Mideast indexes drop in first day of trading post-Brexit
By Associated Press
Jun 26, 2016 7:49 AM CDT
FILE - In this Friday, June 24, 2016, file photo, people pass the New York Stock Exchange. The U.K.’s vote to leave the European Union has caused trillions of dollars in wealth to evaporate. The Associated Press takes a look at why investors are nervous, and what they are looking for in the coming months....   (Associated Press)

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Stocks tumbled in the Middle East on Sunday, the first day of trading since Britain voted to leave the European Union, following other market drops in the U.S. and worldwide.

The Saudi Tadawul index, the region's largest, closed 1.1 percent lower, while Egypt's EGX 30 saw a 5.54 percent drop.

Other Mideast indexes, which trade from Sunday to Thursday, also fell. Dubai's main index was down 3.25 percent. Abu Dhabi's index fell 1.85 percent.

Investors had expected the UK to remain in the EU. The outcome of the vote brought a massive dose of uncertainty to financial markets on Friday.

Oil prices also sank, with the benchmark U.S. crude declining 4.9 percent, to close at $47.64 a barrel in New York. Brent crude also fell 4.9 percent to $48.41 a barrel in London on Friday.

After the Brexit poll came out in favor of an exit of Britain from the EU, asset management firm Al Masah Capital said investors preferred to sell risk assets and await more clarity on the impact Britain's EU exit will have on the global economy.

Al Masah Capital said Sunday that the volatility in the market is not necessarily a bad thing, however, and could give long term investors the ability to purchase undervalued stocks.