Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Saudi giga-projects may tap into debt market funding

Saudi giga-project Mukaab Riyadh, part of Vision 2030 Balkis Press/Abaca via Reuters Connect
Saudi Arabia's giga-projects such as the Mukaab in Riyadh may need additional funding
  • Bank sector and PIF cannot alone fund Vision 2030
  • S&P Global expects capital markets to play a part
  • Contracts were worth $24.6bn in 2022

Saudi Arabia’s vast pipeline of giga-projects will require funding assistance due to the tightened liquidity in the country’s banking sector, say analysts at credit rating firm S&P Global.

This, they add, opens opportunities for the Gulf’s debt markets.

“We think that the Public Investment Fund and Saudi’s banking sector alone won’t be able to fund all the required investments for Vision 2030 and so it will fall on the debt capital markets to support a large proportion of projects,” said Mohamed Damak, senior director of financial institutions ratings at S&P.

“We expect a lot more debt capital market activity relating to Saudi over the next two to three years.”  

Damak noted that credit growth has outstripped deposit growth, which in turn has reduced the availability of liquidity in the kingdom’s banks.

S&P has forecast that credit growth will slow to 10-12 percent in 2023-2024, owing to higher interest rates and tighter liquidity.

“The massive number of projects looking for long term financing has created more strain for the banks,” Sofia Bensaid, associate director of infrastructure ratings at S&P, said.

“Hence this is translating to higher lending rates on Saudi loans. Therefore, we see the capital markets as extremely important for infrastructure and project finance funding.”

Increased credit demand is being fuelled by the kingdom’s ramping up of activity, in a bid to achieve its Vision 2030 economic diversification goals.

The value of giga-project-related contracts awarded in Saudi Arabia in 2022 grew by 103 percent to $24.6 billion from $12 billion the previous year.

A combined $110 billion worth of contracts are expected to be awarded in the GCC this year, with Saudi Arabia accounting for more than half of the total. The kingdom makes up $64 billion of the combined value, according to Middle East data provider Meed Projects’ 2023 outlook. 

Bensaid added that capital markets are also of increasing importance to Saudi giga-projects and other GCC infrastructure schemes.

“There are a massive number of operational infrastructure projects in the region right now – especially relating to power, water and wastewater treatment plants – that are looking for bond refinancing,” she said, adding that there are at least 15 regional projects that are currently waiting for the right time to go to market.

Latest articles

Migrants attempting to reach Italy from Tunisia. About 270,000 so-called irregular migrants arrived in the EU via sea crossings last year

EU reveals total aid to North Africa to combat migration 

The European Union provided €673 million ($718 million) in funding to four North African countries from 2021-23 to help the quartet reduce what it calls irregular migration to the 27-member bloc, official data shows. Last year about 270,000 “irregular migrants” arrived in the EU via sea crossings, 64 percent more than in 2022. Crossings from […]

The SPA report highlighted a number of metrics as being on target, including home ownership of 53.7 percent

Third of Vision 2030 projects ‘completed’ government says

One third of 1,064 planned projects have been completed so far under the Vision 2030 economic transformation plan, the Saudi government said in its annual progress report on the reform programme.   The report also said 561 initiatives were on track, according to the state-owned Saudi Press Agency, publishing its major findings. It was not […]

Tawfik Alzaidi

Saudi director’s labour of love takes the kingdom to Cannes

For the first time a Saudi film has been selected to compete in the Cannes film festival, catapulting its little-known self-taught director into the limelight. Tawfik Alzaidi was so surprised that he’d managed to break through to the big time that he kept the news that his film Norah had been accepted for the ‘Un […]

Joby Aviation's CEO JoeBen Bevirt (2nd left) at the signing of a multilateral agreement with the three Abu Dhabi government departments

Abu Dhabi signs multiple deals to launch air taxi services in 2025

A commute from Abu Dhabi to Dubai could take only 30 minutes next year, with the introduction of air taxi services significantly slashing travel time between the emirates. The electric aircraft manufacturer Joby Aviation signed agreements this week with Abu Dhabi’s Department of Municipalities and Transport, Department of Economic Development and Department of Culture and […]