Saudi bank credit races to $834bn in April as companies out-borrow households

Saudi bank credit races to $834bn in April as companies out-borrow households
Large national projects are driving most of the new business borrowing. Shutterstock
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Updated 09 June 2025

Saudi bank credit races to $834bn in April as companies out-borrow households

Saudi bank credit races to $834bn in April as companies out-borrow households
  • Jump adds roughly SR443 billion in new credit over 12 months
  • Real estate developers remain the largest borrowers, accounting for 21.77% of outstanding corporate credit

RIYADH: Saudi banks’ outstanding loan portfolio climbed to SR3.13 trillion ($833.7 billion) at the end of April, up 16.51 percent from a year earlier and marking the fastest annual expansion since mid-2021.

According to figures from the Saudi Central Bank, also known as SAMA, the double-digit jump adds roughly SR443 billion in new credit over 12 months and underscores how the Kingdom’s project-driven growth model is reshaping balance-sheet priorities across the banking system.

Behind the headline figure is a striking pivot toward business customers. Corporate borrowing jumped 22 percent year on year to SR1.72 trillion, lifting its share of total credit above 55 percent, while loans to individuals rose a more measured 10.4 percent to about SR1.4 trillion.

Real estate developers remain the largest borrowers, accounting for 21.77 percent of outstanding corporate credit. This division was followed by the wholesale and retail trade sector at 12.29 percent, utilities, including electricity, gas, and water, at 10.98 percent, and manufacturing, which is close behind at 10.9 percent.




Saudi Central Bank underscored how the Kingdom’s project-driven growth model is reshaping balance-sheet priorities. File/Asharq Alawsat

Within the fastest-growing niches, transport and storage finance soared 47.5 percent to SR67.6 billion, education credit expanded 44.8 percent to SR9.5 billion, real-estate borrowing increased nearly 39 percent, and loans to financial services and insurance firms jumped 35.1 percent to SR159.9 billion, according to SAMA.

Vision 2030 projects drive demand

Large national projects are driving most of the new business borrowing. Huge developments, such as NEOM, the Red Sea resort, Diriyah, and King Salman International Airport, require long-term bank loans to enable builders and suppliers to continue their operations.

Newer industries, including green hydrogen plants and data centers, utilize short-term credit to cover their costs while they are being established.

At the same time, home loan growth is slowing because many families took advantage of subsidized Sakani mortgages between 2021 and 2023.




Corporate borrowing jumped 22 percent year on year to SR1.72 trillion. File/SPA

A March report by JLL says ’s non-oil economy should grow 5.8 percent in this year, up from 4.5 percent in 2024.

JLL expects the real estate market to be worth about $101.6 billion by 2029, an average rise of 8 percent a year, and noted that Grade-A offices in Riyadh are almost fully occupied, pushing prime rents to $609 per sq. meter.

Such conditions translate directly into bank-financed demand for land acquisition, infrastructure outlays and bridging loans for developers racing to deliver stock ahead of the FIFA World Cup 2030 and Expo 2030.

Although real-estate developers still claim the largest slice of corporate credit, another borrower group is accelerating just as quickly: insurers. As the property boom feeds through to compulsory project coverage and fast-growing medical and motor lines, the insurance industry’s need for cash and capital is rising sharply.

According to KPMG’s Insurance Overview 2025, sector revenue jumped 16.9 percent year on year in the third quarter of 2024 as compulsory medical cover, brisk motor sales, and a wave of big property projects swelled premium volumes and claims reserves. The same report flags heavy spending on “technological innovation” as firms roll out IFRS-17 systems and digital sales platforms.




A man withdraws money from an ATM outside a Saudi bank in Riyadh, . File/Reuters

Under SAMA’s rulebook, however, ordinary loans or bond proceeds cannot be counted toward an insurer’s solvency margin unless the central bank gives written approval, and only Basel-style Tier-2 subordinated instruments qualify as supplementary capital.

Facing larger day-to-day cash needs, significant IT expenditures, and tighter capital buffers, alongside a regulator-driven wave of mergers that has already prompted players like Amana Cooperative and ACIG to explore tie-ups to gain scale, insurers are increasingly turning to banks for revolving credit lines and subordinated sukuk financing.

The funding strain is now visible in the monetary statistics. Outstanding bank credit to “financial and insurance activities,” registering one of the fastest growth rates of any sector, reflecting a mix of liquidity borrowings.

The education sector is also borrowing heavily to meet Vision 2030 targets. April’s EDGEx 2025 expo in Riyadh attracted over 20,000 delegates and showcased private-school growth plans that could lift the non-state share of enrolment from roughly 17 percent to 25 percent within five years.

