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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Q2 results to test Oman firms’ resilience

The energy sector remains central to Oman’s fiscal position.
The energy sector remains central to Oman’s fiscal position.
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MUSCAT: Oman’s upcoming second-quarter company results will offer investors a clearer test of how listed firms absorbed regional volatility, after international analysts warned that Gulf earnings are likely to show an uneven impact across sectors.


The issue is not whether Oman is immune to external shocks. It is not. The more important question is whether companies can protect margins, sustain demand and manage costs during a period of higher regional risk.


Reuters reported on Thursday that Gulf company earnings are expected to reflect different levels of exposure to recent regional tensions, with banks, real estate, tourism and aviation among the more sensitive sectors, while energy and telecoms are expected to show greater resilience.


For Oman, the reporting season comes after a period of stronger macroeconomic indicators and renewed investor attention. The Sultanate of Oman’s real GDP grew 2.58 per cent in the first quarter of 2026, supported by a 4.59 per cent rise in oil activities and 2.36 per cent growth in non-oil activities, according to the Ministry of Economy’s June Economic Performance Bulletin.


But the same figures showed that growth remains uneven. Services expanded 3.68 per cent and agriculture and fisheries rose 6.13 per cent, while industrial activities contracted 1.24 per cent. Manufacturing declined 3.06 per cent and construction fell 1.86 per cent, underlining the need to look beyond headline growth and assess company-level performance.


Banks will be among the sectors most closely watched. Investors are likely to focus on lending growth, deposit costs, fee income, trade finance, credit-card spending and any signs of pressure from softer business activity or higher operating costs.


Energy companies may benefit from firmer hydrocarbon prices, but market attention will remain on production volumes, margins, maintenance costs and exposure to external volatility. The sector remains central to Oman’s fiscal position, even as the country continues to deepen its non-oil base under Oman Vision 2040.


Telecom companies are expected to remain more defensive because demand for connectivity is less exposed to short-term shifts in consumer sentiment. Still, investors will look for evidence of growth in data services, enterprise solutions and digital infrastructure.


Logistics and transport companies will also be important indicators. Oman’s ports and maritime position are strategic advantages, but higher insurance costs, freight volatility and regional shipping risks can still influence margins and trade flows.


Consumer-facing sectors, including retail, tourism and hospitality, require careful reading. Khareef Dhofar Season may support domestic activity, but aviation, visitor confidence and household spending will determine how much of that seasonal momentum translates into earnings.


The safer conclusion is that Oman may be relatively better placed than some Gulf peers, but it is not insulated from regional shocks. The coming disclosures will test whether that relative stability is being converted into stronger corporate performance.


For investors, the next few weeks will be less about broad optimism and more about evidence: which companies protected margins, which sectors sustained demand, and where regional volatility has started to show in the numbers.


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