Red Sea Development builds town for 14,000 employees

The vast Red Sea tourism project under development in Saudi Arabia will receive its first guests next year. (Supplied)
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Updated 12 April 2021
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Red Sea Development builds town for 14,000 employees

  • Red Sea project will have 50 hotels
  • First guests to be welcomed next year

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea Development Company is building accommodation for some 14,000 people working on the mega project.
It signed a contract with Contracting & Construction Enterprises (CCE), to design and construct the infrastructure for the staff city, Al Eqtisadiah reported.
The contractor will also help to develop infrastructure designed to reduce carbon emissions.
The project will include the construction of roads, van lanes, pedestrian and cyclists’ paths, as well as the excavation and construction of central facilities.
The road and track network will be dedicated to sustainable transportation, the report said.
Lighting will also be designed to reduce energy consumption in line with the Red Sea Dark Skies Program.
The Red Sea project will consist of some 50 hotels providing up to 8,000 hotel rooms and more than 1,000 residential properties spread over 22 islands and six indoor sites, upon completion in 2030.
The project aims to receive its first guests next year as a new airport and the first of the planned hotels come online.
The new staff accommodation will welcome employees by the second quarter of 2021, the newspaper said.


Saudi Arabia’s debt capital market to hit $600bn by end-2026, up 15% Fitch says 

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Saudi Arabia’s debt capital market to hit $600bn by end-2026, up 15% Fitch says 

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s debt capital market is expected to reach $600 billion in outstanding issuance by the end of 2026, cementing its position as the largest US dollar debt and sukuk issuer among emerging markets. 

In a report published this week, Fitch Ratings said outstanding Saudi debt surpassed $520 billion in 2025, an annual increase of 21 percent, with sukuk — Shariah-compliant financial instruments — accounting for roughly 62 percent of the total.

The steady momentum in Saudi Arabia’s sukuk market highlights the broader expansion of the Kingdom’s debt markets, as domestic and international investors seek diversification and stable returns. 

Bashar Al-Natoor, global head of Islamic finance at Fitch Ratings, said: “Driven by cross-sector financing needs, fiscal deficits, regulatory initiatives, and expected lower oil prices and interest rates, Saudi Arabia’s DCM is likely to reach $600 billion outstanding in 2026.” 

He added: “Almost all Fitch-rated Saudi sukuk are investment grade, with issuers on Stable Outlooks and no defaults. Following reforms, foreign investors now contribute more than 10 percent of the government’s outstanding direct domestic issuance in primary local markets at end-2025.”

In 2025, the Kingdom’s dollar debt issuance surged by 49 percent to around $100 billion, with sukuk growth outpacing bonds. 

In emerging markets excluding China, Saudi Arabia was both the largest dollar-debt issuer in 2025, with an 18 percent share, and the largest environmental, social and governance dollar-debt issuer, with more than a 26 percent share. 

“Subordinated sukuk issuances by banks are rising. Access to the Saudi riyal and dollar markets is bringing benefits amid tighter riyal liquidity. This is supported by no additional currency risk, and established access to foreign investors,” said Fitch. 

It added that Saudi Arabia’s annual borrowing plan, approved by the National Debt Management Center, aims to source up to 50 percent of sovereign funding needs from private markets, 25 percent to 30 percent from international debt capital markets, and 20 percent to 30 percent from domestic debt capital markets. 

The report further noted that private funding channels, syndicated financing and certificates of deposit for banks are expected to remain among the prominent alternative funding sources in Saudi Arabia. 

Fitch, however, cautioned that Saudi Arabia’s DCM is exposed to oil price sensitivity, interest rate volatility, evolving Shariah requirements for sukuk, and geopolitical risks, which could affect fiscal balances, funding costs and investor sentiment. 

Earlier this month, a separate report by Fitch Ratings revealed that global sukuk issuances reached $300 billion in 2025, representing a 25 percent increase compared to the previous year, driven by steady offerings in Gulf Cooperation Council countries. 

The report added that this growth momentum is likely to continue in 2026, supported by funding diversification efforts, upcoming maturities and refinancing activity across sovereigns, banks and corporates.