Commercial sector leads Saudi real estate growth over two months to Oct 6 2021

New buildings being constructed in the new King Abdullah Financial District in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
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Updated 11 October 2021
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Commercial sector leads Saudi real estate growth over two months to Oct 6 2021

  • In the two-month period of 1443 the average property value increased to SR556,696

MOSCOW: The commercial property sector's value of transactions registered with the Ministry of Justice, rose sharply to SR9.6 billion in the first two months of 1443, ending October 6 2021, from SR5.7 billion and SR5.8 billion in the first two months of the previous Hijri year 1442, a period ending 16 October 2020.

The value of residential real estate transactions in the first two months of 1443 totalled SR17.9 billion ($4.7 billion), up 8 percent from SR17.7 billion, in the same period of 1442 and 1441, respectively.

However, compared to the first two months of 1441, a pre-pandemic period ending 28 Oct. 2019, it experienced a decline of 31 percent from SR25.8 billion.

The total number of transactions in the residential sector fell to 32,117 in the first two months of 1443 from 43,301 and 57,130 transactions recorded over the same period of 1442 and 1441, respectively.

As a result, in the two-month period of 1443 the average property value increased to SR556,696, or by 36 percent and 23 percent compared to the same period of 1442 and 1441, respectively.

Average area per property stood at 779 sqm, little changed from 739 sqm in the same period of 1442 but noticeably up from 728 sqm in the same period of 1441.

The average value per property surged to SR1.8 million from SR1.1 million each in the same period of 1442 and 1441 as the average area of a property grew 85 percent and almost 400 percent from the same period of 1442 and 1441 while the number of properties involved in the commercial segment even decreased to 5,226 from 5,691 and 6,140 in the same two months of 1442 and 1441, respectively.


Gold slips over 1 percent on strong dollar, easing rate-cut bets

Updated 12 March 2026
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Gold slips over 1 percent on strong dollar, easing rate-cut bets

  • Chile central bank issues first gold purchase in decades
  • BMI expects silver to average $93/oz in 2026

Gold prices fell more than 1 percent on Thursday, pressured by a stronger dollar and diminishing hopes for a reduction in borrowing costs as the ongoing Iran war stoked inflation concerns.
Spot gold dipped 1.1 percent at $5,118.16 per ounce by 1:31 p.m. ET (1731 GMT). US gold futures for April delivery settled 1 percent lower at $5,125.80.
The dollar gained for a third consecutive session. The greenback is a competitive ‌safe-haven asset, and ‌a stronger US currency makes gold more ​expensive ‌for ⁠holders ​of other currencies.
“The ⁠higher dollar index, rising treasury yields and lack of interest-rate cuts are the negative factors, but the conflict in the Middle East has been generating some safe-haven flows,” said Phillip Streible, chief market strategist at Blue Line Futures.
Two tankers were ablaze in Iraqi waters in an apparent escalation in Iranian attacks that have cut off ⁠Middle East energy supplies. In reaction, oil prices ‌rose sharply for the day.
Iran will avenge ‌the blood of its martyrs, keep ​the Strait of Hormuz closed and ‌attack US bases, new Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei said.
Higher crude ‌prices feed into inflation by raising transportation and production costs. Gold is considered an inflation hedge, but high interest rates weigh on it by making yield-bearing assets more attractive.
“If they can prevent oil prices from climbing ‌further, gold should be in a good place... On the bullish side for gold, the main argument is ⁠that central ⁠bank buying and steady exchange-traded fund inflows, which have remained positive all year,” Streible added.
Chile’s central bank issued its first major gold purchase since at least 2000. In February, the bank boosted its gold reserves to $1.108 billion, up from $42 million in January, equivalent to 2.2 percent of total reserves.
Elsewhere, spot silver eased 1 percent to $84.90. Prices gained more than 146 percent last year.
Analysts at BMI wrote in a note they expect silver to average $93 per ounce in 2026, with strong investment demand consolidating the gains witnessed in 2025, and offsetting price-induced ​demand destruction in solar ​panels and jewelry.
Spot platinum lost 1.1 percent to $2,145.75, and palladium fell 1 percent to $1,620.86.