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#541
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Saudi Arabia aims to make bank financing easier for SMEs
The Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA) has launched a new system to help banks evaluate the performance of small and medium enterprises (SMEs) before providing loans with confidence, Arab News has reported. "The assessment system that was launched today removes one of the major obstacles facing the development of SMEs," he said. According to a study presented at the Riyadh Economic Forum, about 90% of companies in the kingdom are SMEs. Source: Arab News
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#542
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Saudi Aramco, Total Refinery JV Sukuk oversubscribed
Saudi Aramco Total Refining and Petrochemical Company's (SATORP) Islamic bond, or sukuk was 3.5 times oversubscribed, making the final offering size of $1bn, Dow Jones Newswire reported. The floating rate sukuk will have a tenor of about 14 years, the firm said in a statement. It was offered at six-month Saudi interbank offered rate, or SAIBOR, plus 95 basis points. The refinery was projected to cost about $14bn to construct capable of carrying 400,000 barrels per day exports. This is expected to be completed and active by the end of 2013. Source: Dow Jones Newswire
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#543
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Aramco, Dow Chemical to form petrochemical JV
Aramco and US Dow Chemical have agreed to form a $20bn petrochemical joint venture in Jubail, Reuters has reported. Saudi Aramco said the move is in line with plans aimed at balancing its energy portfolio by increasing exposure to downstream industries and maximising profits from existing oil and gas streams. The state-run firm is considering building three new joint venture refineries in Asia in order to increase its global refining capacity by 50% to over 6m barrels per day (bpd). Source: Reuters
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#544
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Saudi market rises the fourth day straight
The Tadawul All Share Index closed 0.61% higher at 6,136.97 points. The Riyadh-based benchmark was mainly lifted by advances in the financial and petrochemical sector. Sabic added half a percent and closed at SR92.25. Saudi Hotels & Resort Areas Co. closed up 0.35% at SR28.70. Earlier in the day, Saudi Hotels announced that net profit during the third quarter amounted to SR41.1m as compared to SR32.6m for the same quarter of the previous year with growth of 26.1 and compared to SR35.7m for the previous quarter with growth of 15.1%. "The major reason behind the profit increase is the improvement in the operating results of the most properties," the firm said in a statement posted on the Tadawul website. Source: Ame Info
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#545
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Saudi Safco's Q3 net profit doubles
Saudi Arabian Fertilizer Co (Safco) has said its third-quarter net profits have doubled after prices for its products rose globally, Reuters has reported. Safco, which produces urea and ammonia, made a net profit of SR1.2bn in the third quarter, compared with SR604m last year. Operational profit for the quarter surged 97% to SR1.1bn, Safco said. Source: Reuters
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#546
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Saudi Arabia set to build, assemble cars by 2021
Saudi Arabia plans to manufacture car parts by 2013 and to build two car models and assemble cars in about 10 years, said an official who is handling the development of country’s automotive industry. “It’s a big challenge and that is why the government is involved in developing the automotive sector,” Azzam Shalabi, president of the government’s National Industrial Clusters Programme, said in an interview on Monday in the eastern coastal city of Dammam. The kingdom, the world’s largest oil exporter, is trying to develop new conversion industries in areas around refineries and petrochemical plants that are being built by Saudi Arabian Oil Co and Saudi Basic Industries Corp. The country is developing the clusters to diversify the economy and provide more jobs to its rapidly growing population. In those areas, Saudi Aramco and Sabic, as the companies are known, will provide petrochemical products to producers of finished goods used in making cars, solar-energy products, home appliances, and plastic and packaging products, Shalabi said. The Sadara chemical joint venture of Saudi Aramco and the Dow Chemical Co will create a plastics-manufacturing park next to its complex, said Fayez al-Sharef, Aramco’s chemical project director. The park will create businesses valued at $2bn, he said in Dammam on Monday. “We estimate that by developing a sustainable scale industry, the kingdom could create 100,000 direct jobs and add SR40bn ($11bn) to the GDP annually.” He said that a sustainable industry will be producing about 500,000 cars a year. Saudi Arabia will be developing two car models, to be called the Ghazal and Assilah, he said. The Ghazal is being developed by King Saud University, and the Riyadh Techno Valley Co. is conducting a project-feasibility study for it. The Assilah will be developed by King Abdulaziz City of Science and Technology, he said. Saudi Arabia is also trying to convince large automotive companies to assemble cars in the kingdom. Japan’s Isuzu Motors Ltd. has a plant to assemble heavy and medium-size trucks in Dammam, where it will start production in 2012 with the aim of producing 25,000 vehicles a year, Shalabi said. To attract foreign auto investors, Saudi Arabia is developing an automotive-zone master plan that will allow manufacturers to share some production facilities and logistics operations. “This zone concept is being discussed with auto companies to validate its feasibility and acceptability,” Shalabi said. The government is also giving financial incentives to investors. The state-owned funds will provide 75 percent of the project cost as a soft loan for 20 years in underdeveloped areas of the country, such as Najran in the south and Tabuk in the north, while it will finance 50 percent of the project for 15 years in other areas of the country, he said. Source: Bloomberg
