IMF must be more active on debt restructurings, Georgieva says

IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva. Getty
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Updated 23 April 2025
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IMF must be more active on debt restructurings, Georgieva says

  • African countries want IMF to provide technical assistance
  • Debt roundtable to release new playbook for debt restructurings
  • African leaders, IMF met

WASHINGTON: The International Monetary Fund must be more active in debt restructuring processes, the global lender’s managing director, Kristalina Georgieva, said on Tuesday, noting the growing challenges facing vulnerable low- and middle-income countries.

Georgieva told an event hosted by the Bretton Woods Committee booster group that African countries and others, in a 1-1/2-hour meeting, said they wanted the IMF to provide more technical assistance to countries grappling with high debt levels.

She said the Global Sovereign Debt Roundtable, which includes creditor and borrowing countries as well as the IMF and the World Bank, had separately approved a new playbook to help countries navigate the complex process of restructuring heavy debt burdens.

The roundtable will release the document after a closed-door meeting in Washington on Wednesday during the spring meetings of the IMF and the World Bank.

A joint statement released by Georgieva and Hervé Ndoba, chair of the African Caucus and Central African Republic’s minister of finance and budget, said Africa faces the risk of further shocks that could undo strong policy actions taken to bring down inflation, stabilize public debt and reduce external imbalances.

“While growth in Africa is showing some resilience in the face of multiple shocks, the sudden shift in the global outlook has interrupted the growth momentum,” the two leaders said, noting that growth on the African continent had been revised down by 0.3 percentage point to 3.9 percent for 2025.

African leaders and the IMF agreed on the need to ensure macroeconomic and financial stability while working to meet the continent’s economic development goals. They said domestic reform efforts should promote fiscal sustainability by boosting revenue and improving spending efficiency.

“Now, more than ever, the Fund is committed to working with its member countries to help navigate the complex global economic environment,” the joint statement said, noting that addition of a 25th chair on the Executive Board for sub-Saharan Africa strengthened the region’s voice in the fund.

The statement also pledged that the IMF would “remain agile” in responding to emerging challenges, and providing support to initiatives like the G20 Common Framework and the Global Sovereign Debt Roundtable.

It welcomed IMF steps to review both its debt sustainability framework for low-income countries and the design and conditionality of lending programs with an eye to addressing macroeconomic imbalances and promoting growth.

The African Consultative Group includes governors from 12 African countries belonging to the African Caucus and IMF management.


Oman’s banking sector strengthens with 8% credit growth

Updated 5 sec ago
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Oman’s banking sector strengthens with 8% credit growth

JEDDAH: Oman’s banking sector showed robust growth by May, with total credit rising 8 percent to 33.6 billion Omani rials ($87.36 billion) and deposits increasing 7.9 percent, reflecting strong private sector activity and confidence.

Data from the Central Bank of Oman revealed that credit extended to the private sector grew by 6.8 percent year on year to reach 27.9 billion rials by the end of May. Total deposits stood at 32.3 billion rials during the same period.

Oman’s banking sector remains resilient, supported by private sector engagement, expanding credit, and steady deposit growth. Regulatory reforms and growing confidence in financial institutions also continue to strengthen both conventional and Islamic banking.

Non-financial corporations held the largest share of private sector credit at 46.4 percent, closely followed by households at 44.2 percent. Private sector deposits increased by 7.4 percent to 21.9 billion rials, with households accounting for nearly half of the total.

The banking sectors of the Gulf Cooperation Council showed overall credit growth, highlighting regional economic resilience. Saudi Arabia’s credit facilities rose 14.4 percent to SR2.96 trillion by the fourth quarter of 2024, while Qatar experienced a slight 0.2 percent decline to 1.4 trillion riyals, mainly due to reduced public sector and consumer lending.

The combined balance sheet of conventional banks showed a 6.9 percent year-over-year increase in total outstanding credit. Credit to the private sector grew by 5.2 percent to 21.4 billion rials, while investments in securities fell 1.7 percent to 5.5 billion rials.

Government bond investments increased 2.2 percent to 2 billion rials, whereas foreign securities declined by 11.9 percent, according to the CBO, which added that deposits with conventional banks rose 5.7 percent to 25.2 billion rials, with private sector deposits growing 5.8 percent to 17.1 billion rials.

Islamic banking assets surged 17.5 percent to 9 billion rials, with financing increasing 12.3 percent and deposits rising 16.6 percent to 7 billion rials.

According to the CBO, broad money supply rose 6.9 percent to 25.4 billion rials, driven by a 13.9 percent increase in narrow money and a 4.4 percent rise in quasi-money. Within M1, currency with the public fell 5.1 percent, while demand deposits grew 18.6 percent.

