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Thursday, 31 July 2025

#Saudi stock market slide signals doubts over kingdom’s diversification plans

Saudi stock market slide signals doubts over kingdom’s diversification plans

Saudi Arabia’s stock market has been one of the worst performing in the world this year as a sliding oil price, ballooning government debt sales and a string of listings flops have cast a shadow over what was previously a bright spot on global markets. 

The failure of new listings to match the stellar performance of debuts in 2023 and 2024, in particular, has raised doubts about the kingdom’s attempts to promote its plans for economic diversification to international investors. 

Riyadh has been trying to rein in spending following a decade-long splurge as it sought to wean the Saudi economy off its reliance on oil. But while debt-fuelled spending on mega-projects such as the futuristic Neom have helped to boost growth, investors are worried that the pullback may hurt the economy. 

“There are rising concerns over Saudi’s ability to cope with a lower oil price environment,” said Monica Malik, chief economist at Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank. 

Other factors were also at play, she added, including “tight liquidity in the banking sector”, with banks tapped out by lending to the government. 

Saudi companies have raised more than $2.8bn in stock market listings so far this year, a faster pace than in 2024, despite a more than 9 per cent drop in the benchmark Tadawul All-Share Index. 

But newly floated Saudi stocks have gained only 4 per cent on average in their first month of trading, versus 27 per cent in 2024, with large falls for key initial public offerings, according to Dealogic. 

Among the losers are packaging company United Carton Industries, whose shares have fallen 35 per cent since floating in late May. Budget carrier Flynas has lost 8 per cent since going public in June. Gym company Sport Clubs Co seems to have bucked the trend, with its shares up 10 per cent since it listed on July 25. 

This year’s fall in the Tadawul is in sharp contrast with exchanges in Kuwait and Dubai, where the main indices are up 17 per cent and 20 per cent, respectively. 

Out of more than 90 stock markets worldwide, only those of Jamaica, Denmark, Lebanon and Argentina have fallen more in US dollar percentage terms this year than the bourse of the Middle East’s largest economy. 

Saudi companies make up five of the 10 worst performers in MSCI’s benchmark gauge of more than 1,200 emerging market stocks. 

Lacklustre performance is hitting the exchange. On Sunday, bourse operator Saudi Tadawul Group said its first six month operating revenues had fallen 13 per cent year-on-year to 647.1mn riyals ($172.6mn), because average daily trading values were down by a third over the same period. 

“There is no problem with the IPO pipeline, and the regulators are keen,” said Mohammed al-Suwayed, chief executive of Riyadh-based Razeen Capital. 

But investors worried, he added, that low oil prices could push the government to abandon the expansionary policy it has pursued in recent years under its economic diversification programme and revert to the old habit of cutting spending. 

“The problem is in this uncertainty: is Saudi Arabia going to change how they respond to oil slumps or not?” 

Saudi Arabia’s stock market is skewed towards banks, oil companies and petrochemicals groups, traditional sectors that are particularly vulnerable to oil prices and economic conditions. 

The composition of the main index “presents a fundamental challenge to investors seeking exposure to Saudi Arabia’s economic transformation story”, said Tarek Fadlallah, chief executive of Nomura Asset Management Middle East. 

Investors are betting that the bourse will be weighed down by Saudi Arabia’s surge in borrowing to make up for lower crude prices, which threatens to raise funding costs for banks and companies. 

Economic growth had been supercharged by the government’s ambitious diversification plans. But with costs ballooning and oil prices low, the kingdom is “taking stock” of its spending priorities, Saudi Arabia’s finance minister has said. 

The value of new projects awarded in the first half of 2025 tumbled 60 per cent from a year earlier, according to research firm ADCB and MEED Projects. The value of projects awarded in the second quarter of this year was the lowest for any quarter since 2021. 

Plugging the gap left by oil prices, Saudi Arabia has leaned heavily on international capital markets. It was the biggest sovereign issuer of external bonds in emerging markets in 2024 and could be again this year, adding to a dollar debt stock that has grown rapidly in half a decade. 

Saudi 30-year bonds trade at a yield of about 6 per cent, only about a percentage point more than equivalent US Treasuries. But some funds are betting that the kingdom will have to pay up for international buyers to absorb more debt if oil prices continue to languish. 

