Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

China dominates Saudi trade in Q1 as ties strengthen

King Salman of Saudi Arabia greets China's President Xi Jinping. China is Saudi's top trade partner Saudi Press Agency via Reuters
Saudi's King Salman greets China's President Xi Jinping in Riyadh on December 8, 2022
  • Saudi Arabia’s trade with China totalled $24.3bn in Q1 2023
  • Beijing was Riyadh’s top trading partner for imports and exports
  • Analysts report ‘great momentum’ in bilateral relationship

China’s trade with Saudi Arabia topped SAR91 billion ($24.3 billion) in the first quarter of 2023, making up 19 percent of the kingdom’s total commerce.

Data from Riyadh’s General Authority for Statistics (Gastat) said China was the top trading partner for both imports and exports.

Exports to China, which are dominated by crude oil, amounted to $13.7 billion – 16.4 percent of total exports – in Q1. Imports from China, led by electronic goods, totalled $10.7 billion – 21.5 percent of total imports.

Gastat said imports from China were worth more than imports from Saudi’s No 2 and No 3 trade partners added together. These are the United States and the UAE, which had a combined figure of $7.8 billion.

The Q1 figures showed a 14.6 percent drop in total international exports to $84 billion. Imports rose by 18 percent, as analysts described “great momentum” in Chinese-Saudi relations over the past few months.

Co-operation in technology is “moving at pace”, said Freddie Neve, senior Middle East associate at Asia House in an updated research briefing.

Chinese tech companies such as Huawei are winning contracts to work on Saudi's digital transformation.

The recent visits to the kingdom by President Xi Jinping and Hong Kong chief executive John Lee will accelerate growth in economic and political ties, Neve said.

Bilateral trade hit $87.3 billion in 2021. China's crude oil imports made up almost half the total.

During Xi's visit last December, some 35 deals worth $50 billion were signed with Gulf nations. Key areas included technology, logistics and renewables.

Neve said: “Chinese investment in Saudi Arabia may amplify China’s focus on the wider Middle East. The China-brokered deal between Saudi Arabia and Iran to restore diplomatic ties is an example of this. 

“The US would have struggled to broker a similar rapprochement, given its relations with Iran. So the deal points towards an emerging shift in the Middle East’s power dynamics, where China is more willing to exert greater diplomatic and political influence in the region to secure its interests at Washington’s expense.”

Robert Mogielnicki, senior resident scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington, pointed to a “great deal of momentum” over the past few months.

He told AGBI: “The Chinese are likely to double down on economic cooperation and then look for niche areas in non-economic realms where they can advance their interests and gain prestige on the world stage.” 

Mogielnicki added that it was important to distinguish between China's political leaders and its business chiefs. "While there are strong ties and coordination between them in China, implementing a grand strategy in this region is not an easy task, if that’s even the aim.

“My sense is US government officials won’t be phased by Saudi-Chinese economic co-operation but will be on the lookout for various forms of collaboration that raise red flags.”

Asia House said Saudi's expanding manufacturing and logistics industries were particularly attractive to Chinese firms. 

J&T Express is a Chinese logistics company that entered Saudi Arabia at the start of 2022. Within a year, it had established seven warehousing and distribution centres and taken on 2,000 staff.

Beijing hopes its economic ties with Saudi will strengthen to the point that Riyadh begins to accept payment for oil in yuan, according to Asia House.

There are signs of the yuan gaining greater influence in the Middle East, particularly as Russia is increasingly conducting trade in the Chinese currency.

However, Neve said: “There are some reasons why Saudi Arabia may not wish to trade its oil in yuan. The Chinese currency is less stable than the dollar and replacing it could undermine Saudi Arabia’s fiscal outlook, its ability to deploy capital abroad and weaken its US dollar peg.”

Some of the biggest China-Saudi deals in 2023
  • The Red Sea Industrial Aluminium Company, a subsidiary of China’s largest private manufacturer of aluminium alloys, plans to invest $10 billion to build a factory in the kingdom. It will create 5,500 jobs.
  • Shenzhen Capital Group has launched a $1 billion private equity fund focused on Saudi Arabia.
  • The Public Investment Fund bought a $265 million stake in Chinese e-sports company VSPO. The Saudi wealth fund is now VSPO's single largest equity holder.
  • Saudi Aramco acquired a 10 percent stake in Rongsheng Petrochemical Company for $3.6 billion.

Latest articles

Opec predicts global crude demand will rise by around 2 million barrels a day in both 2024 and 2025

Opec maintains stance on oil demand predictions

Opec has kept its global oil demand prediction unchanged for this year as the global economy showed resilience, surpassing initial projections in some instances. The oil producers block said in its monthly report on Tuesday that it believed global crude demand would increase by 2.2 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2024 and by 1.8 […]

Dnata staff load cargo into a plane at Cointrin Airport in Geneva. The company's expansion into Rome will need a €20 million investment

Dnata CEO confident of victory in Rome airport case

The Group CEO of Dnata, the Dubai-based global air and travel services provider, is “very confident” the company will soon begin operations in Rome. “We’re certainly planning to be operating this year,” Steve Allen told AGBI at a media event on Tuesday, referring to an appeal ruling on the decision to award ground-handling contracts due […]

Prime minister of Qatar Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani said GCC states need to coordinate their efforts in sectors such as AI

Qatar calls for greater GCC cooperation as it diversifies economy

Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund will continue a policy of diversification, investing in Central Asia and Africa, but Gulf countries need to do more to unify their economic growth plans to face rising geopolitical risks, Qatar’s prime minister said on Tuesday.  “Our focus in terms of the sovereign wealth fund and investment continues following the strategy […]

Workers at a semiconductor plant in the Netherlands. Qatar's investment in France's Ardian comes as global demand for semiconductor chips is surging

QIA invests in French semiconductor fund Ardian

Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), the country’s sovereign wealth fund, has announced plans to make an anchor investment in Ardian Semiconductor, a new entity established by the French private equity firm Ardian.  The move underscores the Gulf state’s bet on the crucial role of semiconductors in powering digital and green transformations in key areas such as […]