Future global challenges requires human capital building, says expert panel

Saudi Arabia’s Permanent Representative to the EU, Haifa Al-Jedea.
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Updated 28 February 2024
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Future global challenges requires human capital building, says expert panel

RIYADH: Economic development, conflict resolution, and future resilience are all rooted in cross-border human capital readiness, a panel of experts claimed during the Human Capability Initiative in Riyadh.

As the global community grapples with an ever-growing climate crisis, geopolitical tensions, and an imminent “fourth” industrial revolution, Saudi Arabia’s Permanent Representative to the EU, Haifa Al-Jedea, emphasized the need for accelerated access to essential human capital. 

For this to happen at the required scale and speed, she affirmed the necessity for multilateral efforts involving governments, multinational entities, and the private sector. 

Al-Jedea raised questions about whether sufficient investment and attention are being directed toward human capital within the existing global systems. She highlighted that the current frameworks may fall short in addressing future global challenges. 

She said: “Are we using the same priorities that are being applied in the private sector to UN organizations in our peace efforts? Are we investing in the same way that we are in our war efforts toward peace that includes human capability development, but also the application of different kinds of tech?” 

Al-Jedea said she echoed the need to adapt international organizations to focus on future skills, adding: “The system that is created today was created in the post-World War II environment. Are we ready? As the UN, as the European Union, as any other international organization, together with governments, are we ready to tackle future issues? Do we have the human capabilities within our organizations and governments to be able to tackle these future challenges?” 

A recent report on the prosperity of nations revealed that about 80 percent of a country’s wealth is generated from human capital, as stated by Fadia Saadah, the World Bank’s regional director of human development in the Middle East and North Africa. 

In less developed nations, this figure decreases to around 40 percent, as outlined by Saadah, thus affirming that in order to advance development, more specifically inclusive development, “we cannot do so without the adequate human capital.”  

At the core of building the necessary talent, is a grassroots approach, she noted, saying: “Whenever we talk about human capital, you really have to work with local institutions and with local capacity. I prefer to say unleashing the capacity rather than building it because I think there’s a lot of capacity that sometimes we just need to direct it and invest in it. So working and joining hands with local institutions is critical for any initiative that’s looking at human capital.” 

The World Economic Forum’s managing director Saadia Zahidi, speaking alongside Saadah, highlighted the organization’s efforts to implement concrete examples of localized re-skilling and up-skilling.

These initiatives aim to serve as scalable models on a global level, addressing the human capital deficit. 

Among them is the “reskilling revolution” initiative, which seeks to better educate and train a billion people over the span of 10 years, with a target of completion by 2030, Zahidi said.  

“In 20 countries, we have helped set up education, skills, and jobs accelerators. And together, this set of work has already reached 600 million people, well ahead of the target that we had set for ourselves. So, I believe, at least, that it’s very possible, from the experiments that we’ve done so far, that we can actually surface the best-in-class knowledge and get countries to put some of these in place,” she added. 

Managing the vast array of transitions that the world is witnessing in an equitable manner requires an inclusive approach that “makes people feel like they are participating in economic opportunities in the world,” said Kai Roemmelt, the CEO of Udacity, while speaking on the panel. 

He attributed much of the tensions witnessed in many communities — whether terrorism, extremism, or poverty — to a lack of equal access. Roemmelt praised the technological surge of the fourth industrial revolution as an asset, rather than a detriment to human capacity building. 

“So, we need to make sure that that we give people access to opportunity, and I think AI and online learning are ways to do that. There are a lot of programs; we have a program that we do together with Google for Palestine. We have programs for underprivileged youth in many parts of the world. And I believe that allows people equal access to these opportunities, regardless of where they are, regardless of whether they are in a city in a rural area,” he said. 


Global markets: Shares rise on China-US trade hopes, dollar on the back foot

Updated 27 June 2025
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Global markets: Shares rise on China-US trade hopes, dollar on the back foot

PARIS: Global shares rallied on Friday, helped by signs of progress in US-China trade talks, while the dollar held close to its lowest levels in more than three years.

World stock markets have rallied to record highs this week, as traders took confidence from a ceasefire between Iran and Israel and markets stepped up bets for US rate cuts.

A trade agreement between the US and China on Thursday on how to expedite rare earth shipments to the US was also seen by markets as a positive sign, amid efforts to end the tariff war between the world’s two biggest economies.

