Trump hails ‘big progress’ in Japan tariff talks

Trump hails ‘big progress’ in Japan tariff talks
Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba reacts as he speaks to reporters after a Japanese negotiator held ministerial talks at the White House regarding US tariffs, at the prime minister’s official residence in Tokyo, Japan, 17 April 2025. FRANCK ROBICHON/Pool via REUTERS
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Updated 17 April 2025

Trump hails ‘big progress’ in Japan tariff talks

Trump hails ‘big progress’ in Japan tariff talks

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump touted “big progress” in tariff talks with Japan on Wednesday, in one of the first rounds of face-to-face negotiations since his barrage of duties on global imports roiled markets and stoked recession fears.

Japan had not expected the president to get involved in Wednesday’s talks, viewing them as a preliminary, fact-finding mission, a sign that Trump wants to keep tight control over negotiations with dozens of countries expected over coming days and weeks.

Tokyo had also been hoping to limit the scope of the talks to trade and investment matters. But announcing his involvement early Wednesday, Trump said thorny issues including the amount Japan pays towards hosting US troops were among discussion topics.

“A Great Honor to have just met with the Japanese Delegation on Trade. Big Progress!” Trump said in a social media message that contained no details of the discussions.

Opposite Trump was Ryosei Akazawa, a close confidant of Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba who serves in the relatively junior cabinet position of economic revitalisation minister.

Speaking to reporters after the talks, Akazawa gave few details but said the parties had agreed to hold a second meeting later this month and that Trump had said getting a deal with Japan was a “top priority.”

Exchange rates, which the Trump administration has said Japan and others manipulate to get a trade advantage, were not part of the talks, Akazawa added.

The dollar strengthened against the yen after his remarks on forex, up around 0.5 percent on the day. Tokyo denies it manipulates its yen currency lower to get make its exports cheaper.

Akazawa held a 50-minute meeting with Trump at the White House before another session with his Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer that stretched to almost an hour and a half, according to Japanese readouts of the talks.

Japan’s prime minister, who has previously said he won’t rush to reach a deal and does not plan to make big concessions, sounded a more cautious tone speaking to reporters later in Tokyo.

“Of course, the negotiations will not be easy going forward, but President Trump has stated that he wants to give top priority to the talks with Japan,” Ishiba said.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni heads to the White House on Thursday to discuss tariffs imposed on the EU with Trump, while Bessent has invited South Korea’s finance minister to Washington for talks next week.

FIRST MOVER ADVANTAGE

Trump has long complained about the US trade deficit with Japan and other countries, saying US businesses have been “ripped off” by trade practices and intentional efforts by other countries to maintain weak currencies.

Japan has been hit with 24 percent levies on its exports to the US although these rates have, like most of Trump’s tariffs, been paused for 90 days. But a 10 percent universal rate remains in place as does a 25 percent duty for cars, a mainstay of Japan’s export-reliant economy.

Bessent has said there is a “first mover advantage” given Washington has said more than 75 countries have requested talks since Trump announced sweeping duties on dozens of countries — both friend and foe — earlier this month.

Akazawa declined to comment on the matter, adding only that he strongly requested a revocation of the tariffs and that he believed Washington wanted to secure a deal in the 90-day window.

Washington is hoping to strike deals with countries that would cover tariffs, non-tariff barriers and exchange rates, Bessent has said, though Tokyo had lobbied to keep the latter separate.

Trump earlier this month lambasted Japan for what he said was a 700 percent tariff on rice, a figure Tokyo disputes. Levies on autos are particularly painful for Japan as they make up nearly a third of shipments to the US, its biggest export market.

Japan hopes that pledges to expand investment in the US will help to convince the US that the allies can achieve a “win-win” situation without tariffs.

Possible Japanese investment in a multi-billion-dollar gas project in Alaska could also feature in tariff negotiations, Bessent said before Wednesday’s talks.

“It sounds like the Trump administration really does want a quick deal, which suggests it will be a less substantive deal,” said Tobias Harris of Japan Foresight, a political risk advisory.

“My baseline is that if the US really starts making demands on agriculture and maybe also on some of the auto regulations, it becomes a lot more contentious and hard to do quickly.”


Saudi bank loans hit $845bn as corporate lending booms

Saudi bank loans hit $845bn as corporate lending booms
Updated 1 min 54 sec ago

Saudi bank loans hit $845bn as corporate lending booms

Saudi bank loans hit $845bn as corporate lending booms

RIYADH: Saudi banks’ total outstanding loans reached SR3.17 trillion ($844.7 billion) at the end of May, an annual increase of 16.28 percent, according to the latest official data.

