Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Saudi foreign reserves fall 5% as oil revenue drops

Saudi foreign reserves minister of finance Mohammed al Jadaan Reuters/Ahmed Yosri
The Saudi minister of finance, Mohammed al Jadaan, announced that some giga-projects would slow down to avoid creating supply bottlenecks and inflation
  • Total reserve assets now $437bn
  • Oil revenues go into giga-projects
  • GDP growth forecast lowered

Saudi Arabia’s international reserve assets fell 5 percent in value year on year in 2023, after oil output cuts that hit GDP had only limited success supporting prices. 

Central bank figures show total reserve assets were at SAR1.6 trillion ($437 billion), from  SAR1.7 trillion in January 2023, when the government was embarking on a policy of Opec+ output cuts to try to keep prices up as global demand weakened. 

Foreign currency reserves make up more than 90 percent of total assets, which also include foreign securities, the reserve position in the International Monetary Fund (IMF), special drawing rights, and monetary gold. 

Saudi foreign reserves fell by around $16 billion in July last year, as the government appeared to funnel a greater share of oil revenues into the Public Investment Fund to pay for its massive economic development project. 

Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil exporter, is trying to diversify its economy via massive development projects that have made the country one of the world’s largest construction sites

Last month the IMF lowered its forecast for Saudi Arabia’s increase in GDP in 2024 to 2.7 percent, down from a forecast of 4 percent made last October, on the grounds of lower oil production, which is due to continue until March. The government says GDP declined by around 1 percent in 2023. 

The kingdom’s finance minister, Mohammed Al-Jadaan, said in December that the timetables of some giga-projects would be slowed to avoid creating supply bottlenecks and inflation. 

The IMF has predicted average inflation of 2.2 percent in Saudi Arabia in 2024 and 2 percent in 2025. 

Saudi Arabia’s foreign reserves are seen as vital to maintaining confidence in the dollar peg. Reserves hit a high of $744 billion in 2014 but are now back down to 2010 levels. 

Fitch Ratings, affirming its A+ rating for Saudi Arabia this month, said: “We forecast reserves to decline to an average of $420 billion in 2024-2025, as the current account surplus narrows on the assumption of lower oil revenue.” 

However, Fitch said that Saudi Arabia had “one of the highest reserve coverage ratios among Fitch-rated sovereigns, at 16.5 months of current external payments.” 

Latest articles

Waleed bin Ibrahim Al Ibrahim, CEO of MBC Group, which raised $222 million with its IPO

Saudi Arabia dominates Mena public listings in Q1

Saudi Arabia dominated public listings in the region in the first quarter of the year and maintains a “healthy pipeline” of IPOs for the remainder of 2024. Nine companies were brought to market in Saudi Arabia during the opening three months, according to the latest report from global consultants EY. The kingdom’s largest, and the […]

SWVL CEO Mostafa Kandil Video length: 04:15

Unicorn SWVL survives share slump to turn a profit

Scaling back operations, chasing profitability over investor funding and divesting from acquisitions has resulted in the Middle East’s first unicorn finally turning profitable.  Egypt-born ride hailing app SWVL has survived a turbulent time during which the Nasdaq-listed startup faced the possibility of being delisted.  SWVL was valued at $1.5 billion when it went public in […]

Turkey Facebook

Turkey fines Facebook owner Meta over customer data sharing

The social media giant Meta has been found guilty by Turkey’s competition agency of trying to shut out rivals from the local market and dominate advertising penetration. The $230 billion Californian company operates Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Threads. On May 9 the Turkish Competition Authority announced it had levied fines totalling $37.2 million on Meta […]

Hajj pilgrims arrive at King Abdulaziz International Airport in Jeddah

Saudia allocates 1.2m seats for Hajj pilgrims  

Saudia, the national flag carrier of Saudi Arabia, has allocated more than 1.2 million seats for the 2024 Hajj Season across its fleet of over 150 aircraft. The operational period for the carrier during this year’s Hajj will span 74 days, starting from May 9, encompassing both inbound and outbound stages. Saudia Group, one of […]