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China temporarily bans helium exports as US-Iran tensions flare again

China announced on Friday a temporary ban on helium exports, effective immediately, as renewed military conflict in the Middle East threatens to trigger fresh shortages of the gas, which is critical for semiconductor manufacturing. Earlier this year, the US-Israeli war on Iran caused helium shortages, disrupting companies worldwide, including in China, where the artificial intelligence industry increasingly relies on domestically produced chips to train and run AI models. Helium is essential for heat management during semiconductor production. The export ban is the latest example of Beijing seeking to prevent domestic shortages of critical materials by restricting overseas shipments. China has previously imposed similar export curbs on fuel, fertilisers and sulphuric acid. China is also seeking to expand domestic semiconductor manufacturing capacity and reduce the industry's reliance on advanced Nvidia chips that are subject to US export controls. China re-exports helium ...

Gulf companies are set to reveal the unequal toll of Iran war

Companies in the Gulf, some of the most directly affected by the Iran war, will provide one of the clearest insights so far of its regional financial impact when they begin reporting their second-quarter earnings this week. In countries from Saudi Arabia and Oman to the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, company results are likely to be mixed. Banks and real estate are most exposed given pre-existing challenges that have been exacerbated by the war's impact on inflation on interest rates, while long-term contracts and relatively inflexible demand sheltered telecoms, analysts said. Energy companies faced supply disruption from the four-month conflict, but also potential gains from the price volatility caused by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz shipping channel. "The second quarter is going to reveal the real impact of the war," said Tariq Qaqish, deputy CEO at advisory firm FH Capital. He added the first quarter, only partly affected by the conflict which began at the end of February, had shown just the initial impact on sectors such as tourism and aviation. Winners and losers depending on geography The fortunes of regional economies, many built around hydrocarbons, largely depend on how reliant they are on the Strait of Hormuz, which provides the only sea access to the Gulf. The economy of Saudi Arabia, which also has oil terminals on the Red Sea, will grow 2.1% this year, HSBC forecasts show. Similarly, the stock index of Oman, which is outside the strait, has outperformed. UAE, Qatar and Kuwait, which rely on the shipping canal, are set to contract. As a peace deal comes under threat from renewed strikes, some of the region's risk premium is likely to stay, said Salman Ahmed, Fidelity International's global head of macro and strategic asset allocation, citing Iran's leverage on the strait. On Wednesday, US President Donald Trump said an interim agreement to end the war with Iran was over after Tehran carried out new attacks on US bases in the Gulf. "A further confidence shock would exacerbate risk for companies exposed to consumer and service demand," S&P Global Ratings analysts said. Energy and telecoms are broadly resilient Oil and gas earnings are expected to remain strong, as elevated energy prices partly offset volumes lost to damage and disruption. HSBC raised its Brent forecast to $95 a barrel for 2026 and estimates second-quarter average prices of $114. While Saudi Arabia managed to keep exports flowing via the Red Sea, the UAE's gas sector suffered. ADNOC Gas has forecast a roughly 19% year-on-year decline in domestic gas sales tied to an incident at one of its plants. Among telecoms, Saudi Arabia's STC and Mobily and the UAE's e& regional operators have proved resilient. The consumer sector, including retail activity and tourism, will reflect disruption, although higher at-home consumption provided a boost for some. Among them, shares in Dubai food delivery firm Talabat have risen by more than 60% in the last three months. Gulf airline flight volumes, meanwhile, have returned to near normal. Banks and real estate head lower Banks across the Gulf are forecast to post single-digit declines in second-quarter profits from the previous three months, said Elena Sanchez-Cabezudo, head of financials equity research at EFG Hermes, citing lower fee income linked to weaker trade finance and credit card spending on international travel. The decline partly reflects a strong January and February compared with a full quarter of conflict in the second quarter, she said, adding that lenders remained resilient with abundant sector liquidity. S&P Global Ratings said regional lenders had "stable funding profiles", but that war-linked uncertainty is likely to slow their growth. Some UAE banks have bolstered deposit growth by raising interest rates for new savers. After a years-long boom, UAE property markets, meanwhile, show signs of strain and analysts have flagged risks to expatriate inflows and tourism-linked demand if tensions persist. Also Read: Iran deploys air defences after explosions heard in Bandar Abbas, Chabahar; US confirms new strikes Some developers are taking measures to preserve liquidity, such as reducing or delaying dividend payouts. Citi said in a note that Dubai residential sales in the second quarter were "significantly below pre-conflict" levels, with a similar if less severe slide in Abu Dhabi. Big regional names include Emaar Properties and Aldar Properties. Francesc Balcells, CIO EM debt at investment management firm FIM Partners, was more positive. He said that some real estate developers were lagging, but regional credit spreads – the premiums investors demand to buy bonds – were "pretty much back to normal". "It is just an issue of balance sheets, these guys have very strong balance sheets," he said. "So they can withstand big shocks like this."

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