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#547
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Saudi Telecom eyes new licences in MENA region
Saudi Telecom Co (STC) is targeting acquisitions and licences in the Middle East and North Africa and is confident of securing funding for any deals, the head of its international operations said on Monday. STC, which owns 35 percent of Turkish group Oger Telecom, licences in Bahrain and Kuwait and a controlling stake in Indonesian firm Axis, wants to expand. "Our future investments will continue to focus on the Middle East and North Africa predominantly and then Asia ... we thought there were not any opportunities (in the Middle East) a year ago, but looking at the region today the picture is changing," Ghassan Hasbani told Reuters in an interview. "There are greenfield opportunities that will emerge or existing operations that are up for sale or potentially up for sale. There's a lot of hidden potential that will emerge in the next 18 to 24 months." STC and Qatar Telecommunications (Qtel) were the two final bidders for Syria's third mobile licence, but the auction remains on hold as the government mounts a deadly crackdown against protesters demanding an end to President Bashar al-Assad's rule. "We are waiting for new signals on that market (Syria) on where the process is going. Nothing has changed," said Hasbani. Another target could be Iraq, with Saudi Arabia's northern neighbour aiming to auction a fourth mobile licence by year-end. "When that process is underway we would look at it seriously," said Hasbani. STC will be able to tap debt markets for acquisitions. "Funding was more limited in 2008, but today for companies like STC I don't they think will have problems finding funding at good rates," said Hasbani. "We only look to borrow money when there's an imminent opportunity. According to that opportunity we will look at our debt-equity mix." Source: Reuters
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#548
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Saudi, Sudan to explore Red Sea basin for gold and silver
Sudan and Saudi Arabia plan to produce within three years gold, silver and copper in large quantities from the bottom of the Red Sea, trying to execute a project in planning for almost four decades, a senior Sudanese official said. Both Arab countries, which lie across each other in the Red Sea, have been sounding out since the mid-seventies on how to exploit large mineral deposits suspected to be 2,000 metres below sea levels. A German firm first analysed in the seventies the Atlantis II basin which is located roughly half way between the Saudi port city of Jeddah and Port Sudan, the biggest port on the African country. Using that data, both countries - which agreed long ago to jointly explore the potential of the Red Sea - now plan to start production in 2014 using special drill ships, said Abbas Al Sheikh, undersecretary in the Sudanese mining ministry. Sudan will explore the basin with Saudi firm Manafa International which has formed a joint-venture with Canadian firm Diamond Fields International for the task. "It's a lot," Sheikh said on Sunday on the sidelines of an industry conference in Port Sudan when asked how much both countries planned to produce from there. Based on past estimates the basin stretching some 60 square kilometres contains 47 tonnes of gold, 3,750 tonnes of silver, 1.89 million tonnes of Zinc plus around 425,000 tonnes of copper, a Sudanese ministry study says. The rock in the basin "indicates that sediments in some parts of the Atlantis basin may attain a total thickness of up to 160 metres," Diamond Fields says on its website. Sheikh declined to say how much the project would cost, saying only it had now become viable after gold and copper prices have risen strongly: "It is very costly...but now gold and copper prices are high. It's expensive." Diamond Fields said more than $70m had been spent to date by Saudi Arabia alone on research. Industry experts said extracting the minerals from the sea bottom would be difficult and expensive, putting a question mark over the production date. Processing the minerals at a plant would cost $200 million or more. "There are significant technological challenges," said Tucker Barrie, a Canadian mining consultant attending the conference. The operation would need around 200 workers on rotation on sea plus 300-500 people working on land at a metallurgy plant. Barrie said copper would be the most interesting mineral to extract from the deep-water basin: "Copper is the most value resource....From the size it is all copper." Neither Saudi Arabia nor Sudan had a copper smelter to process the minerals, Barrie said. Building one would cost around $2bn which would make sense instead of taking the copper somewhere else for processing. Sheikh said both governments had not yet decided where to process the extracted minerals. Sudan is expanding its minerals and gold production to compensate for the loss of most oil reserves to newly-independent South Sudan. Source: Reuters
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#549
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The gold price per gram is SR 175.99
October 13, 2011 after mednight
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#550
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Saudi's Aviation Link makes Airbus narrowbodies order
Saudi-based Aviation Link has signed an agreement to buy two Airbus aircraft, an ACJ319 corporate jet and an A319 airliner, Arabian Aerospace has reported. Set for delivery in the second half of next year, Aviation Link is to manage both aircraft on behalf of two undisclosed customers. Source: Arabian Aerospace
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