Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Saudi sovereign fund in talks to buy national airline

Saudia operates flights to more than 100 destinations across four continents through its fleet of 142 aircraft Saudia
Saudia operates flights to more than 100 destinations across four continents through its fleet of 142 aircraft

Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund is in discussions to acquire the kingdom’s national airline, reports released on Monday indicate.

The $940 billion sovereign fund is looking to add Saudia, formerly known as Saudi Arabian Airlines, to its portfolio and a deal could be completed as soon as next year, according to a report by Bloomberg, quoting unnamed sources.

Saudia is under the ownership of the Saudi government, but the article suggests a purchase by PIF could lead to the 80-year-old airline merging with Riyadh Air, which is owned by the wealth fund.



Saudia is based in Jeddah and operates its main hub from the city’s King Abdulaziz International Airport and King Khalid International Airport in Riyadh. 

The airline carried more than 30 million passengers in 2023, a 21 percent year-on-year increase on higher seat capacity and flight frequency.

Saudia operates flights to more than 100 destinations across four continents through its fleet of 142 aircraft.

Riyadh Air was launched in March last year. The new carrier is scheduled to take to the skies next year and is targeting 100 destinations in its first five years.

The airline has firm orders for 39 long-range B787s and options for 33 more, part of a double deal in which Saudia also booked 39 B787s and 10 options, which was valued by the White House at close to $37 billion.

Riyadh Air is expected to add $20 billion to Saudi Arabia’s non-oil GDP growth and create more than 200,000 jobs both directly and indirectly, it said.

Saudi Arabian aviation is scheduled to treble in the next six years, while the kingdom has set itself the goal of welcoming 150 million annual visitors by the end of the decade across 29 Saudi airports, including a new Riyadh airport to be operational by 2030.

PIF is behind the redevelopment plans for Riyadh Airport, with ambitions to make it the biggest in the world. The fund also owns Saudi jet leasing business AviLease, as well as The Helicopter Company, which was founded in mid-2019 and operates 47 helicopters.

In December PIF announced plans to develop a one million-square-metre maintenance, repair and overhaul village in Saudi Arabia as part of its investment in Saudia Technic, a subsidiary of Saudia Group.

Latest articles

UAE’s RedBird IMI acquires UK TV producer for $1.5bn

RedBird IMI, A US investment management company partly owned by Abu Dhabi’s International Media Investments, has acquired All3Media, the UK’s largest independent TV production company behind hits such as Fleabag, The Traitors and Gogglebox. The for £1.15 billion ($1.5 billion) deal is the largest for RedBird IMI to date, the company said in a statement. […]

PIF's Starbucks shareholdings were cut almost by half from 6.3 million shares to 3.8 million

PIF slashes Starbucks stake as it cuts US stocks by $15bn

Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) has slashed its US equity holdings by 42 percent to $20.6 billion, including its stake in Starbucks, the global coffee chain that has suffered calls for a boycott as a result of the Gaza conflict. The latest US government data highlights funding challenges facing the Saudi giga-projects.  The filing […]

Tunisia olives

Soaring olive oil exports help Tunisia balance books

Tunisia’s soaring olive oil exports have almost doubled to close to $1 billion in just five months, helping it claw back its current account deficit.   However the increased revenues merely “paint over the cracks” and the country is still probably heading towards a sovereign default, according to an economic expert. Tunisia’s current account deficit narrowed […]

Iraqi prime minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani attends licensing rounds for 29 oil and gas exploration blocks at the oil ministry's headquarters in Baghdad

Falling oil prices deepen Iraq’s fiscal imbalances, says IMF

Iraq’s fiscal imbalances have worsened due to significant fiscal expansion and lower oil prices, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF). “The ongoing fiscal expansion is expected to boost growth in 2024 at the expense of a further deterioration of fiscal and external accounts and Iraq’s vulnerability to oil price fluctuations,” the Washington-based fund said in […]