New digital platforms such as Madaris promise to streamline admissions and tuition payments, while PwC’s purchase of Saudi consultancy Emkan underscores the sector’s investment appeal. These dynamics help explain why bank lending to education providers is growing at more than four times the system average.




Large corporations also employ interest-rate swaps and caps to lock in borrowing costs, according to local treasury advisory guidance. File/Reuters

Funding and liquidity

Rapid corporate demand poses funding challenges. Fitch projects that Saudi bank lending will rise by 12 percent to 14 percent in 2025, again surpassing deposit growth and stretching a funding shortfall that had already reached roughly SR0.3 trillion in 2024.

For now, liquidity remains comfortable. The loan-to-deposit ratio stands near 82.41 percent in April, and non-performing loans hover below 1.5 percent, according to SAMA data, thanks in part to stricter underwriting and the central bank’s early-warning analytics.

Interest rates’ dual impact

Contrary to conventional wisdom, elevated interest rates have not dampened corporate borrowing appetite. Several structural factors continue to shield large borrowers from the impact of rising rates.

Project-finance deals tied to government-related entities in the Gulf are typically funded on long-term, availability-based contracts, with pricing linked to government benchmarks rather than floating interbank rates, limiting their direct exposure to movements in SAIBOR.

Large corporations also employ interest-rate swaps and caps to lock in borrowing costs, according to local treasury advisory guidance, so higher policy rates do not translate one-for-one into higher debt-service outlays.




Real-estate developers still claim the largest slice of corporate credit. File/Reuters

Households, by contrast, feel the tightening much sooner. SAMA’s updated disclosure rules require banks to display mortgage rates tied to the three-month SAIBOR, and most variable-rate home finance contracts reset against that benchmark every quarter.

As SAIBOR followed the US Fed trajectory above 5 percent through 2024, monthly repayments for floating-rate mortgages rose accordingly, helping explain why retail-loan growth has cooled relative to corporate demand.

Taken together, the mix of hedged or government-linked pricing on large projects and the immediate SAIBOR pass-through on household mortgages helps explain why elevated interest rates have slowed consumer borrowing more than business lending — without significantly curbing overall credit growth.

The April numbers confirm a structural hand-off. After a decade in which subsidized mortgages dominated credit creation, business lending is now the engine of Saudi banking.

That shift mirrors the broader diversification of the Kingdom’s economy— away from oil, toward industry, logistics, tourism and technology. For lenders, the opportunity is immense, but so is the challenge of funding mega-projects without stretching balance sheet resilience.

With capital ratios near 19 percent and a regulatory regime quick to adapt, Saudi banks appear well-placed to finance the next leg of Vision 2030’s transformation while maintaining the stability that has long been the system’s hallmark.


Closing Bell: Saudi main index declines 0.30% to 10,498 

Closing Bell: Saudi main index declines 0.30% to 10,498 
Updated 10 September 2025

Closing Bell: Saudi main index declines 0.30% to 10,498 

Closing Bell: Saudi main index declines 0.30% to 10,498 

RIYADH: ’s Tadawul All Share Index closed lower on Wednesday, losing 31.13 points, or 0.30 percent, to end at 10,498.04. 

The total trading turnover of the benchmark index reached SR3.71 billion ($989.8 million), with 54 stocks advancing and 200 declining. 

’s parallel market Nomu shed 124.41 points to close at 25,075.25, while the MSCI Tadawul Index declined 1.86 percent to 1,364.98. 

The best-performing stock on the main market was Retal Urban Development Co., which climbed 2.94 percent to SR11.56.  

Shares of Almasane Alkobra Mining Co., advanced 2.63 percent to SR66.4, while Malath Cooperative Insurance Co. gained 2.36 percent to SR13. 

Jadwa REIT Saudi Fund climbed 2.16 percent to SR10.42, and Banque Saudi Fransi added 2.06 percent to SR16.38. 

On the other hand, Obeikan Glass Co. dropped 6.07 percent to SR26.30, and Thimar Development Holding Co. fell 4.70 percent to SR43.84. 

Marketing Home Group for Trading Co. declined 3.74 percent to SR68.25, Scientific and Medical Equipment House Co. added 3.40 percent to SR35.84 and Sinad Holding Co. also lost 2.06 percent to close at SR10.15 

In corporate announcements, Al Rajhi Bank has successfully completed the offering of its $1 billion tier 2 US dollar-denominated social trust certificates, the lender said in a filing to the Saudi Exchange. 