Gas production

Oman’s total natural gas production and imports rose marginally by 0.5 percent year-on-year to 17.95 billion cubic meters by April, driven mainly by a 10.8 percent increase in associated gas production.

Meanwhile, non-associated and imported gas volumes declined by 2.1 percent, according to the state’s National Center for Statistics and Information.

Industrial projects remained the largest consumers, using 9.32 billion cubic meters, followed by power generation stations, which used 4.33 billion cubic meters. Oil fields consumed 4.21 billion cubic meters, with industrial zones using 88 million cubic meters.


Saudi Arabia opens July Sah sukuk subscription with 4.88% annual return

Updated 9 min 28 sec ago
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Saudi Arabia opens July Sah sukuk subscription with 4.88% annual return

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia has launched the July subscription window for its government-backed savings sukuk, “Sah,” offering an annual return of 4.88 percent—slightly up from June’s 4.76 percent.

Part of the 2025 issuance calendar managed by the National Debt Management Center under the Ministry of Finance, the sukuk reflects ongoing efforts to promote financial inclusion and encourage personal savings among Saudi citizens.

“Sah” is issued under the Financial Sector Development Program, a core component of Vision 2030, which aims to raise the national savings rate from 6 percent to 10 percent by 2030.

Targeted at individual investors, the product offers a secure, fee-free investment avenue with stable, government-guaranteed returns. The July issuance window opened at 10 a.m. on July 6 and will close at 3 p.m. on July 8.

As with previous tranches, the sukuk is Shariah-compliant, denominated in Saudi riyals, and carries a one-year maturity, with fixed returns paid upon redemption. The minimum subscription remains SR1,000 ($266.56), while the maximum is capped at SR200,000 per investor.

The marginal increase in return reflects slight shifts in domestic funding costs and market liquidity, as the government responds to growing demand for low-risk savings instruments.

Subscription is open to Saudi nationals aged 18 and above through approved digital platforms, including SNB Capital, Aljazira Capital, Alinma Investment, SAB Invest, and Al-Rajhi Capital.

The Ministry of Finance has confirmed that monthly issuances will continue, with each offering’s yield determined by prevailing market benchmarks.

According to NDMC, the sukuk also supports broader collaboration with the private sector, including banks, asset managers, and fintech companies, as the Kingdom works to expand access to savings products and build a more diversified financial ecosystem.


Saudi Arabia’s top 10 listed firms hit $2.1tn valuation, led by Aramco

Updated 32 min 17 sec ago
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Saudi Arabia’s top 10 listed firms hit $2.1tn valuation, led by Aramco

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s top 10 publicly listed companies reached a combined market capitalization of $2.1 trillion as of April 25, highlighting their dominant role in the Kingdom’s capital markets, according to a new analysis by Forbes Middle East.

The companies collectively reported $133.9 billion in net profits for 2024, reflecting the growing strength of the Kingdom’s diversified economy. The ranking covers key sectors such as energy, banking, telecommunications, industrials, and utilities.

The milestone comes as the Saudi Exchange, or Tadawul, was recognized as the world’s fastest-growing stock market in 2024. The number of listings doubled to 55, and market liquidity surged by 40 percent — a growth fueled by a streamlined capital management system that halved IPO processing times and widened investor participation.

“The banking sector dominates the ranking, securing five out of the 10 spots, with total assets amounting to $854.7 billion,” the Forbes report noted.

Saudi Aramco topped the list with a market value of $1.7 trillion. The energy giant posted $480.4 billion in revenue and $106.2 billion in net income last year, cementing its position as a global energy leader.

Aramco also advanced its international strategy through major deals in 2024, including a $12.35 billion secondary share sale in June, $25 billion in contracts to boost gas output by 60 percent by 2030, a $90 billion agreement with U.S. firms, and a joint venture with China’s Sinopec to develop a refining complex in Fujian province.

Banking giants 

Saudi Arabia’s leading banks continued to post strong performance in 2024, with several institutions recording double digit profit growth and expanding their international and digital footprints.

Saudi National Bank maintained its position as the Kingdom’s largest lender by assets, reaching $294.4 billion. The bank posted $5.6 billion in net profits and bolstered its global presence with a $500 million bond issuance in Taiwan.

Al Rajhi Bank, which holds $259.8 billion in assets, recorded an 18.7 percent rise in profits to $5.3 billion. The Islamic lender also acquired a majority stake in the fintech app Drahim, signaling a strategic push into digital finance.

Riyad Bank reported a 15.9 percent increase in profits to $2.5 billion, supported by a $750 million sukuk issuance. Saudi Awwal Bank also delivered strong results, with profits climbing 15 percent to $2.2 billion following a $1.1 billion sukuk deal.