Figures released by the Saudi Central Bank, also known as SAMA, show that this marks one of the fastest annual credit expansions in recent years, underscoring strong economic momentum in the Kingdom.

The SAMA data revealed that business loans now comprise 55.35 percent of all bank credit, up from 52.87 percent a year ago.

Corporate lending surged 21.73 percent year on year to SR1.75 trillion, far outpacing personal lending, which rose around 10 percent to SR1.41 trillion.

This shift highlights how companies have become the dominant force in ’s lending landscape, as banks pivot from consumer finance to funding large projects and enterprises.

The Kingdom’s credit boom stands out within the region. Across the Gulf Cooperation Council countries, most banking sectors are expanding on the back of post-pandemic economic growth and government spending, but Saudi banks are leading the pack in loan growth.

A Kamco Invest report published in May found the Kingdom posted the region’s highest year-on-year loan growth in the first quarter of 2025, outpacing other Gulf markets.

This growth was broad-based across sectors — including construction, real estate, education, and transport — whereas some neighboring countries saw more subdued or narrowly focused increases.

The UAE, the region’s second-largest banking market, is also seeing solid credit expansion supported by its own infrastructure and economic reforms.

Gulf banks in general benefit from strong capitalization and government backing, which has kept credit flowing. The International Monetary Fund projects GCC economies to grow around 3.5 percent in 2025, with , the UAE, and Qatar driving non-oil growth.

This trend aligns with the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 diversification plan, which emphasizes infrastructure, industry, and non-oil sectors. It also indicates that after a decade of mortgage-fueled expansion, banks are rebalancing portfolios toward commercial lending in response to market demand and government priorities.

This “structural hand-off” means business lending is now the engine of Saudi banking — a significant change after years when consumer mortgages dominated credit creation.

Real estate dominates; education and transport soar

Within corporate lending, real estate developers remain the single largest borrower group according to SAMA data. Real estate activities accounted for 21.35 percent of outstanding corporate credit, totaling approximately SR374 billion in May.

This segment grew by a remarkable 37.7 percent annually, reflecting heightened demand for housing, commercial infrastructure, and mega-project development across the Kingdom.

’s ambitious construction boom — from new housing in major cities to giga-projects like NEOM, the Red Sea tourism resorts, and large mixed-use developments — has driven banks to significantly increase financing for land purchases, building, and property development.

According to a March report by real estate consultancy JLL, ’s real estate sector is set for sustained growth, driven by Vision 2030 diversification goals and robust non-oil economic expansion.

The construction sector recorded $29.5 billion in project awards in 2024, while the property market is forecast by the Real Estate General Authority to reach $101.6 billion by 2029, growing at a compound annual rate of 8 percent. 

Grade-A office demand in Riyadh surged, with vacancy falling to just 0.2 percent by the end of 2024 and average rents reaching $609 per sq. meter.

JLL noted that 326,000 sq. meters of leasable space was delivered in 2024, with an additional 888,600 sq. meters in the pipeline for 2025. The firm added that Jeddah is emerging as a competitive alternative, attracting regional and international firms, while rising office and logistics rents in both Riyadh and Jeddah indicate strong commercial demand.

The report also highlighted real estate tailwinds from upcoming mega-events like the 2030 FIFA World Cup and Expo 2030, which are expected to inject significant capital and further boost infrastructure development across the Kingdom.

Other major sectors in banks’ corporate portfolios include wholesale and retail trade, around 12.2 percent of corporate credit, utilities like electricity, water and gas of 11 percent, and manufacturing at 11 percent.

Each of these recorded healthy double-digit growth, supported by increased public and private investment and industrial reforms.

This includes lending to the utilities sector growing to SR196 billion, as expands power grids, renewable energy projects, and water infrastructure to meet rising demand.

Manufacturing loans — about SR191 billion — reflect ongoing expansion in petrochemicals, metals, and consumer goods production under diversification initiatives.

Crucially, some of the fastest growth rates were seen in smaller, emerging segments, highlighting shifting priorities. 

Education sector credit, though making up only 0.55 percent of corporate loans, jumped by over 48 percent year on year to around SR9.58 billion.

This was the highest growth of any sector, fueled by a national drive to expand and modernize educational institutions. is encouraging more private investment in schools, universities, and training centers as part of Vision 2030’s human capital development goals.

Transport and logistics is another booming area. Loans for transportation and storage climbed 43 percent year on year, reaching SR68 billion.

This reflects ’s push to become a global logistics hub, building new ports, airports, railways, and warehouses. Huge projects such as the expansion of Riyadh’s King Salman International Airport and the launch of a new national airline, as well as improvements in roads and shipping infrastructure, require significant funding.