Asian shares hit their highest in more than three years in early trading, and US stock futures pointed to a firm start for Wall Street shares.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index was up 0.8 percent on the day, set for a 1.1 percent weekly gain — its best week since mid-May.

London’s FTSE 100 was up 0.5 percent and Germany’s DAX gained 0.6 percent.

The MSCI World Equity Index touched a fresh record high and was set for a weekly gain of 2.8 percent.

The S&P 500 index is up just 4.4 percent this year overall, following a volatile first half of the year, dominated by US President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariff announcement on April 2, which sent stocks plunging.

“What we are having right now is potentially some optimism about some trade deals,” said Vasileios Gkionakis, senior economist and strategist at Aviva Investors.

“We have ... come from quite low levels in the aftermath of the Liberation Day in April. To a certain extent we have also had some mini-selloff on the back of the events in the Middle East, and in that sense we’re rebounding.”

Trump has set July 9 as the deadline for the EU and other countries to reach a deal to reduce tariffs.

Mark Haefele, chief investment officer at UBS Global Wealth Management said that in the near-term, the firm saw greater upside potential in US and emerging markets than in Europe.

Dollar drop

The dollar remained on the backfoot, hovering near its lowest level in 3-1/2 years against the euro and sterling.

The dollar index was down a touch on the day at 97.269 , holding near its lowest in more than three years. The euro was at $1.1708, getting a lift after data showed French consumer prices rose more than expected in June.

It held near multi-year peaks hit a day earlier.

“We see the US dollar as unattractive,” said Haefele at UBS Wealth Management.

Markets are focused on US monetary policy, as traders weigh up the possibility of Trump announcing a new, more dovish chair of the Federal Reserve.

Traders have stepped up their bets on US rate cuts, and are now pricing in 64 basis points (bps) of easing this year versus 46 bps expected on Friday.

The dollar is having its worst start to a year since the era of free-floating currencies began in the early 1970s.

“I don’t think it’s just the repricing of the Fed, I think there is a broader issue here of some tarnishing of US exceptionalism,” Aviva Investors’ Gkionakis said.

Core PCE price data, the US central bank’s preferred measure of inflation, is due later in the session.

German 30-year government bond yields were on track for their biggest weekly increase in nearly four months after rising this week on expectations of increased borrowing by Germany’s government.

 


PIF embraces ‘precision finance’ with diversified debt strategy, says Global SWF

Updated 27 June 2025
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PIF embraces ‘precision finance’ with diversified debt strategy, says Global SWF

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund is embracing a calibrated, multi-instrument approach to debt issuance described by Global SWF as a model of “precision finance.”

According to the research firm, the purpose — following the issuance of the commercial paper program in June — is to align PIF’s funding tools with investment timelines, liquidity needs, and investor targeting, while reinforcing financial discipline across its expanding portfolio.

In its report, Global SWF noted that PIF is moving away from a singular focus on long-term mega-bond issuances and toward a more agile debt framework that includes commercial paper, sukuk, green bonds, and multi-tranche conventional bonds.

This strategy is designed not just to raise capital, but to do so with precision, which is matching maturities to project lifecycles and diversifying funding sources across global markets.

Global SWF highlighted that PIF’s latest move, completes a full-spectrum debt portfolio that now includes ultra-short to ultra-long maturity instruments.

The commercial paper, issued in US dollar and euro denominations via offshore special-purpose vehicles, secured the highest short-term credit ratings available: Prime-1 from Moody’s and F1+ from Fitch.

These ratings reflect exceptional credit quality and grant PIF access to deep liquidity pools among institutional investors such as money market funds.

The commercial paper program is a critical addition to a borrowing strategy that also includes a $3 billion 100-year green bond issued in October 2022, a $5.5 billion green bond in February 2023, a $3.5 billion sukuk in October 2023, and a series of multi-tranche bonds and sukuk issued through early 2025. 

With each offering, PIF has tailored tenor, currency, and structure to match specific financial and investor objectives.

The evolution of PIF’s financial strategy is closely tied to its broader transformation under Vision 2030. Since 2016, the fund has grown its assets under management from $160 billion to $941.3 billion, according to the latest Vision 2030 Annual Report. It has now increased its 2030 AUM target to $2.67 trillion, reflecting its expanded mandate and rising international profile.

