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Tuesday, 10 June 2025

The Gulf’s ambitious bet on AI #SaudiArabia #UAE

The Gulf’s ambitious bet on AI

The phrase “data is the new oil” has added meaning in the Gulf. Leaders in the region are investing heavily in artificial intelligence to diversify and modernise their fossil fuel-dependent economies. “Instead of exporting oil, we will export data,” said Saudi Arabia’s minister of finance, Mohammed al-Jadaan, early this year. 

The ambition makes sense. AI requires lots of capital, land and energy. The Gulf has all those in abundance. Humain, Saudi Arabia’s new state-owned AI company, is backed by the country’s $940bn Public Investment Fund. Abu Dhabi, which manages $1.7tn in sovereign wealth funds, is investing through AI fund MGX. Last month, during President Donald Trump’s visit to the region, both funds helped to develop partnerships with US tech companies, securing access to chips and talent in exchange for money and data centre hosting facilities. 

The timing is apt too. The International Energy Agency forecasts oil demand to peak by the end of this decade. Done well, the Gulf’s foray into AI could drive up investment, improve productivity and ease cost burdens in the region’s hefty civil services. According to McKinsey, AI adoption could boost the Gulf Cooperation Council economies by $150bn. But success is not guaranteed. Significant hurdles lie in the way. 

The Gulf has a spotty record historically in delivering on efforts to diversify its economy. Riyadh is already spending hundreds of billions of dollars on grandiose “giga projects” that have run over budget. With falling oil prices putting more pressure on public finances, the region will need to be more focused with its AI strategy. It has the resources to tap into the rising global demand for data-processing capacity. But it should not rely too heavily on hosting companies’ data centres to drive growth. The vast amounts of energy and water the facilities suck up risk sapping other parts of the economy. 

The region can achieve more sustained growth from AI by encouraging adoption in its strategic industries. This includes manufacturing, port management and energy infrastructure. For instance, Saudi Aramco, the kingdom’s oil company, has already been using AI to detect blockages and leaks. The UAE’s urban centres are also particularly well positioned to generate growth from AI integration, given its applications in finance and smart city infrastructure. Sensibly, these areas are the focus of the emirates’ 2031 AI strategy. 

But access to skills and talent is a limitation. Right now the UAE in particular is able to lure talented tech experts from abroad with high salaries and low taxes. However, to develop a resilient, self-sustaining AI ecosystem, the region will need to invest more in nurturing tech skills and start-ups at home, through tech institutes and its universities. Improving training and education more generally is crucial, too, to cushion the effects of tech-driven job displacement. A 2022 study showed that students in the UAE perform worse than the OECD average in maths, reading and science. In Saudi Arabia, AI-related roles reportedly suffer from a 50 per cent hiring gap, with machine learning and data science the most sought-after skills. 

Finally, the Gulf will need to develop a robust regulatory framework for AI. Foreign companies will rightly be cautious about handing over their data to entities controlled by the region’s autocratic rulers, who could use it for nefarious means such as surveillance. If they want to host data centres, utilise private data to improve public services, or encourage AI experimentation, Gulf countries will need to show themselves to be trustworthy custodians. 

Data may indeed be the new oil. But driving long-term economic growth from AI won’t be as straightforward as building rigs and pipelines.

BBVA Plans to Set Up #AbuDhabi, #UAE Branch for Its Investment Bank - Bloomberg

BBVA Plans to Set Up Abu Dhabi Branch for Its Investment Bank - Bloomberg

BBVA SA is preparing to expand its presence in Abu Dhabi as it seeks to grow its corporate and investment banking business in the region.

Spain’s second-largest lender aims to transform its current representative office in the emirate into a fully-fledged banking branch for its CIB unit, people with knowledge of the plans said. A spokesperson for the lender declined to comment.

Abu Dhabi has emerged as a magnet for the world’s wealthiest people over the past few years. The city is already home to 75 centi-millionaires, according to the consultancy Henley & Partners, which projected Abu Dhabi will see that population of individuals more than double over the next 10 years.

BBVA has been hiring to expand its corporate and investment banking business in the US and the UK in recent months. It also boosted the unit earlier this year by adding technology-focused businesses from other parts of the bank.

The corporate and investment banking unit lender, contributes about 25% to overall profit of BBVA, whose full name is Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria. The unit reported €2.78 billion ($3.2 billion) in net income for last year, 24% higher than in 2023.

EU Seeks to Remove #UAE From Its Money Laundering Risk List - Bloomberg

EU Seeks to Remove UAE From Its Money Laundering Risk List - Bloomberg

The European Union plans to remove the United Arab Emirates from its list of countries that pose a high-risk for money-laundering, something the Gulf country has been pushing to happen.

The European Commission, the bloc’s executive arm, took the UAE off its list of “high-risk jurisdictions presenting strategic deficiencies in their national anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) regimes,” according to a statement.

The change still needs the go-ahead from EU member states and the European Parliament, which last year blocked the UAE’s removal from the list.

The EU’s financial services commissioner, Maria Luis Albuquerque, said the move “reiterates our strong commitment to aligning with international standards,” in particular those set by the Financial Action Task Force, which removed the UAE from its list for ‘increased monitoring’ last year.

The removal would satisfy a demand from the UAE, which has previously raised its concerns about its inclusion on the so-called “black list”. It comes as the two parties recently agreed to launch free trade negotiations.

Other countries taken off the the EU’s list were: Barbados, Gibraltar, Jamaica, Panama, the Philippines, Senegal and Uganda. Countries added were: Algeria, Angola, Cote d’Ivoire, Kenya, Laos, Lebanon, Monaco, Namibia, Nepal and Venezuela.

Most Gulf markets gain as investors eye US-China talks | Reuters

Most Gulf markets gain as investors eye US-China talks | Reuters


Most stock markets in the Gulf ended higher on Tuesday, tracking gains in global equities as investors looked for progress in U.S.-China trade talks that could ease tensions between the world's two largest economies.

U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said on Tuesday trade talks with China were going well as the two sides met for a second day in London, seeking a breakthrough on export controls that have threatened a fresh rupture between the superpowers.

World stocks, as reflected by the MSCI All-Country World index (.MIWD00000PUS), opens new tab, traded near record highs, while the dollar steadied against a range of currencies.

Dubai's main share index (.DFMGI), opens new tab rose 0.1%, helped by a 1.8% rise in top lender Emirates NBD (ENBD.DU), opens new tab.

The bourse's gains were limited after the benchmark index hit its highest since 2008 on Monday. However, underlying momentum remains intact, suggesting the potential for further advances in the coming sessions, said Osama Al Saifi, Managing Director for MENA at Traze.

"Although many sectors were in negative territory today, solid market fundamentals point towards continuous gains."

In Abu Dhabi, the main index (.FTFADGI), opens new tab finished 0.5% higher.

Oil prices - a catalyst for the Gulf's financial markets - climbed as investors awaited the outcome of U.S.-China trade talks and as Saudi Arabia's crude supply to China is set to dip slightly.

The Qatari index (.QSI), opens new tab advanced 1.3%, led by a 1.4% gain in the Gulf's biggest lender Qatar National Bank (QNBK.QA), opens new tab.

Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index (.EGX30), opens new tab closed 0.7% higher, with Talaat Moustafa Group Holding (TMGH.CA), opens new tab rising 2.5%.

** The Saudi and Bahrain bourses remained closed due to a public holiday.