Total set to announce major investment in Saudi gas filling stations

‘I am investing in Saudi Arabia — heavily,’ said Total CEO Patrick Pouyanne when speaking on a panel with the Kingdom’s finance and economy ministers at the WEF in Davos. (AFP)
Updated 24 January 2019
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Total set to announce major investment in Saudi gas filling stations

  • Total CEO Patrick Pouyanne: We will announce in the coming days that together with Saudi Aramco we will establish a retail network in Saudi Arabia
  • The new firm, Saudi Aramco Retail Co, would create a network of filling stations within Saudi Arabia to sell automotive fuels

London: The boss of French energy giant Total has revealed plans to invest in gas filling stations across Saudi Arabia.
He was speaking on a panel with the Kingdom’s finance and economy ministers as well as the chief of Morgan Stanley at the World Economic Forum in Davos.
“I am investing in Saudi Arabia — heavily,” said Total CEO Patrick Pouyanne.
“We will announce in the coming days that together with Saudi Aramco we will establish a retail network in Saudi Arabia.”

 

Earlier this month, Aramco said it was establishing a domestic fuel retailing subsidiary as part of the national oil company’s drive to expand beyond crude oil production into downstream businesses.
The new firm, Saudi Aramco Retail Co, would create a network of filling stations within Saudi Arabia to sell automotive fuels, Aramco said last week, without giving details of the size, cost or time-frame for the network.
In April, Aramco said it had signed a memorandum of understanding with Total to evaluate the feasibility of jointly buying a retail service station network in Saudi Arabia.
Last October, Aramco and Total signed an engineering and design contract for a $9 billion petrochemical complex in the Kingdom.
The Amiral complex will be able to produce 2.7 million tons of chemicals annually and is expected to be completed by early 2024.

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Aramco and Total struck a deal to develop a $9 billion petrochemical complex in the Kingdom.


Saudi stock market opens its doors to foreign investors

Updated 06 January 2026
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Saudi stock market opens its doors to foreign investors

RIYADH: Foreigners will be able to invest directly in Saudi Arabia’s stock market from Feb. 1, the Kingdom’s Capital Market Authority has announced.

The CMA’s board has approved a regulatory change which will mean the capital market, across all its segments, will be accessible to investors from around the world for direct participation.

According to a statement, the approved amendments aim to expand and diversify the base of those permitted to invest in the Main Market, thereby supporting investment inflows and enhancing market liquidity.

International investors' ownership in the capital market exceeded SR590 billion ($157.32 billion) by the end of the third quarter of 2025, while international investments in the main market reached approximately SR519 billion during the same period — an annual rise of 4 percent.

“The approved amendments eliminated the concept of the Qualified Foreign Investor in the Main Market, thereby allowing all categories of foreign investors to access the market without the need to meet qualification requirements,” said the CMA, adding: “It also eliminated the regulatory framework governing swap agreements, which were used as an option to enable non-resident foreign investors to obtain economic benefits only from listed securities, and the allowance of direct investment in shares listed on the Main Market.”

In July, the CMA approved measures to simplify the procedures for opening and operating investment accounts for certain categories of investors. These included natural foreign investors residing in one of the Gulf Cooperation Council countries, as well as those who had previously resided in the Kingdom or in any GCC country. 

This step represented an interim phase leading up to the decision announced today, with the aim of increasing confidence among participants in the Main Market and supporting the local economy.

Saudi Arabia, which ‌is more than halfway ‍through an economic plan ‍to reduce its dependence on oil, ‍has been trying to attract foreign investors, including by establishing exchange-traded funds with Asian partners in Japan and Hong Kong.