Meanwhile, Alinma Bank saw profits jump 20.5 percent and signed a $756 million agreement with Bahri to finance oil tankers, underscoring its growing role in Shariah-compliant corporate financing.

Telecom and industrials   

In telecommunications, stc Group recorded $6.6 billion in profits, launched STC Bank, and transferred tower assets to a Public Investment Fund-led entity.  

SABIC, a global chemicals leader, recovered from a 2023 loss to post $993 million in profits and sold its Alba stake for $966 million.    

Meanwhile, Maaden, the Middle East’s top mining firm, acquired SABIC’s Alba stake and issued a $1.25 billion sukuk, contributing 20 percent of Saudi non-oil exports.   

Utilities and energy 

Saudi Electricity Co. saw a 7.5 percent increase in power output and signed a $3.6 billion gas plant deal, while raising $2.75 billion in sukuk. The company also settled $1.5 billion in historical obligations to the state, with PIF holding a 74.3 percent stake.  

Forbes ranked firms based on sales, assets, profits, and market value from Tadawul, with equal weight given to each metric.     

This elite group of companies highlighted Saudi Arabia’s economic strength, with banks and energy firms driving record profits and global expansions in 2025.   


Egypt’s non-oil private sector contracts in June as PMI falls to 48.8 

Updated 06 July 2025
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Egypt’s non-oil private sector contracts in June as PMI falls to 48.8 

RIYADH: Egypt’s non-oil private sector continued to contract in June, with the Purchasing Managers’ Index falling to 48.8 from 49.5 in May, as business confidence plunged to its lowest level on record. 

According to the latest S&P Global survey, this marked the fourth consecutive month below the neutral 50 threshold, signaling a continued deterioration in operating conditions. The decline was accompanied by the sharpest reduction in purchasing activity in nearly a year and a pronounced drop in sentiment about the year ahead. 

The June PMI downturn came amid escalating regional and economic pressures, with spillovers from the Gaza conflict suppressing tourism, remittance flows, and Suez Canal revenues — all key sources of foreign exchange and domestic demand. 

Concurrently, intermittent disruptions in Israeli gas exports have sparked concerns over energy reliability, while elevated freight rates have inflated import costs.  

David Owen, a senior economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said: “Overall expectations for future activity were the lowest ever recorded in June.”  

He added: “This downbeat sentiment reflects subdued hopes for order books, as well as concerns that geopolitical risks could cause greater economic disruption.”  

The survey, conducted between June 12 and 20, highlighted deepening demand weakness across the economy.   

Businesses widely reported that weaker order books prompted them to scale back output, while a broad stagnation in local markets contributed to the drop in new orders.  

Although the pace of decline accelerated compared to May, S&P Global noted that it remained softer than the series average.  

Purchasing volumes decreased for the fourth month running, with the contraction gathering pace to become the fastest recorded in nearly a year.  

The manufacturing sector saw the largest cutbacks among the surveyed industries.   

As a result of reduced buying levels, inventories stalled in June after having risen slightly in the preceding three months.   

The data also pointed to ongoing strains in supply chains, reflected in a slight lengthening of supplier delivery times for the second month in a row.  

Employment levels continued to weaken, though the rate of job shedding was described as fractional and was the softest observed in the current five-month sequence of workforce reductions. 

S&P Global noted that staffing cuts were driven not only by diminished demand but also by the prevailing pessimism regarding future activity.  

“Although rates of contraction accelerated from the prior survey, they remained softer than their respective historic trends,” Owen added.  

“Nevertheless, a faster drop in input purchases combined with stalling hiring activity suggests that firms expect demand to remain low and are thereby looking to make cost savings.”  

On the cost side, there was a modest reprieve for businesses. Input cost inflation eased to a three-month low, while the pace at which firms raised output prices slowed considerably from May’s seven-month high.   

This softening of price pressures provided some relief but did little to offset the overall deterioration in confidence.  

The S&P Egypt PMI is a composite index derived from survey responses from around 400 private-sector firms, designed to provide a single-figure snapshot of non-oil business conditions.   

Readings above 50 signal improvement, while those below 50 indicate deterioration.


Saudi PIF enters ‘post-trillion’ era with pivot from scale to substance 

Updated 06 July 2025
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Saudi PIF enters ‘post-trillion’ era with pivot from scale to substance 

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund has surpassed $1 trillion in assets, marking a global milestone — but the organization is now pivoting from rapid expansion to a focus on solvency, strategic discipline, and sustainable long-term returns. 

According to Global SWF, the sovereign wealth fund, which recently announced an 18 percent increase in assets under management to SR4.32 trillion ($1.15 trillion) in 2024, is now prioritizing “solvency over scale” and “substance over show.” 

