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By Andrew Torchia
DUBAI, March 16 (Reuters) - Middle Eastern stock markets rose on Thursday, led by Egypt, after the U.S. Federal Reserve hiked interest rates as expected but signalled no acceleration in the pace of monetary tightening.
But Gulf bourses lagged emerging markets in general because of concern that low oil prices and government austerity measures will continue to weigh on corporate earnings. Among planned austerity, the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council plans to introduce a 5 percent value-added tax in 2018.
The Saudi stock index
Saudi banks outperformed for a second straight day, after Moody's raised its outlook for the Saudi banking sector to stable from negative on Wednesday. Banque Saudi Fransi
In Dubai, GFH Financial
Qatar was buoyed by a 1.6 percent rise by Qatar National Bank
Abu Dhabi's index
Five central banks in the GCC raised interest rates in line with the Fed and the sixth, Oman, had already been allowing its policy rate to drift higher in recent months.
However, market interest rates in the Gulf will not necessarily rise because a partial rebound in oil prices and governments' international bond issues have eased pressure on state spending. This could improve liquidity in the money markets over coming months.
In Egypt, the index
THURSDAY'S HIGHLIGHTS
SAUDI ARABIA
* The index
DUBAI
* The index
ABU DHABI
* The index
QATAR
* The index
KUWAIT
* The index
EGYPT
* The index
OMAN
* The index
BAHRAIN
* The index
<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ OPEC in first joint oil cut with Russia since 2001, Saudis take "big hit"
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Editing by Mark Potter) ((andrew.torchia@thomsonreuters.com)(+9715 6681 7277)(Reuters Messaging: andrew.torchia.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))