ETF Spotlight: Egypt | ETF Trends

After a tenuous transition from the ousting of the Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak and continued violence, parliamentary elections helped ease stability concerns, lifting Egyptian markets and a related exchange traded fund that’s fallen in November.

In the Middle East, tensions in Iran boiled over as protestors sacked a British embassy in Tehran on Tuesday, according to reports.

Van Eck’s Market Vectors Egypt Index ETF (NYSEArca: EGPT) was up 5.87% at last check Tuesday.

The Egyptian Exchange’s benchmark EGX30 Index ended up 5.48% Tuesday.

“We, as Egyptians, didn’t expect the situation to play out like this,” Khaled Nagah, a senior broker at Mega Investments, said in an Associated Press report. “There were expectations of violence, thugs and other troublemakers, but that hasn’t happened.”

Analysts were wary that the parliamentary elections would be overshadowed by violence. Last week, Standard & Poor’s  downgraded Egypt’s sovereign rating by a notch on pessimistic expectations. The social unrest has crippled the economy as tourists have avoided the area and industrial production has halted. [Egypt ETF Falls Before Elections as Violence Flares]

In Iran, some protestors broke into the British embassy, looted the building and even held six British staff members hostage briefly before the police freed them, reports Robin Pomeroy for Reuters.