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UAE Consolidates Strong Position as Global Investment Hub Amid Cautious
(MENAFN- Click On Group) As the global economy approaches the close of 2025, investors face a landscape defined by record valuations, shifting fiscal narratives, and heightened geopolitical uncertainty. According to the 2025/26 Market Outlook by FOREX.com, markets are entering a period of cautious transition, marked by policy fatigue, liquidity shifts, and the emerging realities of a second U.S. presidential term.
“Major indices have tested multi-decade highs, but momentum appears to be fading,” said Razan Hilal, CMT, Market Analyst at FOREX.com: “We are seeing the early stages of a retracement phase across key benchmarks, suggesting that 2026 will be defined by recalibration rather than expansion.”
U.S. small-cap equities, represented by the Russell 2000, are once again testing the critical 2,500 resistance level, a threshold that last preceded the tariff-induced sell-off of 2025. Larger indices echo this fatigue: the Dow Jones Industrial Average has stalled below 48,000, the Nasdaq remains capped under 26,300, and the MSCI U.S. Index struggles to break 20.50.
Hilal noted, “While the AI and tech sectors have driven exceptional gains, valuations north of $4 trillion for mega-cap leaders like Microsoft and Nvidia have pushed sentiment to stretched levels. A measured correction could restore balance to what has become an overheated market.”
Safe-haven assets surged in 2025, with gold reaching an inflation-adjusted record above $4,300/oz and silver climbing to $54.30, their strongest dollar terms since 1980. Both metals now appear to be consolidating following steep rallies. FOREXprojects potential pullbacks toward $3,500 for gold and $42 for silver before the next cyclical upswing. “Momentum fatigue in safe havens mirrors what we’re observing across risk assets,” Hilal added. “The underlying structural bid for inflation protection remains intact, but investors should expect a normalization in volatility.”
The U.S. dollar index (DXY) has declined to a 17-year trendline near 96, under pressure from dovish policy expectations and weaker labor data. Yet, FOREXanalysis suggests this level could mark a long-term support zone, sustaining relative dollar strength and maintaining stability for pegged currencies such as the UAE dirham. Meanwhile, crude oil markets remain anchored by a structural floor near $55 per barrel, a threshold aligned with a 160-year trendline dating back to the 1860s. OPEC’s gradual unwinding of supply cuts and uneven global demand may expose oil to further declines toward $49 before stabilization.
Within this shifting global landscape, the UAE continues to consolidate its position as a forward-looking financial and innovation hub, supported by crypto-friendly regulation, robust healthcare-tech investment, and long-term infrastructure expansion. These dynamics align with a broader trend of digital asset integration and industrial demand recovery amid a U.S.–China trade truce.
Hilal commented, “The UAE’s progressive stance on digital finance and sustainable growth is attracting young capital inflows. As global trade frameworks stabilize, we expect emerging economies to gain momentum in 2026, particularly across energy, logistics, and technology.”
As the world moves into 2026, FOREXforesees a cautious but strategically significant year. Legacy-driven fiscal policy, recalibrated liquidity cycles, and evolving energy-market structures will shape investor behavior across asset classes. Hilal concluded, “Markets are transitioning from reaction to reflection. 2026 will be about endurance, not euphoria, as investors adjust to the long arc of second-term economics.”
“Major indices have tested multi-decade highs, but momentum appears to be fading,” said Razan Hilal, CMT, Market Analyst at FOREX.com: “We are seeing the early stages of a retracement phase across key benchmarks, suggesting that 2026 will be defined by recalibration rather than expansion.”
U.S. small-cap equities, represented by the Russell 2000, are once again testing the critical 2,500 resistance level, a threshold that last preceded the tariff-induced sell-off of 2025. Larger indices echo this fatigue: the Dow Jones Industrial Average has stalled below 48,000, the Nasdaq remains capped under 26,300, and the MSCI U.S. Index struggles to break 20.50.
Hilal noted, “While the AI and tech sectors have driven exceptional gains, valuations north of $4 trillion for mega-cap leaders like Microsoft and Nvidia have pushed sentiment to stretched levels. A measured correction could restore balance to what has become an overheated market.”
Safe-haven assets surged in 2025, with gold reaching an inflation-adjusted record above $4,300/oz and silver climbing to $54.30, their strongest dollar terms since 1980. Both metals now appear to be consolidating following steep rallies. FOREXprojects potential pullbacks toward $3,500 for gold and $42 for silver before the next cyclical upswing. “Momentum fatigue in safe havens mirrors what we’re observing across risk assets,” Hilal added. “The underlying structural bid for inflation protection remains intact, but investors should expect a normalization in volatility.”
The U.S. dollar index (DXY) has declined to a 17-year trendline near 96, under pressure from dovish policy expectations and weaker labor data. Yet, FOREXanalysis suggests this level could mark a long-term support zone, sustaining relative dollar strength and maintaining stability for pegged currencies such as the UAE dirham. Meanwhile, crude oil markets remain anchored by a structural floor near $55 per barrel, a threshold aligned with a 160-year trendline dating back to the 1860s. OPEC’s gradual unwinding of supply cuts and uneven global demand may expose oil to further declines toward $49 before stabilization.
Within this shifting global landscape, the UAE continues to consolidate its position as a forward-looking financial and innovation hub, supported by crypto-friendly regulation, robust healthcare-tech investment, and long-term infrastructure expansion. These dynamics align with a broader trend of digital asset integration and industrial demand recovery amid a U.S.–China trade truce.
Hilal commented, “The UAE’s progressive stance on digital finance and sustainable growth is attracting young capital inflows. As global trade frameworks stabilize, we expect emerging economies to gain momentum in 2026, particularly across energy, logistics, and technology.”
As the world moves into 2026, FOREXforesees a cautious but strategically significant year. Legacy-driven fiscal policy, recalibrated liquidity cycles, and evolving energy-market structures will shape investor behavior across asset classes. Hilal concluded, “Markets are transitioning from reaction to reflection. 2026 will be about endurance, not euphoria, as investors adjust to the long arc of second-term economics.”
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