“There will be more and more [oil] supply from Saudi Arabia and the rest of OPEC+ coming on to markets,” said Dan Worth, a partner at Broad Reach, an emerging markets hedge fund. “We feel that Saudi debt is mispriced. We think that there is eventually going to be indigestion.” 

The kingdom is still a long way from debt stress. At the end of 2024, its central bank had net foreign assets of $415bn, while Saudi Arabia’s debt is among the lowest as a share of GDP worldwide. 

But a longtime current account surplus vanished last year and Saudi Arabia will be in deficit for the rest of this decade, the IMF said last month, as the kingdom increasingly finances itself with foreign capital in place of oil income. 

Meanwhile, net foreign assets of Saudi banks, key buyers of government bonds, turned negative last year for the first time since 1993 as they borrowed more from abroad to fund lending at home. 

“That liquidity squeeze and net selling from domestic investors is driving the ongoing derating of the [Saudi] stock market,” said JPMorgan analysts in a recent note.

Adnoc Drilling Plans New Oil Rig Deal in #Kuwait and #Oman - Bloomberg

Adnoc Drilling Plans New Oil Rig Deal in Kuwait and Oman - Bloomberg

Adnoc Drilling Co. is planning to buy a company operating oil and gas rigs in Kuwait and Oman, which would be the second such deal in less than a year as the United Arab Emirates-based firm expands beyond its home market.

The company, a listed unit of Abu Dhabi’s government-owned oil giant, is targeting the acquisition for later this year or early 2026, Chief Financial Officer Youssef Salem said in an interview Thursday.

Adnoc Drilling agreed in May to pay $112 million for the majority of SLB’s drilling business in Kuwait and Oman. The new deal would likely be “the same structure, the same size” to give Adnoc Drilling additional scope without raising risk of overexposure, Salem said.

Parent company Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. spun off the drilling unit in 2021, part of a push to list several divisions aimed at raising cash and giving investors access to the UAE’s energy earnings. While Adnoc’s publicly traded units have pursued deals to build capacity and extend their international reach, they’re also still highly reliant on contracts at home.

Salem said he’s “super bullish” about the company’s prospects as it has bookings with Adnoc underpinning revenue growth next year. The company is drilling wells — using a process called fracking — in unconventional oil and gas fields on land in Abu Dhabi.

In Abu Dhabi’s offshore areas, Adnoc Drilling has contracted rigs for the expansion of the Upper Zakum field, an Adnoc joint venture with Exxon Mobil Corp. Six rigs are set to begin operating at the project between 2026 and 2028.

Adnoc Drilling is also on track to complete two more deals for technology-linked services companies by the end of this year, Salem said. The deals, through its Enersol joint venture with Alpha Dhabi Holding PJSC, will be valued at about $350 million, he said.

#Saudi Economy Expands 3.9% on Strong Non-Oil Momentum - Bloomberg

Saudi Economy Expands 3.9% on Strong Non-Oil Momentum - Bloomberg


Saudi Arabia’s economy expanded for a fifth straight quarter, driven by steady growth in the non-oil sector and a return to expansion for oil activities as the kingdom boosts output under new OPEC+ supply policy.

Overall gross domestic product rose 3.9% year on year in the three months through June, compared with 3.4% in the previous quarter, according to preliminary data published by the statistics office on Thursday.

Non-oil activities — the primary focus for the kingdom as it seeks to expand outside the energy sector to help diversify the economy and attract more foreign investors — grew 4.7%.

The oil economy swung back to expansion after contracting in the first quarter, growing by 3.8%. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, led by Saudi Arabia and Russia, have been opening the taps in recent months after years of supply restraint that had dragged on oil growth.

The International Monetary Fund recently raised its Saudi GDP forecast to 3.5% for 2025, from a prior view of 3% earlier this year, saying the kingdom “has demonstrated strong resilience to shocks, with non-oil economic activities expanding, inflation contained, and unemployment reaching record-low levels.”