The sukuk issuance forms part of the bank’s international trust certificate issuance program, with settlement scheduled for Sept. 16. A total of 5,000 certificates were issued at a par value of $200,000 each, offering an annual return of 5.65 percent. 

The notes carry a maturity of 10.5 years and are callable after five years. The offering was made to eligible investors in and internationally. 

The completion follows the bank’s earlier announcement on Sept. 9 regarding the launch of the offer, reinforcing its position as a key player in Shariah-compliant financing and aligning with broader goals to support sustainable and social finance initiatives. 


PIF’s Neo Space Group to acquire Display Interactive to boost in-flight connectivity 

PIF’s Neo Space Group to acquire Display Interactive to boost in-flight connectivity 
Updated 10 September 2025

PIF’s Neo Space Group to acquire Display Interactive to boost in-flight connectivity 

PIF’s Neo Space Group to acquire Display Interactive to boost in-flight connectivity 

RIYADH: Passengers and airlines will benefit from faster, more reliable inflight connectivity as Public Investment Fund-backed Neo Space Group acquires Display Interactive to enhance services and streamline operations. 

The deal, finalized under a definitive agreement, will integrate DI’s technology with NSG’s satellite communications capabilities, aiming to improve passenger experience and support more efficient airline operations. 

The acquisition is part of ’s push to expand its aviation and digital infrastructure under Vision 2030, which seeks to diversify the economy, boost private sector growth, and strengthen the Kingdom’s position as a global transportation hub. 

As part of this plan, Saudi aviation goals include serving 330 million passengers across over 250 destinations and transporting 4.5 million tons of air cargo by 2030. 

Martijn Blanken, CEO of NSG, said: “The IFC (inflight connectivity) sector is evolving rapidly, and remaining competitive requires a strong customer focus, continuous innovation, and adaptability.”  

He added: “Acquiring DI strengthens our ability to deliver cutting-edge connectivity solutions while ensuring passengers enjoy an unparalleled in-flight experience with seamless connectivity, high-speed internet, and real-time entertainment and communication.” 

This move will enhance NSG’s standing in the aviation sector as a leading provider of integrated, multi-orbit solutions, supported by smart bandwidth management and comprehensive global coverage.  

“Joining forces with Neo Space Group allows us to open a new chapter, scaling our technology and expanding our impact in global aviation. Together, we will push the boundaries of innovation and connectivity in the most agile way,” said Tarek El Mitwalli, CEO of Display Interactive. 

NSG and DI began working together in 2023 on product development and introduced the Skywaves satellite connectivity system in May 2024. 

The acquisition will build on this collaboration, linking Skywaves’ traffic management with the SkyFly passenger portal. 

Using the SES Open Orbits network, the system routes data across multiple satellite providers to maintain consistent, high-speed connectivity for airlines and passengers. 

Combining DI’s technology with NSG’s satellite capabilities, the group aims to simplify deployment of in-flight connectivity solutions, improve efficiency for airlines, and enhance the digital experience for travelers.


UAE wealth funds bet big on fintech amid global tech shifts

UAE wealth funds bet big on fintech amid global tech shifts
Updated 10 September 2025

UAE wealth funds bet big on fintech amid global tech shifts

UAE wealth funds bet big on fintech amid global tech shifts
  • From Africa to Southeast Asia, fintech investment has become a tool of financial diplomacy

DUBAI: The quiet capital that once operated behind the scenes is no longer just writing the big checks; they are rewriting the rules.

Leading state-owned sovereign wealth funds, such as ADQ, Mubadala, the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority and newer heavyweight Lunate, are expanding their reach beyond capital deployment.

Their investments now include infrastructure development, regulatory engagement, and broader ecosystem support.

This approach signals a notable shift in global fintech dynamics, with Gulf-based funds increasingly directing not only where capital flows, but also which players and platforms gain prominence.

From petro capital to powerbroker  

In 2025, ADQ, Mubadala, and Lunate traded their quiet capital status for the driver’s seat of global fintech.

The three funds are backed by Abu Dhabi’s ruling elite, tasked with deploying the emirate’s oil wealth into strategic international assets. 

“While sovereign wealth funds are often associated with large-ticket late-stage investments, their role in seeding and scaling ecosystems is equally significant,” Farah El Nahlawi, research manager at MAGNiTT, told Arab News.

In 2022, the Abu Dhabi Developmental Holding company, ADQ, backed a $200 million fintech and digital-assets venture targeting early-stage startups, while Mubadala led the world’s sovereign investors by deploying $29.2 billion across 52 deals in 2025. 

