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º£½ÇÖ±²¥ sees 28.8% rise in Chinese FDI to reach $8.2bn

º£½ÇÖ±²¥ sees 28.8% rise in Chinese FDI to reach $8.2bn
Investment inflows jumped 164 percent year on year to SR8.6 billion, while net inflows more than tripled to SR7 billion. Shutterstock
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Updated 24 August 2025

º£½ÇÖ±²¥ sees 28.8% rise in Chinese FDI to reach $8.2bn

º£½ÇÖ±²¥ sees 28.8% rise in Chinese FDI to reach $8.2bn

RIYADH: Foreign direct investment from China into º£½ÇÖ±²¥ rose in 2024, with total Chinese FDI stock reaching SR31.1 billion ($8.2 billion), up from SR24.1 billion in 2023, a 28.8 percent increase.

Investment inflows jumped 164 percent year on year to SR8.6 billion, while net inflows more than tripled to SR7 billion, highlighting growing investor confidence in the Kingdom’s market and the strengthening economic partnership with China, according to the Saudi Press Agency.

The rise in Chinese FDI comes as º£½ÇÖ±²¥ intensifies efforts to diversify its economy under Vision 2030. 

Minister of Investment Khalid Al-Falih is leading a high-level delegation to China from Aug. 24-29. The visit falls under the Saudi-Chinese High-Level Joint Committee framework and the Joint Committee on Trade, Investment, and Technology, co-chaired by Al-Falih and Chinese Minister of Commerce Wang Wentao. The fifth meeting of this committee was held in May 2025.

Bilateral trade between the two nations exceeds $100 billion annually, making China º£½ÇÖ±²¥â€™s largest trading partner. 

Chinese investments are concentrated in manufacturing but also span financial services, insurance, construction, mining, technology, trade, infrastructure, and healthcare.

During the visit, discussions in Shanghai will focus on petrochemical and industrial value chains, while Beijing meetings will explore financial partnerships and collaboration with state-owned enterprises. 

The delegation will also visit industrial facilities and participate in capital market activities in Hong Kong.

The visit builds on previous milestones in bilateral cooperation, including the Saudi-Chinese Investment Forum in December 2023, which brought together 1,200 government and private sector leaders and resulted in over 60 memorandums of understanding across sectors, including energy, agriculture, tourism, mining, finance, logistics, infrastructure, technology, and healthcare.

Al-Falih also participated in the China-GCC Industrial and Investment Cooperation Forum in May 2024, attended by over 50 Saudi officials and business leaders.


Qatar sells $4bn in two-part debt issue

Qatar sells $4bn in two-part debt issue
Updated 5 sec ago

Qatar sells $4bn in two-part debt issue

Qatar sells $4bn in two-part debt issue

ABU DHABI: Qatar, among the world’s top exporters of liquefied natural gas, tapped global debt markets for $4 billion in a two-tranche issue which attracted hefty order books and allowed the Gulf state to achieve more favorable pricing than initially indicated.

Qatar sold a $1 billion, three-year bond at 15 basis points over US Treasuries and a $3 billion Islamic bond, or sukuk, with a 10-year tenor at 20 basis points over the same benchmark, according to a document from a lead manager.

Orders for the issuance hit $13.5 billion ahead of launch, fixed income news service IFR reported, allowing the sovereign — rated AA by Fitch and S&P and Aa2 by Moody’s — to tighten pricing substantially from earlier guidance.

In the second quarter of 2025, Qatar posted a budget deficit of 757 million riyals ($208 million) as public spending rose 5.7 percent from a year earlier and lower oil prices weighed on revenue.

It raised $3 billion from debt markets in February.

Several Gulf sovereigns have issued debt in recent weeks as strong global appetite and attractive borrowing costs have allowed governments to increase funding sources to help refinance debt, plug budget deficits, and invest in ambitious economic diversification plans.

Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs International, QNB Capital and Standard Chartered Bank were mandated global coordinators on Qatar’s bond issue. They were joined by Santander, Citi, Emirates NBD Capital, ICBC, IMI-Intesa Sanpaolo and SMBC as joint lead managers.

Citi, Deutsche Bank, QNB Capital and Standard Chartered Bank were global coordinators for the sukuk as well as joint lead managers along with Al Rayan Investment, Dubai Islamic Bank, Emirates NBD Capital, Goldman Sachs, Islamic Corporation for the Development of the Private Sector, IMI-Intesa Sanpaolo and KFH Capital.