Dubai Financial Market Opens December 31 Session Higher at 6,060 Points with Liquidity Surpassing AED 92 Million
Dubai Financial Market opened higher at 6,060 points, with strong liquidity over AED 92M and 33 stocks advancing, led by blue-chip gains.
Dubai | EcoPulse24
The Dubai Financial Market (DFM) began trading on Wednesday, December 31, 2025, with clear gains, as the main index climbed 45.060 points (0.749%) to 6,060.010 points as of 10:42:28 AM, according to market data.
Trading saw notable activity early in the session, with advancing stocks (33) outpacing decliners (6), indicating positive sentiment supported by leading stocks.
Opening Trading Summary:
- DFM General Index: 6,060.010 points (+0.749% | +45.060 points)
- Total transactions: 1,572
- Stocks traded: 46
- Advancing: 33 | Declining: 6 | Unchanged: 7
- Trading volume: 28,449,087 shares
- Trading value: AED 92,099,270.26
- Block trades: None
Blue-Chip Movers at Open:
- Emaar Properties: AED 14.050 (+1.079%)
- Emaar Development: AED 15.200 (+2.013%)
- Dubai Islamic Bank: AED 9.350 (+1.410%)
- DEWA: AED 2.780 (+0.725%)
- Deyaar Development: AED 1.040 (+1.961%)
- DFM: AED 1.660 (+1.840%)
- du: AED 9.600 (+0.418%)
- DIC: AED 3.560 (+1.136%)
- Salik: AED 6.350 (+0.475%)
- Parkin: AED 5.730 (+0.880%)
- Taaleem: AED 4.210 (+1.446%)
- Amanat: AED 1.290 (+4.032%)
Notable Decliners:
- Air Arabia: AED 4.650 (-0.641%)
- China AE: AED 6.900 (-1.429%)
- NGI: AED 5.870 (-0.340%)
- TECOM: AED 3.340 (-1.183%)
- Union Coop: AED 2.240 (-1.754%)
- Spinneys: AED 1.490 (-0.667%)
EcoPulse24 Analysis:
DFM’s positive opening, with 33 gainers versus 6 losers, signals early bullish momentum led by blue-chip stocks, particularly Emaar, Dubai Islamic Bank, and DEWA. Sustaining these gains throughout the session may depend on whether liquidity remains above current levels. However, as this is a year-end session, volatility may arise from rebalancing and position closing. Continued upward movement requires wider sector participation beyond a few leading shares, with special attention to the real estate (Emaar/Deyaar) and banking (DIB) sectors, which are key short-term market drivers.
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