The Middle East’s biggest economy is spending heavily on Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s Vision 2030 strategy, which includes major infrastructure projects and an overarching goal of weaning the economy off its reliance on crude oil revenues. Key indicators show, however, that the government is still largely reliant on petrodollars to drive economic activity and the broader diversification agenda.

Prices for global benchmark Brent crude have declined more than 2% this year to about $73 a barrel. JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Citigroup Inc. have forecast prices will continue to slide toward $60 later this year as excess supplies pile up.

According to Ziad Daoud, chief emerging markets economist at Bloomberg Economics, the kingdom requires the price of crude to be $96 a barrel to balance its budget in the first quarter, and $113 when including the sovereign wealth fund’s domestic spending.

The combination of low crude prices, falling oil-export revenue and elevated investment needs has the kingdom facing deeper budget deficits. To fund the gap, the government will likely have to increase borrowing, even after debt levels jumped the most on record in the first quarter.

Saudi Arabia’s total debt still stands at $354 billion, about 30% of GDP and low by the standards of most other governments.

#SaudiArabia, #Kuwait-Backed Wealth Fund to Sell Assets in Private Markets Pivot - Bloomberg

Saudi Arabia, Kuwait-Backed Wealth Fund to Sell Assets in Private Markets Pivot - Bloomberg

Wealth funds aren’t generally known for making sudden strategic changes that upend their investment models. A little-known Middle Eastern investor is deviating from that thesis, with plans to sell all $1.2 billion of its legacy assets as part of a pivot toward private markets.

The move stems from an existential choice that The Arab Investment Co. — one of the Middle East’s oldest state-backed investors — faced a little over a year ago. At the time, its bosses had to choose between shutting down the firm after half a century or overhauling strategy.

Ultimately, they turned to a former State Street Corp. executive to engineer a turnaround at TAIC, whose portfolio is largely made up of short-term lending and letters of credit, low-risk holdings in government bonds and treasury bills.

Abdullah Bakhraibah, who took over as chief executive officer last year, has since embarked on a quest to reallocate most of that to private markets, with about 40% going to public equities and some to venture investments.

“We are literally in exit mode across our entire portfolio,” Bakhraibah told Bloomberg News, saying that he intends to focus on sectors like health care, education, and industrials. The fund is also eyeing tactical bets on technology and artificial intelligence, with a goal of boosting returns to 9% from an average of about 5% in recent years.

It’s already begun shifting money into public and private markets, and plans to exit its current portfolio companies to make room for fresh investments, Bakhraibah said.

That shift would mirror a broader trend among Gulf state-backed funds looking to diversify portfolios and capture higher yields. Many of these entities play an important role in their countries’ efforts to diversify and have splashed out billions of dollars across industries to support that quest.

Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, for instance, invests across a swathe of sectors from technology and sports to gaming. Over in the United Arab Emirates, Abu Dhabi is home to three wealth funds that have been branching out into pockets of finance including private credit.

In a region awash in sovereign wealth — at least $4 trillion between the main investors — TAIC is an unusual entity. The Riyadh-based firm is overseen by 17 Middle Eastern countries, each typically weighing in on decision making.

In a wide-ranging chat, Bakhraibah shone a light on the fund’s operations. Founded in 1974 as one of the region’s earliest sovereign wealth funds with initial capital of $60 million, TAIC counts Saudi Arabia and Kuwait among its largest shareholders. Its board is chaired by Saad bin Abdulaziz AlKhalb, CEO of Saudi EXIM Bank, and includes representatives from other countries.

Bakhraibah, who previously led State Street’s operations in Saudi Arabia, said his fund is targeting at least 20 new transactions this year across its shareholder countries, while exploring partnerships with both regional and global asset managers.

Some deals might come in conjunction with Middle Eastern wealth funds, including Kuwait and Saudi Arabia’s $1 trillion behemoths, he added.

“We’re becoming commercially-driven investors,” Bakhraibah said. “Returns are our top priority.”

#Saudi budget deficit shrinks to $9.21 billion as oil, other revenues rise | Reuters

Saudi budget deficit shrinks to $9.21 billion as oil, other revenues rise | Reuters

Saudi Arabia's budget deficit narrowed to 34.534 billion riyals ($9.21 billion) in the second quarter, marking a 41.1% decline from the previous quarter, as oil and other revenues rose, the finance ministry said on Thursday.

