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Saudi POS transactions hit $3.6bn in early November amid airline spending boost聽

Saudi POS transactions hit $3.6bn in early November amid airline spending boost聽
Spending in the airline sector rose 5.3 percent across the week. Getty
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Saudi POS transactions hit $3.6bn in early November amid airline spending boost聽

Saudi POS transactions hit $3.6bn in early November amid airline spending boost聽

RIYADH: 黑料社区鈥檚 total point-of-sale transactions reached SR13.71 billion ($3.65 billion) in the week ending Nov. 8, driven by increased spending on airlines.聽

According to data from the Saudi Central Bank, also known as SAMA, spending in the airline sector rose 5.3 percent to SR66.68 million, even as the number of transactions declined 5.3 percent to 138,000.聽

Overall POS spending dropped 14.4 percent week on week, while the total number of transactions fell 7.5 percent to 235.47 million compared with 254.45 million the previous week.聽

Data revealed decreases across most categories, led by freight transport, postal and courier services, which saw the largest dip at 26.3 percent to reach SR47.15 million. Spending on telecommunication followed, with a 24.4 percent decrease to reach SR183.17 million.聽

Expenditure on food and beverages decreased 21.9 percent to SR2.08 billion, accounting for the largest share of total POS spending.聽

The subcategory of personal care saw a 15.7 percent decrease to reach SR124.95 million, while expenditure on auto and equipment rentals saw a 20.7 percent fall to SR71.53 million.聽

Spending on restaurants and cafes dipped by 10.5 percent to SR1.64 billion, while apparel and clothing decreased by 10.2 percent to SR1.23 billion, claiming the third largest share of the POS during the monitored week.聽

The Kingdom鈥檚 key urban centers mirrored the national decline. Riyadh, which accounted for the largest share of total POS spending, saw a 10.2 percent dip to SR4.91 billion, down from SR5.46 billion the previous week. The number of transactions in the capital reached 78.07 million.聽

In Jeddah, transaction values decreased 9.6 percent to SR1.85 billion, while Dammam reported a 10.2 percent dip to SR688.21 million.聽

POS data, tracked weekly by SAMA, provides an indicator of consumer spending trends and the ongoing growth of digital payments in 黑料社区.聽

The figures also highlight聽the expanding reach of POS infrastructure, extending beyond major retail hubs to smaller cities and service sectors, supporting broader digital inclusion initiatives.聽

The growth of digital payment technologies aligns with 黑料社区鈥檚 Vision 2030 objectives, promoting electronic transactions and contributing to the Kingdom鈥檚 broader digital economy.聽


From consumers to creators: 黑料社区 is engineering its own AI future

From consumers to creators: 黑料社区 is engineering its own AI future
Updated 14 November 2025

From consumers to creators: 黑料社区 is engineering its own AI future

From consumers to creators: 黑料社区 is engineering its own AI future
  • KSU is training engineers to not just use AI, but design the systems

RIYADH: King Saud University鈥檚 College of Engineering is positioning itself as a proving ground for a new kind of Saudi engineer 鈥 one who treats AI not as a mere software tool, but as an engineering layer that redefines how the Kingdom designs infrastructure, energy systems, defense technologies, communications networks, and smart materials.

This transformation is not cosmetic. It is structural, embedded deep in the curriculum, linked with industry, and aligned with a national mandate. 鈥淜SU鈥檚 College of Engineering is aligning its AI push squarely with Vision 2030 toward building a talent base to deliver on the 66 of 96 national objectives linked to data and AI,鈥 said Abdulelah Alshehri, assistant professor of chemical engineering at the college. 

鈥淭he result would be engineers who do not just adopt tools, but create local and superior technologies that boost competitiveness, security, and a knowledge economy.鈥

King Saud University and Saudi Data & AI Authority unite to advance AI-driven education. (Supplied)

The shift reflects a broader reality: AI is no longer an isolated discipline buried inside computer science departments. It has become a force multiplier shaping which nations lead in defense autonomy, manufacturing localization, space systems, medical devices, energy optimization, and the next generation of 6G networks. To lead, engineers must understand physics, hardware, data, and algorithms as a unified system, not as separate domains.

鈥淔uture engineers should not be just AI users; they would architect the systems within which AI is implemented,鈥 said Alshehri. 鈥淭hey would frame the problem and data, build and test AI models, and finally fuse algorithms with hardware, safety and regulation so systems act responsibly in the real world.鈥

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This vision is being formalized through KSU鈥檚 flagship AI for Engineering Center, approved for launch in 2025. The center merges academic research with real-world application, acting as a living testbed where students and researchers develop and test AI-driven solutions for energy, autonomous mobility, national defense, and environmental analytics. By connecting university labs directly with industry needs, the center accelerates prototyping, real-data validation, and faster deployment for sectors such as energy and mobility.

