Saudi Ministry of Commerce issues exceptions to companies law provisions

The Saudi Ministry of Commerce suspended some provisions of the Companies Law. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 03 December 2020
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Saudi Ministry of Commerce issues exceptions to companies law provisions

  • Ministry of Commerce suspends some provisions of the Companies Law

The Ministry of Commerce suspended some provisions of the Companies Law, and granted the commerce minister the necessary powers in this regard.

According to the ministry, some exceptions from those provisions are as follows:

1) The period during which companies must hold their general assembly meetings was extended to the next 12 months following the fiscal year end.

2) The period required for submitting a copy of the company’s auditor’s report, financial statements, business activity, financial position, the proposed dividend and the supervisory board report, if any, to the ministry and every shareholder was extended to 12 months following the end of the fiscal year.

3) The abovementioned clauses shall no longer be effective from Dec. 31.

4) Shareholders in limited partnerships, which include over 20 shareholders, are allowed to vote separately, given that the company’s manager shall send a registered letter including the proposed decisions for vote, for a period of one year as of Nov. 2, 2020 with exception from Article 168/A of the Companies Law.

5) With exception from Article 181 of the Companies Law, the period during which the director of a limited partnership shall invite for a general assembly meeting, is extended to become (180) days of the date on which the board of directors become aware that losses account for 50 percent of capital, for two years as of March 25, 2020.

6) Article 181/3 of Companies Law shall be suspended for two years as of March 25, 2020. A limited partnership should continuously disclose updates about its losses, when they reach the percentage mentioned in Article 181/1 of the same law, as per the following regulations:

- A director(s) or the board of directors, upon being aware that losses account for 50 percent of capital, shall apply to the ministry to disclose this news on the ministry’s website, including losses, their percentage of capital and the main reasons behind these losses.

- A director(s) or the board of directors shall submit a quarterly report of losses to the ministry within 15 days of the end of every quarter and shall apply to the ministry to disclose this news on its website.

- A director(s) or the board of directors – upon being aware that losses shrink to below 50 percent of capital – shall apply to the ministry to disclose this news on the ministry’s website, including the measures taken to adjust the company’s status.

7) Clause 6 shall no longer be effective starting from March 3, 2022.

8) With exception from Article 150 of the Companies Law:

1. The period during which the board of directors must invite the extraordinary general assembly once the board of directors became aware of the losses of the joint-stock company reaching half of its paid-up capital, shall be extended to 60 days, from the date the board of directors become aware of the losses, for a period of two years starting from March 25, 2020.

2. The period during which the extraordinary general assembly meeting must be held shall be extended to 180 days from the date the board of directors become aware of the losses for a period of two years starting from March 25, 2020.

9) Article 150/2 of the Companies Law shall be suspended for a period of two years starting from March 25, 2020, and the joint-stock companies shall upon reaching the amount specified in Article 150/A continuously disclose updates on the losses in accordance with the regulatory rules.

- A board chairman, upon being aware that losses account for 50 percent of capital, shall apply to the ministry to disclose this news on the ministry’s website, including losses, their percentage of capital and the main reasons behind these losses.

- A board chairman shall submit a quarterly report of losses to the ministry within 15 days after the end of every quarter and shall apply to the ministry to disclose this news on its website.

- A board chairman – upon being aware that losses shrink to less than 50 percent of capital – shall apply to the ministry to disclose this news on the ministry’s website, including the measures taken by the company to adjust its status.

10) Clause 9 shall no longer be effective from March 3, 2022.

11) With exception from Article 133/1 and Article 166 of the same law, joint-stock companies are permitted to re-appoint an auditor whose term of appointment has reached five continuous years, for two additional years maximum, as long as the total period of his appointment does not exceed seven continuous years for the audit office, and five continuous years for the partner who supervises the audit process, provided that this exception ends after two years as of March 25, 2020.

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Closing Bell: Saudi main index closes in red at 11,167  

Updated 11 February 2026
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Closing Bell: Saudi main index closes in red at 11,167  

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index dipped on Wednesday, losing 46.43 points, or 0.41 percent, to close at 11,167.54. 

The total trading turnover of the benchmark index was SR4.88 billion ($1.30 billion), as 66 of the listed stocks advanced, while 192 retreated. 

The MSCI Tadawul Index decreased, down 5.52 points, or 0.37 percent, to close at 1,506.55. 

The Kingdom’s parallel market Nomu lost 153.40 points, or 0.65 percent, to close at 23,486.52. This comes as 32 of the listed stocks advanced, while 31 retreated. 

The best-performing stock was Tourism Enterprise Co., with its share price surging 9.95 percent to SR14.36. 

Other top performers included Mobile Telecommunication Co., Saudi Arabia, which saw its share price rise by 5.32 percent to SR11.48, and Al Masar Al Shamil Education Co., which saw a 4.86 percent increase to SR22.89. 

On the downside, Almoosa Health Co. was the day’s weakest performer, with its share price falling 4.81 percent to SR150.40. 

Dallah Healthcare Co. fell 3.81 percent to SR113.50, while Saudi Research and Media Group dropped 3.44 percent to SR100.90. 

On the corporate front, Arabian Plastic Industrial Co. has signed a non-binding memorandum of understanding with K. K. Nag to explore the establishment of a specialized manufacturing facility for expanded polypropylene products. 

According to a Tadawul statement, the agreement sets out initial mutual obligations and rights between the two parties as part of APICO’s broader expansion strategy to increase production capacity and meet rising industrial demand. 

The company’s share price rose 1.21 percent to SR43.52 on the parallel market.