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#41
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Lexus invests in new Saudi shownroom
Abdul Latif Jameel Group (ALJ), the exclusive distributor of Toyota, Lexus & Daihatsu in Saudi Arabia, is investing in a SR250m ($66.5m) into a new Lexus centre in the capital, Riyadh, Arab News has reported. The new Lexus centre will provide main services including sales of new and used Lexus cars, service and spare parts. The new facility comprises a 3,000 sq m showroom accommodating around 20 brand new vehicles, a used cars showroom with a capacity of about 15 vehicles, and a service division to accommodate 83 vehicles, which could be services simultaneously. Source: Arab News
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#42
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Saudi stock exchange advances slightly
The Riyadh-based Tadawul All Share Index (TASI) finished 0.21% higher at 6,519.76. Arabian Pipes Company was the top gainer, closing 9.96% higher at SR29.80. Saudi Arabia is the largest oil exporting country in the world. Citibank-analyst David Lubin comments in his latest oil study on Saudi Arabia: "Pressure on oil exporting countries to spend seems to have increased recently as a result of the political pressures created by the 'Arab Spring'. The most visible effort to increase spending in the face of political pressure has been Saudi Arabia's, where the authorities have committed to two successive fiscal packages, of $37bn and $80bn respectively: the two add up to some 25% GDP. In addition, higher levels of oil production in Saudi Arabia, to offset that lost from Libya, should boost Saudi GDP growth this year." Oil prices continued to trade above $115 per barrel. Market bellwether SABIC dipped by a quarter percent on profit bookings, closing at SR103.25. Source: Ame Info
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#43
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Saudi Arabia pledges to stamp our corruption
A senior Saudi Arabia minister on Monday said the kingdom would leave no stone unturned in its fight against corruption. Prince Nayef bin Abdulaziz, Saudi's second deputy prime minister and minister of interior, made the pledge as he met with the man put in charge of a new anti-corruption unit. Prince Nayef told Mohammad bin Abdullah Al-Sharif, chairman of the National Authority for Combating Corruption (NACC) - announced by King Abdullah last week: "The fight against corruption has wide meanings and implications such as fighting a disease. All doors should be open to you to perform your duties sincerely, faithfully and easily." Prince Nayef said the NACC had been established as an "implantation of a national strategy to protect integrity and fight corruption in the country", state news agency SPA reported. The direct link between the NACC and the Saudi King, it said, reflected the King's support and concern of ensuring that "no challenging obstacles would face the mission of this developmental institute". King Abdullah announced the new commission for combatting corruption earlier this month, as part of a raft of measures including $93bn of handouts to citizens. A series of decrees outlined a boost in welfare benefits, a minimum wage of SR3,000 ($800) for state employees, bonuses for public sector workers and students, and a drive to build new housing. The numbers announced were large: SR250bn ($66.7bn) would be spent on 500,000 housing units and SR16bn ($4.3bn) on more medical facilities. This followed a $37bn package announced last month in an initial move to ease social tensions. Source: Arabian Business
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#44
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Saudi Arabia to hold local selections on Sept 22
Saudi Arabia, the Arab world’s largest economy, will hold municipal elections on September 22 as pro-democracy unrest sweeps through the region. Voter registration will open on April 23 and results will be announced within 48 hours, the general elections commission said on Monday. The announcement comes after Saudi King Abdullah on March 18 ordered an increase in spending, including $67bn on housing and funds for the military and religious groups that have backed a ban on domestic protests. A call for a March 11 demonstration in the kingdom failed to materialize after the government deployed troops and senior clerics denounced protests as un-Islamic. More than two months of protests have shaken the Middle East and North Africa as citizens demand civil rights, higher living standards and the ouster of autocratic regimes. In Bahrain, a Saudi neighbour, security forces quelled mainly Shiite demonstrators calling for democracy after Saudi-led troops from the Gulf Cooperation Council entered the country on March 14. Although Saudi Arabia held its first municipal elections in February 2005, the second election was delayed in May 2009. Saudi Arabia is the least democratic country in the Middle East and ranks 160th out of 167 countries worldwide, according to the Democracy Index for 2010 published by the Economist Intelligence Unit. All political parties and organizations are banned in Saudi Arabia. Source: Bloomberg
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#45
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Saudi needs $80 bn power investment by 2021, says minister
