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Tehran Stock Exchange Plummets on 2nd Day of Israel-Hamas Conflict


FILE - Stockbrokers work at the Tehran Stock Exchange in Iran, May 10, 2020.
FILE - Stockbrokers work at the Tehran Stock Exchange in Iran, May 10, 2020.

The Tehran Stock Exchange saw a sharp decline on the second day of fighting between Israel and Hamas militants, with the overall index plummeting approximately 51,000 points.

According to the ISNA news agency prominent companies, including Persian Gulf Petrochemical Industries, Esfahan Oil Refining, Parsian Oil and Gas Development, Bandar Abbas Oil Refining, and Mapna Group, were at the forefront of stock market transactions and all experienced a decline Sunday.

The over-the-counter market's composite index also stalled with a 659-point drop, closing at 25,025 units.

Economist Siamak Ghasemi attributed the stock market's decline to a "clear indication of a substantial surge in systemic risk in Iran." In a message on the 'X' messaging platform (formerly Twitter), he said that Hamas' attack on Israel and the onset of a new conflict are the most critical systemic economic risks in Iran, and possibly the entire Middle East, this year.

Following Saturday's attack by Hamas, which enjoys the support of the Islamic Republic, the foreign currency exchange market in Iran saw an uptick, with the U.S. dollar reaching 52,250 Iranian tomans at the time of this report, up from 51,500 Iranian tomans a few hours earlier.

The dollar's price surpassing 51,000 tomans broke the previous high of 49,000 tomans, which had been consistent in recent months despite assurances from Iranian officials of a declining trend in the second half of the year.

According to Iranian domestic news sources, in Tehran's gold and coin exchanges the price of Bahar Azadi gold coins surged from approximately 28 million tomans to over 30 million tomans.

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