Wednesday, June 24, 2026

EGX Eases as Foreign Buyers Stay Active and Futures Trading Begins

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Cairo Egyptian equities slipped on Monday after opening the week higher, as investors locked in gains while foreign buying remained positive and the launch of single-stock futures added a new layer to Egypt’s developing capital markets.

The benchmark EGX30 fell 0.18% to 52,585.72 points, after rising on Sunday. The EGX33 Shariah Index declined 0.10% to 5,854.58 points, while the EGX35-LV lost 0.55% to 6,103.24 points. Broader indices also softened, with the EGX70 down 0.20% to 15,728.02 points and the EGX100 falling 0.19% to 21,550.86 points. Market capitalisation stood at EGP 3.753tn, according to EGX data reported by Amwal Al Ghad and live market summaries.

The move came after Sunday’s positive start, when the EGX30 rose to 52,679.45 points and small-cap shares outperformed, with the EGX70 advancing 1.39%. Monday’s pullback therefore looked more like consolidation than a reversal of the recovery that followed last week’s gains.

Foreign investors remained net buyers, purchasing about EGP 13.21bn, while Arab investors added EGP 858mn. Egyptian investors were net sellers with outflows of around EGP 14.07bn, continuing the recent pattern of local profit-taking being absorbed by overseas capital.

The week’s larger story remains the broadening of Egypt’s financial markets. The EGX began trading single-stock futures on Commercial International Bank and Talaat Moustafa Group on 21 June, after delaying the launch from 18 June. The contracts have three- and six-month maturities and a standard size of 100 shares, giving investors new tools for hedging, leverage and price discovery.

Debt markets are also shaping sentiment. Local reports said foreign investors bought around $4bn of Egyptian government debt instruments through the secondary market last week, following a sharp slowdown in the previous week. The Central Bank is also offering new treasury bonds and sukuk, reinforcing the importance of debt-market demand in supporting liquidity and the pound.

The macro backdrop remains mixed. Egypt’s improving foreign-currency position and investor demand for local debt have supported sentiment, while regional conflict has tested the economy through energy costs, exports and portfolio-flow volatility. Reuters has also reported that Egypt fully cleared $6.1bn in arrears owed to foreign oil and gas companies, a move expected to support investment confidence in the energy sector.

Market View: Monday’s decline does not alter the broader weekly signal. Foreign capital remains active in equities, debt inflows have strengthened, and futures trading has expanded the market’s toolkit. The EGX may still face short-term volatility, but Egypt’s capital markets are increasingly moving beyond simple cash-equity trading toward a deeper ecosystem spanning equities, government debt, sukuk and derivatives.

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