Saudi Arabia has to invest SAR300bn ($80.2bn) in the power sector over ten years and requires an additional 30 gigawatts over the next 20 years to meet its needs, a government official said on Monday. "Over the next ten years, we need over 300 billion Saudi riyals to be invested ... as we need to add more capacity," Saleh Al Awaji, the country's deputy minister for electricity, told an energy conference in Abu Dhabi. The current available power capacity in Saudi is 50 GW compared with 23,800 MW in 2000, Awaji said, adding the average growth forecast was for eight percent annually. He added an additional capacity of 27 to 30 GW power would be needed over the next 20 years. Although sitting on the world's biggest oil and gas reserves, Saudi Arabia is struggling to keep pace with rapidly rising power demand, as petrodollars have fuelled a region-wide economic boom as well as rapid population growth. "The biggest challenge facing Saudi's power sector is the high rate of demand growth, the need for capital and attracting private investors." Awaji said that about half a million new housing units were coming up in the next three to five years and so a lot of energy would be needed to serve these units. "We need to anticipate measures to reduce the high rate of growth and investigate the major areas of electricity consumption, which is air conditioning," he said. Independent Power Projects (IPP) from 2011 to 2020 will add 12,000 MW of capacity and this is estimated to cost SAR80bn. The kingdom said earlier this month it would step up its use of crude oil for power generation in 2011. Awaji also said the water sector had similar challenges. Ongoing projects in the water sector are valued at SAR120bn currently. "There is still a huge market for investors in the water sector," he said. Source: Reuters
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#46
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Social spending spree may push Saudi inflation up
Saudi Arabia may see inflation from massive social spending packages announced over the past month, the kingdom's finance minister said. Ibrahim al-Assaf said, however, that he hoped any impact would be muted from any spending. Saudi Arabia's elderly King Abdullah announced last week $93bn in social handouts, on top of another $37bn announced less than a month earlier, as popular protests sweep across the region. "Any increase in spending could have an impact on inflation," Ibrahim al-Assaf said. "But if there is any impact we hope it is temporary and limited." Saudi annual inflation slowed to a 10-month low of 4.9 percent in February, with growth in housing and transport costs subsiding, though analysts said the slowdown was temporary due to robust global food prices and crude above $100 per barrel. Asked about funding for the spending programme, Assaf said: "The funding will come from the budget." Assaf said earlier in March the kingdom's economy is in "excellent" shape and a rise in oil prices will boost the strong economic and financial position of the world's top oil exporter. Source: Reuters
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#47
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Saudi Arabia’s break-even oil price was about $80 a barrel, Saidi syas
Saudi Arabia’s break-even oil price was about $80 a barrel in 2010, the chief economist at Dubai International Financial Centre Authority said. The kingdom uses as much oil domestically as Germany, which has four times as many people, Nasser Saidi said at a conference in Dubai on Monday. The break-even oil price for many countries in the Middle East is about $80-$85 a barrel, making them very vulnerable to fluctuations in prices as it’s easy to increase spending but a lot harder to bring that spending down, he said. Source: Bloomberg
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#48
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Yanbu airport gets upgrade
Saudi General Authority of Civil Aviation (GACA) has upgraded Prince Abdul Mohsen Airport in Yanbu into a regional airport, Arab News has reported. "We have also taken this decision considering the growing passenger traffic to Yanbu," GACA said in a statement. Spanning over an area of 8,500 sq m, the airport features new control towers, cargo facilities, security and safety systems, as well as modern aviation and passenger facilities to serve 600,000 travellers annually. Source: Arab News
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#49
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Tadawul bourse declines by 0.18%
The Saudi Arabian Tadawul market closed 0.18% lower at 6,508.28. Allianz Saudi Fransi Cooperative Insurance Company was the top gainer, closing 9.94% higher at SR19.90. Petrochemical leader SABIC dipped for the second day straight, closing 0.73% lower at SR102.50. Eighty shares gained, 50 declined and 15 closed flat. Source: Ame Info
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#50
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Saudi Arabia has approves mortgage laws modifications
Saudi Arabia has approved modifications to the kingdom's mortgage law related to loans, Arab News has reported. According to the new law, the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (Sama) will be authorised to issue licenses to companies to register such mortgage agreements between two parties. The draft mortgage law is a package of five laws, including a mortgage registration law, which provides for the use of mortgages in real property financing, including mortgage registration. Source: Ame Info
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