Diego Lopez, founder and managing director of Global SWF, highlights the strategy behind Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth:  

“We have just updated the ranking for 2025, and Abu Dhabi is still at the top with $1,818 billion managed by the SWFs in town,” he said, adding that Abu Dhabi’s capital is spread out in different vehicles, “rather than concentrated in a single SWF, as it happens in other GCC countries.”  

Lopez said this strategy was initially for political reasons, but it allows the separate funds “to focus on their different mandates and strategies (i.e. Mubadala and ADQ raising debt) without the risk of commingling capital or overlapping.” 

This approach has enabled Abu Dhabi’s funds to pursue sector-specific investments, illustrated by Mubadala’s MGX’s recent strategic expansion into the cryptocurrency space. 

MGX Fund Management Ltd., a $330 billion artificial intelligence-investment project, expanded its portfolio to include a $2 billion minority stake in cryptocurrency exchange in Binance.  

This move, announced in March 2025, marks a departure from MGX’s initial focus on AI infrastructure investments, such as those in OpenAI and xAI. 

The decision to invest in Binance aligns with the UAE’s broader ambition to position itself as a global crypto hub, evidenced by its introduction of AE Coin, a UAE dirham-backed stable coin. 

This shift highlights the UAE’s approach to integrating blockchain technology into its financial ecosystem, aiming to enhance its influence in the rapidly evolving digital finance sector. 

How Mubadala, ADQ, and Lunate are picking winners 

From Africa to Southeast Asia, fintech investment has become a tool of financial diplomacy. 

Mubadala’s stake in Nigerian mobility-fintech Moove, contributing $76 million equity and debt financing round in 2023, or ADQ’s partnership with Ant International, Baykar, and Trendyol in Turkiye, are as much about market growth as they are about geoeconomic alignment. 

Through Further Ventures, ADQ is seeding a new generation of fintech firms focused on emerging markets. 

Mubadala’s MGX partnership with Binance signals more than just crypto exposure. It positions the fund within the exchange and infrastructure layer of global digital finance, potentially influencing regulatory alignment and exchange access. 

Meanwhile, Lunate, which launched in late 2023, now manages $110 billion in assets as of August 2025, and has moved quickly to stake out influence in both traditional and digital finance.

It went on to acquire a minority stake in European hedge fund Brevan Howard, alongside a $2 billion joint fund platform based in the Abu Dhabi Global Market.

Middle Eastern SWFs are now playing a “partner role,” a Mitsui & Co. Ltd March report said, adding that SWFs “have established a presence that is commanding the attention of major institutional investors in the US and Europe.” 

Quiet money, big stakes  

Despite concerns about the deployment of petro capital into high-impact technologies in the absence of formal legislative oversight, industry experts note a gradual shift in governance standards among sovereign investors.

“This year, we have noticed that some GCC funds have become more inward and opaque at the back of geopolitical risk,” Lopez told Arab News.

While concerns persist, others point to the strategic resilience of sovereign-backed ventures, particularly in how they adapt to global economic headwinds and recalibrate capital deployment in uncertain markets.

“It is worth noting that the impact of rising tariffs and tighter liquidity may still dampen late-stage fundraising, in the long run,” El Nahlawi said, adding that “sovereign-backed ventures are somewhat shielded, given their longer investment horizons and alignment with national strategic goals.”  

Still, she noted that a shift in investment preferences may be underway. 

“Global headwinds could likely motivate investors to pivot to sharper prioritization of scalable, revenue-generating fintech models by late 2025.” 

The new gatekeepers: What sovereign capital means for global fintech 

This rapid accumulation of capital not only underscores the growing financial clout of SWFs but also highlights the shift from passive investors to strategic actors shaping industry trajectories. 

Gulf funds collectively control around 40 percent of global SWF assets and account for six of the world’s 10 largest sovereign investors, according to Deloitte.  

With combined assets under management nearing $5 trillion and forecasts projecting growth to $7.6 trillion, these state-backed investors are playing an active role in developing infrastructure in emerging markets.  

As of July, the UAE controlled an estimated $2.49 trillion in sovereign wealth assets, making it the third-largest sovereign investor globally, according to Global SWF. 

As sovereign capital becomes more embedded in fintech, its long-term impact on market dynamics and regulation will continue to draw discussion as wealth funds transform into global business empires.