PIF’s investment strategy is balanced between domestic development and global positioning. About 40 percent of its assets are allocated to Saudi-based companies and projects, while the remaining 60 percent target international sectors such as technology, logistics, mining, and tourism.

According to the Vision 2030 report, PIF’s initiatives have helped create 1.1 million jobs, attracted over $37 billion in private capital, and grown the number of PIF-established companies from 45 in 2021 to 93 in 2024.

A strategic departure from Gulf norms

While other sovereign wealth funds such as Norway’s NBIM remain entirely debt-free, and Singapore’s Temasek or China Investment Corporation borrow sparingly, PIF has opted for a hybrid model, one that combines government equity injections with strategic use of debt instruments.

According to Global SWF, this is not a matter of opportunistic borrowing. Rather, PIF is practicing deliberate asset-liability matching which focuses on issuing long-dated bonds to support giga-projects like NEOM or The Line, while using short-term debt for working capital needs and market-timed investments.

Sukuk offerings help tap into regional Islamic finance liquidity, and green bonds target environmental, social, and governance-focused global capital.

This differentiated approach allows PIF to broaden its investor base while keeping funding costs aligned with the nature and duration of its projects.

Why ratings matter

The fund’s credibility is bolstered by strong long-term credit ratings: Aa3 from Moody’s and A+ from Fitch. This has allowed it to secure favorable terms on successive bond offerings and confirmed that PIF is regarded as an exceptionally low-risk short-term borrower, giving it seamless access to institutional liquidity globally.

Global SWF emphasized that the ratings, combined with diverse issuance formats, position PIF among a small group of sovereign wealth funds with the internal capability to manage complex, multi-layered debt programs.

Saudi Arabia is currently navigating a tighter fiscal environment, with a projected 2.3 percent budget deficit in 2025 and a more disciplined approach to public spending.

In this context, PIF’s access to capital markets is more than just financial, according to Global SWF, it serves as a strategic bridge that enables ongoing project execution without placing undue pressure on state reserves.

The firm noted that the fund’s recent bond and sukuk calendar illustrates a sequenced and diversified funding plan, rather than reliance on a single issuance type. This is especially important as global interest rates remain volatile and investors increasingly scrutinize sovereign debt sustainability.

Rather than treating debt as a one-off tool, the fund is deploying it systematically, by tenor, purpose, and investor group, to support a $2.6 trillion vision for economic diversification and global investment leadership.

As the Kingdom approaches the final stretch of Vision 2030 implementation, PIF’s capital strategy offers a case study in how sovereign wealth funds can combine financial discipline, market sophistication, and national ambition under a unified financing framework.


Safe-haven gold near a 1-month low as global tensions ebb

Updated 27 June 2025
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Safe-haven gold near a 1-month low as global tensions ebb

BENGALURU: Gold fell more than 1 percent to its lowest level in nearly a month on Friday due to easing geopolitical and trade tensions and as investors awaited US inflation data for clues on the future trajectory of interest rates.

Spot gold lost 1.4 percent to $3,282.68 per ounce by 1:55 p.m. Saudi time, its lowest since late May. Prices have fallen by over 2 percent this week and more than $200 from a record high scaled in April.

US gold futures fell 1.6 percent to $3,294.50.

The Iran-Israel ceasefire, brokered earlier this week by US President Donald Trump, is holding for now.

A White House official said on Thursday that the US has reached an agreement with China on how to expedite rare earths shipments to the US.

July 9 is the deadline for Trump’s “reciprocal” tariffs as nations rush to get an agreement.

“The loss of haven demand has meant that despite the latest leg down in the dollar, gold has not benefited from this at all,” said Fawad Razaqzada, market analyst at City Index and FOREX.com.

“A bit of a pullback would not be too bad an outcome as that will allow long-term technical overbought conditions on higher time frames to work off, allowing the metal to shine again when macro conditions are more favorable once more.”

Spot silver fell 1.8 percent to $35.96.

Platinum dropped 5.9 percent to $1,334.63, after hitting its highest since 2014. Palladium fell 1.2 percent to $1,117.96.

The main reason for the price increase in platinum was likely to be the high discount to gold, which is apparently considered too expensive, said Commerzbank in a note. 


