Foreign inflows were concentrated in Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi. Dubai saw minor outflows while outflows in Kuwait and Qatar continue to widen since April. The US-Iran MOU and reopening of Hormuz give global investors a reason to revisit regional exposure, with the MSCI GCC Index’s (+0.4% YTD) major lag versus MSCI Emerging Markets (+19.9% YTD) adding to the argument. The 2Q 2026 reporting cycle gives management teams their first forum to quantify the impact of the conflict, explain what has normalized and demonstrate how margins, cash flow, funding and returns will be protected through year end. Download the Foreign Flow Analysis to explore these insights in detail.

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