Egypt’s CPI rises 0.2% in August as food, housing costs climb

Egypt’s CPI rises 0.2% in August as food, housing costs climb
Updated 10 September 2025

Egypt’s CPI rises 0.2% in August as food, housing costs climb

Egypt’s CPI rises 0.2% in August as food, housing costs climb

JEDDAH: Egypt’s consumer prices rose 0.2 percent in August, reversing July’s drop, as higher food, tobacco, housing and healthcare costs outweighed declines in meat, fruits and sugar. 

The headline consumer price index reached 257.1 points, up from 256.6 in July, according to the latest data from the Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics, or CAPMAS. 

Annual inflation slowed to 11.2 percent from 13.1 percent a month earlier. 

The rise in Egypt’s CPI comes amid ongoing efforts to stabilize the economy following a series of external shocks, including regional conflicts and Red Sea trade disruptions, according to a July report by the International Monetary Fund.  

It noted that while inflation has eased since September 2023, it remains a key policy challenge due to its heavy impact on purchasing power. 

Food and beverages rose 0.1 percent on the month, led by dairy, cheese and eggs up 0.8 percent, mineral water and juices up 0.8 percent, and oils, fats, coffee and grains each up 0.1 percent.  

Prices declined for meat and poultry by 1.3 percent, fish and seafood by 0.5 percent, fruits by 0.5 percent and sugar by 0.4 percent. 

Outside food, tobacco climbed 1 percent on higher cigarette prices, while clothing and footwear gained 0.9 percent. Housing, water, electricity, gas and fuel advanced 0.5 percent, driven by a 0.9 percent increase in actual rents.  

Household equipment and maintenance rose 1 percent, supported by appliances up 1.4 percent and maintenance goods up 1.1 percent. 

Healthcare increased 0.8 percent on the back of hospital services rising 2.8 percent, while transport slipped 0.3 percent as services declined 0.8 percent. Restaurants and hotels gained 0.4 percent, and miscellaneous goods and services added 0.4 percent. 

On an annual basis, healthcare costs surged 34.2 percent, housing rose 20.1 percent, tobacco 24.6 percent and transport 21.4 percent. Food and beverages increased 1.3 percent, underscoring divergent price pressures across Egypt’s consumption basket.  

With external financing stabilized through IMF support and ongoing reforms, Egyptian authorities are aiming to balance fiscal consolidation with measures to shield vulnerable groups from inflation shocks. 


Middle East emerges as key growth hub for Chinese firms: PwC survey

Middle East emerges as key growth hub for Chinese firms: PwC survey
Updated 10 September 2025

Middle East emerges as key growth hub for Chinese firms: PwC survey

Middle East emerges as key growth hub for Chinese firms: PwC survey

RIYADH: Nearly 90 percent of Chinese companies are planning to expand their operations in the Middle East, reflecting growing confidence in the region’s investment climate, according to a new PwC survey.
The report, based on a survey of 136 Chinese firms, found that and the UAE are the most popular destinations, with 84 percent and 79 percent of companies, respectively, planning investments there.
Financial performance in the region has also improved, with 40 percent of respondents now reporting profitable operations—a sharp rise since 2022—while only 15 percent reported losses. 
About 44 percent of the firms have already formalized business plans, and over 60 percent expressed satisfaction with their regional investments.
Reflecting a strategic shift, 77 percent of respondents said they are moving from representative offices to full-scale operations with dedicated local entities.
“Chinese enterprises are no longer treating the Middle East as an exploratory market – it has become a strategic hub for global growth,” said Linda Cai, Inbound/Outbound Leader at PwC China. 
Sectors attracting the most interest include digital technologies, artificial intelligence, biopharmaceuticals, and renewable energy—aligned with both ’s Vision 2030 and China’s global innovation ambitions.
remains a key target due to its rapidly transforming economy and market potential, while the UAE continues to draw investors as a regional hub offering diverse economic opportunities.
Policy improvements remain a priority: 72 percent of firms are seeking tax incentives beyond free zones, and 74 percent are calling for greater transparency, stability, and efficiency in regional regulations.
“The Middle East is entering a transformative era, marked by diversification, innovation, and stronger global integration,” said Rami Nazer, clients and markets leader at PwC Middle East and PwC EMEA government and public sector leader. “The deepening commitment of Chinese companies signals a new phase in this economic transformation. By bringing expertise, investment, and long-term partnerships, Chinese enterprises are contributing to the region’s sustainable growth and prosperity, reinforcing its increasingly central role in global investment strategy.”
Aligned with China’s Belt and Road Initiative, the survey points to a growing trajectory of cooperation and investment expected to shape the future of Sino-Middle East economic relations.