Latest News

The PMI indicates that Saudi non-oil businesses expanded in November, but new orders slowed.

A survey released on Wednesday showed that Saudi Arabia's private non-oil sector expanded at the fastest rate in ten months in November. This was driven by robust hiring and increased demand, but new orders grew slower than in previous months.

The seasonally-adjusted Riyad Bank Saudi Arabia Purchasing managers' Index fell to 58.5 from 60.2 in Oct., but remained above 50, indicating strong activity growth.

The output subindex rose to 63.7, its highest level since January. New orders also continued to increase, although at a slower rate than the October peak. Domestic demand was particularly strong.

In November, the subindex for new orders fell to 64.6 after a spike to 68.1 in October. Export orders rose for the fourth month in a row, but growth was modest.

The employment growth rate slowed down from the near-record levels of October, but it remained strong. Firms increased staffing in order to meet the higher demand as well as increase unfinished work. The backlog of unfinished work has increased for the fifth consecutive month, the longest accumulation in 2019.

Naif Al Ghaith is the chief economist at Riyad bank. He said: "Looking forward, confidence will be supported by an anticipated improvement in demand, active pipelines for new projects, and ongoing investment activity."

The non-oil sector expressed optimism about the future, boosted by new projects and anticipated growth in demand. The survey showed a positive outlook, driven by healthy business investment and demand pipelines.

Saudi Arabia is the top oil exporter in the world. As part of its ambitious Vision 2030 economic strategy, it invests heavily to grow and develop its non-oil industries to reduce its dependence on hydrocarbons. (Reporting and Editing by Joe Bavier).

(source: Reuters)