This evolution reflects a broader recalibration of Vision 2030’s investment engine, one that balances domestic megaproject ambitions with liquidity concerns, geopolitical outreach, and disciplined asset rotation. 

While PIF’s top-line revenues surged 25 percent to SR413 billion, net profit fell sharply, down 60 percent to SR26 billion, as rising interest rates, impairments, and project delays eroded returns. 

The decline signals a new reality for one of the world’s most ambitious sovereign investors: returns must be restructured, debt must be optimized, and capital must be deployed with precision. 

To address these challenges, PIF has undertaken a series of strategic shifts. According to Global SWF, these include tighter performance management, a growing reliance on commercial paper and sukuk for short-term funding, and a renewed focus on mature, revenue-generating assets. 

Notably, net profits at AviLease, a PIF-owned aviation leasing firm, increased by 350 percent, while holdings in Uber overtook those in Lucid in PIF’s US public equity portfolio, reflecting a pivot to more resilient assets. 

Meanwhile, PIF’s role is increasingly geopolitical. The fund has been instrumental in securing major international partnerships, including anchoring investment platforms with BlackRock, Goldman Sachs, and Brookfield, as well as government-to-government deals with China, India, France, and the US. 

According to Global SWF, India’s proposal of a 10-year tax holiday and sweeping capital gains exemptions aims to unlock over $100 billion in PIF-led inward investment, underlining its strategic importance. 

PIF’s fiscal and institutional maturity is also earning global recognition. In July, the fund scored a perfect 100 percent in the 2025 Global SWF Governance, Sustainability, and Resilience Scoreboard. 

The ranking, which evaluates 200 sovereign investors globally, placed PIF among just nine funds worldwide and ranked it the highest in the Europe, the Middle East, and Africa region to meet all governance and transparency benchmarks. According to Global SWF, PIF’s strong showing reflects solid progress in disclosures, leadership accountability, and commitment to ESG. 

That commitment is especially evident in the fund’s ESG and green finance activities. In 2024, PIF launched a 100-year green bond as part of its sustainable finance framework, offering a rare long-term issuance that combines ESG impact with Shariah compliance. This approach is helping the fund attract diverse investor interest while aligning capital with climate goals. 

In parallel, the fund is building the Kingdom’s digital and artificial intelligence backbone. In May, it launched HUMAIN, a national AI company tasked with advancing Saudi Arabia’s position in sovereign AI capabilities. 

According to a PIF official statement, HUMAIN aims to invest in foundational models, develop Arabic-language datasets, and partner with global tech leaders, such as NVIDIA. The firm will serve as a vehicle for sovereign AI infrastructure and localization, supporting economic diversification and national security objectives. 

This evolving strategic posture comes at a critical moment for Saudi Arabia’s foreign direct investment ambitions. While cumulative investments remain below Vision 2030 targets, the latest figures from the General Authority for Statistics show that the volume of foreign direct investment inflows reached SR24 billion in the first quarter of this year, marking a 24 percent increase compared to the same period in 2024. 

The figure reflects resilience despite global uncertainties, with PIF expected to play a leading role in accelerating capital deployment and crowding in private investors. 

The fund is also rebalancing its internal structure. As Global SWF noted, several giga-projects, including NEOM’s “The Line,” have been downsized. While originally envisioned as a $1.5 trillion smart city housing 1.5 million people by 2030, current projections suggest that just 300,000 residents and 2.4 km of development will be completed within that timeframe. Accordingly, PIF has trimmed budgets for several large-scale ventures by 20 to 60 percent for 2025. 

Yet this recalibration is not a retreat. It signals a transition to what Global SWF describes as “precision finance,” which uses strategic levers such as commercial paper, asset recycling, co-investments, and sovereign partnerships to preserve liquidity and reduce fiscal strain. 

The fund’s ability to blend long-term Eurobonds with short-term sukuk and CP issuance demonstrates a growing sophistication in liability management, which is rare among sovereign wealth funds. 

As PIF deepens its international exposure, its dual role as both an investor and a policy instrument is becoming increasingly evident. According to Global SWF, the fund’s presence in Paris, its alignment with Trump-era Gulf deals, and its expanding memorandum of understanding with Asian markets reveal an increasingly geopolitical deployment of capital. 

Ultimately, the question facing PIF is not whether it can scale — it already has. The real test is whether it can steer Vision 2030 through a period of rising global interest rates, shifting capital flows, and mounting domestic expectations. If PIF can tighten execution, manage costs, and deliver returns across cycles, it may well redefine the playbook for state-driven transformation. 

As 2025 unfolds, the fund’s performance will be closely watched, not only for its financial metrics but for what it reveals about the sustainability of Vision 2030’s ambitions.