The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange's research unit described the week as "particularly negative," the latest in a month of sharp index declines, according to an N12 report Friday. The research notes that foreign investors and the general public are increasing exposure to the local exchange while pension and long-term savings funds are reducing it.
The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange research unit issued a weekly summary Friday describing trading as "particularly negative," extending a month-long downturn that has seen sharp index declines. The analysis was published by N12's Lior Baka'lo.
The update follows a series of market reports tracking the impact of the recently signed US-Iran agreement on Israeli markets. As The Zioneer reported, the TA-125 had already fallen roughly 5% since the deal's announcement by Wednesday, and exchanges had been trading in the red over the preceding days.
The research unit's assessment contrasts with the pattern of foreign and retail investors increasing local exposure, while institutional long-term savings funds are reducing theirs — a divergence the report flags without drawing conclusions. The broader context includes continued volatility driven by regional diplomatic shifts and their perceived implications for Israeli security and economic stability.
- DevelopingTel Aviv Stock Exchange dips after brief round of conflict with Iran
- StrongTel Aviv Stock Exchange extends sell-off for third consecutive day as US-Iran deal weighs
- DevelopingTel Aviv stock market extends sell-off for fourth straight day, TA-125 down 0.8%
- StrongTel Aviv Stock Exchange turns deep red as Iran market posts gains
Source and signal
A single-sourced dispatch is never rated Confirmed or Strong. Its Signal strengthens only when a second, independent source corroborates it.
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