The government’s National Transport and Logistics Strategy envisions $150 billion of investments in transport infrastructure by 2030, with 80 percent of these coming from the private sector via public-private partnerships and privatizations in airports and roadways.

Banks are playing a key role by lending to contractors and logistics firms involved in these ventures. The result is that transport and logistics finance has seen one of the sharpest upticks across all industries, second only to education in growth rate.

Going forward, Saudi lenders are expected to maintain a delicate balance, financing aggressive growth in the corporate sector while guarding against liquidity and risk pressures.


Oil Updates — crude extends gain on Iraq outages, tight market supports

Oil Updates — crude extends gain on Iraq outages, tight market supports
Updated 18 July 2025

Oil Updates — crude extends gain on Iraq outages, tight market supports

Oil Updates — crude extends gain on Iraq outages, tight market supports

SINGAPORE: Oil prices extended gains on Friday, underpinned by supply concerns following drone attacks on northern Iraqi oilfields and tight market fundamentals amid healthy summer demand.

Brent crude futures climbed 29 cents, or 0.40 percent, to $69.81 a barrel as of 7:51 a.m. Saudi time, US West Texas Intermediate crude futures advanced 27 cents, or 0.42 percent, to $67.81 a barrel.

Four days of drone attacks on oilfields in Iraqi Kurdistan that shut down half the region’s output have supported prices, pushing both contracts up $1 on Thursday.

Additionally, seasonal travel demand has propped up the market. In the first two weeks of July, global oil demand has averaged 105.2 million barrels per day, up by 600,000 bpd from a year earlier and largely in line with forecast, JPMorgan analysts said in a research note.

“Crude prices have been broadly stable this week, with no significant moves as the impact of OPEC+ supply increases has been offset by strong seasonal demand in the US,” said LSEG’s analyst Anh Pham.

US crude inventories fell a larger-than-expected last week as exports rose, government data on Wednesday showed.

Demand in Asia also firmed as refineries came back from maintenance amid peak seasonal demand.

Near-term oil fundamentals are likely to remain supportive, with the market set to remain fairly tight through this quarter, before becoming better supplied from the last three months of the year, ING analysts said in a note on Friday.

Still, the uncertainty around US tariff policy, which appears unlikely to be settled until after August 1, is weighing on the market. Plans by major oil producers to remove output cuts will also add to supply as the seasonal Northern Hemisphere summer demand ends. For this week, both Brent and WTI were down more than 1 percent.

Oil output in the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region has been slashed from about 280,000 bpd to between 140,000 bpd and 150,000 bpd, two energy officials said.

Officials pointed to Iran-backed militias as the likely source of attacks this week on the region’s oilfields, although no group has claimed responsibility.

Despite the attack, Iraq’s federal government said on Thursday that Iraqi Kurdistan will resume oil exports through a pipeline to Turkiye after a two-year halt.


Jordan tourism revenues climb 11.9% in H1 despite regional headwinds

Jordan tourism revenues climb 11.9% in H1 despite regional headwinds
Updated 17 July 2025

Jordan tourism revenues climb 11.9% in H1 despite regional headwinds

Jordan tourism revenues climb 11.9% in H1 despite regional headwinds
  • led the region with a 148% rise in international tourism revenue in 2024
  • Spending by Jordanians on outbound tourism rose 3.3% year on year

RIYADH: Jordan’s tourism revenues rose 11.9 percent year on year in the first half of 2025 to reach $3.67 billion, underscoring the sector’s resilience amid geopolitical tensions in the region. 

According to data from the Central Bank of Jordan, the growth came despite a slight setback in June, when monthly revenues fell 3.7 percent to $619.2 million, state-run Petra news agency reported. 

 Turki Faisal Al-RasheedDespite this, Jordan’s performance reflects a broader tourism surge across the Middle East, with a May release by the World Travel & Tourism Council showing the sector added $341.9 billion to gross domestic product and 7.3 million jobs in 2024, with projections of $367.3 billion and 7.7 million jobs in 2025. 

led the region with a 148 percent rise in international tourism revenue in 2024, according to its Ministry of Tourism, while Oman, the UAE, and Qatar continued to attract strong visitor flows through investment, connectivity, and major events. 

Citing the central bank data, Petra said: “Tourism revenues from Asian visitors surged by 42.9 percent during the first half of the year, while revenues from European tourists increased by 35.6 percent, Americans by 25.8 percent, Arabs by 11.5 percent, and other nationalities by 43.0 percent.”  

It added: “Conversely, revenues from Jordanian expatriates visiting the Kingdom registered a modest decline of 0.8 percent over the same period.” 

Spending by Jordanians on outbound tourism rose 3.3 percent year on year in the first half of 2025, reaching $999.7 million, despite a 22.7 percent decline in June alone, when spending fell to $195.6 million. 