Oil income rose by 1.28% to reach 151.734 billion riyals, the ministry said.

The world’s top oil exporter saw its total revenues climb by nearly 14.4% to 301.595 billion riyals in April to June, of which 149.861 billion riyals came from non-oil industries, while public spending, rose 4.28% quarter-on-quarter to 336.129 billion riyals.

The kingdom's oil exports in May rose to their highest in three months, data from the Joint Organizations Data Initiative (JODI) showed, as the OPEC+ group - comprising OPEC and allies such as Russia - began to unwind cuts of 2.17 million barrels per day (bpd) in April with a boost of 138,000 bpd, followed by further increases in recent months despite falling oil prices.

In the first quarter, the kingdom's budget deficit widened significantly on a year-on-year basis to $15.65 billion from $3.30 billion in the same period a year earlier, as oil revenues dropped 18%.

Lower oil prices have weighed on Saudi Arabia's revenue, with the kingdom projected to post a fiscal deficit of around $27 billion this year.

Still, the country has pushed forward with spending on a massive economic transformation programme known as Vision 2030 that aims to diversify its revenue sources to wean its economy off its dependence on oil.

A 12-day air war between Israel and Iran in June amplified geopolitical risk across the Gulf and raised concerns over regional stability that might threaten to slow foreign investments and tourism in the kingdom, though it briefly spiked oil prices by up to 7% on June 14 when the war first broke.

In June, the International Monetary Fund raised its 2025 GDP growth forecast for Saudi Arabia to 3.5% from 3%, partly on the back of demand for government-led projects and supported by the OPEC+ group's plan to phase out oil production cuts.

Saudi Arabia's public debt stood at 1.38 trillion riyals by the end of the second quarter, the finance ministry said in its statement.

Middle East equities up ahead of earnings, #Dubai pulls back from 17-year high | Reuters

Middle East equities up ahead of earnings, Dubai pulls back from 17-year high | Reuters


Middle East stock markets gained on Thursday as anticipation of strong blue-chip earnings offset signals that U.S. interest rates may remain high, while profit-taking dragged the Dubai index down from a 17-1/2 year high.

The Federal Reserve's lack of clear guidance on when it might lower borrowing costs hampered investor sentiment in a region where monetary policy typically mirrors the U.S. due to currency pegs.

Saudi Arabia's benchmark index (.TASI), opens new tab gained 0.1%, driven by investor enthusiasm ahead of major earnings announcements from chemical company SABIC (2010.SE), opens new tab and oil giant Aramco (2222.SE), opens new tab due early next week.

Aramco rose 0.3%, while Bupa Arabia for Cooperative Insurance (8210.SE), opens new tab jumped 4.3% after appointing a chairman.

Elsewhere, Saudi National Bank (1180.SE), opens new tab, the kingdom's biggest lender by assets, advanced 1.5% as investors bought stock to qualify for dividends ahead of the August 3 eligibility date.

Dubai's main share index (.DFMGI), opens new tab retreated 0.8%, snapping six straight sessions of gains as investors locked in profits following a nearly two-decade high in multiple sessions.

All sectors closed in the red, led by a 1.3% decline in blue-chip developer Emaar Properties (EMAR.DU), opens new tab.

The Abu Dhabi index (.FTFADGI), opens new tab added 0.2%, lifted by selective buying amid a mixed earnings season.

Top lender First Abu Dhabi Bank (FAB.AD), opens new tab advanced 1.7%.
Qatar's stock index (.QSI), opens new tab rose 1% to 11,262 riyals, a level last seen over two and a half years ago.

Qatar Islamic Bank (QISB.QA), opens new tab led the rally, gaining over 3%. Brokerage HSBC lifted its price target to 29.4 riyals from 25.4 riyals.

Qatar's Ooredoo (ORDS.QA), opens new tab surged 5.2%, touching a nearly 11-year peak after the telecom giant posted upbeat second-quarter earnings and held full-year outlook steady.

Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index (.EGX30), opens new tab jumped 1% to hit a fresh record high, led by a 1.5% gain in Talaat Moustafa Group Holding (TMGH.CA), opens new tab.