The transformation also reaches classrooms. The college has introduced a new bilingual AI and Engineering curriculum that treats AI and engineering as one language with two alphabets: physics and data. 鈥淯nlike traditional programs where AI is a late-stage elective, KSU鈥檚 bilingual model teaches engineering students to think in two languages from day one,鈥 Alshehri said. 

Abdulelah Alshehri, assistant professor of chemical engineering. (Supplied)

Graduates will leave with AI literacy embedded in labs, capstones, and industry projects 鈥 not as a certificate, but as a default competency.

Majid Altamimi, dean of the College of Engineering, describes this decision as a response to the speed of global change.

鈥淲e realized that artificial intelligence is transforming every field of engineering. It is becoming the key to building smarter systems, complex automation, and creating more sustainable designs,鈥 he said. 鈥淏y weaving AI into everything we teach and research, we are ensuring our graduates are not just ready for the future, they are ready to shape it.鈥

Majid Altamimi, dean of KSU's College of Engineering. (Supplied)

That ambition is already taking physical form. The KSU college has inaugurated two AI-driven specialized labs, one focused on communication networks and the other on advanced materials, both aligned with national industrial priorities. 鈥淥ur new labs in communication networks and advanced materials are designed to turn great ideas into real-world products,鈥 Altamimi said.

鈥淚n one lab, we鈥檙e working on the next wave of connectivity like 6G and IoT. In the other, we鈥檙e creating new, smarter materials for energy and sustainability. Crucially, we work hand-in-hand with industry partners to prototype and test these innovations, ensuring our research makes a tangible impact on 黑料社区鈥檚 technological competitiveness,鈥 he added.

DID YOU KNOW?

鈥 KSU鈥檚 College of Engineering trains Saudi engineers to design AI systems, not just use them. The college is aligning its AI push squarely with Vision 2030 toward building a talent base. It is ensuring that its graduates are not just ready for the future, they are ready to shape it.

鈥 The college is aligning its AI push squarely with Vision 2030 toward building a talent base.

鈥 It is ensuring that its graduates are not just ready for the future, they are ready to shape it.

KSU is also expanding its international footprint through deep collaboration with leading global universities. The College has signed five two-year partnerships with UCL, NUS, Tsinghua, Shanghai Jiao Tong, and Zhejiang University to advance joint research, faculty exchange, and dual-degree programs. These collaborations provide students and researchers access to world-class expertise, strengthening KSU鈥檚 research capacity and reinforcing 黑料社区鈥檚 position as an emerging global innovation hub.

Yet the most strategic value of the College鈥檚 pivot may not lie in its labs or partnerships, but in its timing. 黑料社区 has already built the infrastructure for an AI economy through sovereign cloud platforms, national data policies, and hyperscale compute deals. The next bottleneck is talent. The Kingdom needs engineers capable of building 6G-secure networks, autonomous defense systems, AI-guided energy grids, and locally designed materials 鈥 not just operating imported software.

AI-driven communication research at KSU explores next-generation 6G and IoT connectivity to power 黑料社区鈥檚 smart cities. (CCNull image)

鈥淭omorrow鈥檚 engineering is AI-defined from grids that self-optimize, materials discovered by algorithms, to autonomous systems coordinating at city scale,鈥 Alshehri said. 鈥淔uture engineering graduates who can architect these agentic, trustworthy systems will power Vision 2030鈥檚 diversification.鈥

This is the quiet race beneath the AI headlines: not who installs AI, but who engineers it. Not who consumes compute, but who designs the systems that require it. Not who imports models, but who trains the minds that build sovereign ones.

A 3D printing and prototyping lab at King Saud University supports hands-on AI engineering projects and technology localization under Vision 2030. (Supplied)

Alshehri believes the coming decade will belong to Saudi engineers ready to lead with curiosity, ethics, and skill. 鈥淭he nation is investing and offering tremendous opportunities and the world is watching, so be curious, ethical, hands-on so we can lead the shift from using engineering tools to creating them in the new era of AI-driven engineering,鈥 he said.

KSU鈥檚 bet is that the next great Saudi breakthrough will not come from a cloud console, but from a lab table where equations, code, and national strategy meet.