This comes on the back of a strong start to 2025, with Jordan welcoming 1.51 million visitors in the first quarter — a 13 percent increase from the same period last year — while receipts rose 8.85 percent to 1.22 billion Jordanian dinars ( $1.72 billion), according to the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities’ first-quarter report. 

The recovery was further supported by the return of air connectivity, which had nearly disappeared in 2024. New agreements with European carriers expanded the number of low-cost direct routes to 25 this year, including 20 to Amman for the summer and five to Aqaba in the winter. These routes are expected to bring in around 270,000 travelers, the report added. 

Looking ahead, the ministry said it is developing a new National Tourism Strategy for 2025–2028, building on the previous plan and aligning with the country’s Economic Modernization Vision. 

The updated roadmap aims to diversify source markets, including China, India, Russia, Africa, and Southeast Asia, and promote high-potential segments such as medical, wellness, faith-based, adventure, and meetings, incentives, conferences, and exhibitions, or MICE, tourism. 


EU pledges $46.4bn for MENA renewables, borders, and migration

EU pledges $46.4bn for MENA renewables, borders, and migration
Updated 17 July 2025

EU pledges $46.4bn for MENA renewables, borders, and migration

EU pledges $46.4bn for MENA renewables, borders, and migration

JEDDAH: Renewable energy, border security, and migration pathways in the Middle East and North Africa will receive €42.5 billion ($46.4 billion) from the EU from 2028, it has been announced.

This doubled financial commitment, under a new funding instrument, aims to enhance stability and cooperation in the region.

Speaking during a press conference in Brussels on July 17, EU Commissioner for Democracy and Demography Dubravka Suica said the increased budget reflects the bloc’s strategic shift toward deeper cooperation with countries in region.

“This is a strong financial toolbox, with which we will invest in stability, security and prosperity, through mutually beneficial partnerships with our Southern neighbors in the Middle East, North Africa and the Gulf,” she said, emphasizing that the Mediterranean is not only a region of challenges but also one of opportunities.

Suica further noted that the EU will support partner countries in addressing the underlying causes of socio-economic fragility, which she said are central to political instability and radicalization.

She added that the bloc will also confront the challenges of the green transition by investing in renewable energy projects, benefiting citizens on both sides of the Mediterranean.

“These increased funds will enable us to respond more effectively to an increasingly volatile geopolitical context right at our doorstep,” the commissioner said.

She stressed that the stability and prosperity of the Mediterranean are directly linked to Europe’s own.

“Their safety is our safety. Their success is our shared success. Their protection of borders is also ours.”

Suica described the Multiannual Financial Framework as an instrument that will strengthen the union, both internally and internationally.

“This new framework enables us to better protect our interest on a global stage and protect our values and interests in an increasingly complex geopolitical context,” she concluded.


Closing Bell: Saudi bourses end week in red at 11,007

Closing Bell: Saudi bourses end week in red at 11,007
Updated 17 July 2025

Closing Bell: Saudi bourses end week in red at 11,007

Closing Bell: Saudi bourses end week in red at 11,007

RIYADH: ’s Tadawul All Share Index fell on Thursday, shedding 31.76 points, or 0.29 percent, to close at 11,006.98.

The benchmark index recorded a total trading turnover of SR4.19 billion ($1.12 billion), with 125 stocks advancing and 117 declining.

The Kingdom’s parallel market Nomu also slipped, losing 50.11 points to close at 27,294.97.

The MSCI Tadawul Index dropped 0.32 percent to settle at 1,410.87.

LIVA Insurance Co. was the best performer on the main market, with its share price surging 9.94 percent to SR13.93.

Emaar The Economic City saw its shares rise by 5.15 percent to SR13.69, while Alistithmar AREIC Diversified REIT Fund gained 4.57 percent to reach SR9.15.

Tourism Enterprise Co. recorded the steepest decline, falling 6.45 percent to SR0.87.

On the announcements front, Lana Medical Co. said it secured multiple contracts worth SR57.1 million from the Ministry of Health.

According to a Tadawul statement, the first contract, valued at SR53.5 million, involves the collection and storage of hazardous waste at health centers, hospitals, and specialized facilities in the Al-Jouf region and Al-Qurayyat Governorate.

The second contract, worth SR3.6 million, covers the transportation of medical waste to the Riyadh First Health Cluster.

The company stated that the impact of these 60-month contracts will be reflected in its financial results starting in the fourth quarter of 2025.

In a separate filing, Lana Medical Co. announced a two-year agreement valued at SR10 million with the National Unified Procurement Co. to manage medical waste.

Shares of Lana Medical Co., listed on the Nomu parallel market, rose 7.98 percent to close at SR36.