Oil Updates — crude set for steepest weekly decline in two years as risk subsides

Updated 27 June 2025
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Oil Updates — crude set for steepest weekly decline in two years as risk subsides

  • Brent, WTI down 12 percent this week, most since March 2023
  • No major supply disruption from Mid-East crisis, analysts say

LONDON: Oil prices rose on Friday though were set for their steepest weekly decline since March 2023, as the absence of significant supply disruption from the Iran-Israel conflict saw any risk premium evaporate.

Brent crude futures were up 51 cents, or 0.75 percent, to $68.24 a barrel at 3:02 p.m. Saudi time, while US West Texas Intermediate crude was up 51 cents, or nearly 0.8 percent, to $65.75.

During the 12-day war that started after Israel targeted Iran’s nuclear facilities on June 13, Brent prices rose briefly to above $80 a barrel before slumping to $67 a barrel after US President Donald Trump announced an Iran-Israel ceasefire.

That put both contracts on course for a weekly fall of about 12 percent.

“The market has almost entirely shrugged off the geopolitical risk premiums from almost a week ago as we return to a fundamentals-driven market,” said Rystad analyst Janiv Shah.

“The market also has to keep eyes on the OPEC+ meeting – we do expect room for one more month of an accelerated unwinding basis balances and structure, but the key question is how strong the summer demand indicators are showing up to be.”

The OPEC+ members will meet on July 6 to decide on August production levels.

Prices were also being supported by multiple oil inventory reports that showed strong draws in the middle distillates, said Tamas Varga, a PVM Oil Associates analyst.

Data from the US Energy Information Administration on Wednesday showed crude oil and fuel inventories fell a week earlier, with refining activity and demand rising.

Meanwhile, data on Thursday showed that the independently held gasoil stocks at the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp refining and storage hub fell to their lowest in over a year, while Singapore’s middle distillates inventories declined as net exports climbed week on week.

Additionally, China’s Iranian oil imports surged in June as shipments accelerated before the conflict and demand from independent refineries improved, analysts said.

China is the world’s top oil importer and biggest buyer of Iranian crude. It bought more than 1.8 million barrels per day of Iranian crude from June 1-20, according to ship-tracker Vortexa, a record high based on the firm’s data. 


Pakistani stocks decline by 715 points over profit-taking after two days of gains

Updated 26 June 2025
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Pakistani stocks decline by 715 points over profit-taking after two days of gains

  • KSE-100 Index closes at 122,046.46 points, witnessing a decline of 0.58 percent, as per stock market data
  • Profit-taking driven by fiscal year-end considerations, short-term portfolio rebalancing, says financial analyst

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) witnessed a bearish trend on Thursday after two days of gains, losing 715.18 points to close at 122,046.46 points, which a financial analyst attributed to profit-taking driven by fiscal year-end considerations.

The PSX closed at 122,046.46 points when trading ended on Thursday, witnessing a negative change of 0.58 percent. The KSE-100 had closed at 122,761.64 points on Wednesday and before that on Tuesday, it surged by 6,079 points or 5.23 percent to close at 122,246 points. Analysts attributed the surge on Tuesday to the ceasefire announcement between Iran and Israel.

As many as 473 companies transacted their shares in the stock market on Thursday, with 200 of them recording gains and 237 sustaining losses, state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) said, adding that the share price of 36 companies remained unchanged.

“After two consecutive sessions of strong gains, the local bourse witnessed a round of profit-taking today, driven by fiscal year-end considerations and short-term portfolio rebalancing,” Maaz Mulla, the vice president of equity sales at Topline Securities Limited, said in a statement.

Mulla said the benchmark KSE-100 index saw a “volatile ride“— climbing 656 points intraday before losing 715 points at close of business. He said the closing figure of 122,046 points reflected “a cautious investor mood” as the quarter draws to a close.

He said despite the decline at the end of the day, the overall market activity remained “vibrant.”

“Total traded volume clocked in at 750 million shares, with a traded value of PKR 29.8 billion,” Mulla said.

APP reported that the three top trading companies on Thursday were Pak Int. Bulk with 37,503,501 shares traded at Rs 8.52 per share, WorldCall Telecom with 33,285,442 shares at Rs 1.45 per share and Pervez Ahmed Co. with 32,962,174 shares at Rs 3.29 per share.