NEOM to invite firms to tender for high-speed rail packages

Within the next two months the future city that is currently in the development phase in Saudi Arabia, will issue the request.
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Updated 24 April 2022
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NEOM to invite firms to tender for high-speed rail packages

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia's $500-billion gigaproject, NEOM, is expected to issue the request for qualification for contracts related to the high-speed rail scheme The Line project, Meed reported. 


Within the next two months the future city that is currently in the development phase in Saudi Arabia, will issue the request, which will be handled in two packages; Package A and Package B. 

Citing close sources to the project, Meed reported that Package A will cover spring and connector projects, along with works related to signalling, telecommunications and power systems. 

Package B deals with civil works and other related utility components. 

Meanwhile, NEOM had received bids on March 28 for the contract to build tunnels in its railway system. 

Contractors that bid for the work include; 

Acciona from Spain and India's Larsen & Toubro

Saudi Arabia's Al-Bawani and China Railway

Greece's Archirodon, Samsung C&T and Hyundai Engineering & Construction from South Korea. 

Spain's FCC, Saudi Arabia's Shibh al-Jazira Contracting Co., and China State Construction Engineering Corporation

PowerChina

Launched in 2021, The Line is one of the main highlights of the NEOM project.

It is a 170-kilometre long linear city that aims to have 1 million citizens without conventional cars, no streets, and no carbon emissions.

NEOM is one of the flagship projects Saudi Arabia is seeking to use to transform it socio-politically as part of its Vision 2030 including the move away from an oil-dependent economy.


GCC banks post record $16.6bn profit in Q3 on lending, revenue growth 

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GCC banks post record $16.6bn profit in Q3 on lending, revenue growth 

RIYADH: Gulf Cooperation Council banks posted a record $16.6 billion in net profit in the third quarter of 2025, an 11.6 percent increase from the same period a year earlier, according to an analysis., an analysis showed. 

Net profit at listed GCC banks also rose 2.2 percent from the previous quarter, marking the third consecutive quarterly increase, driven by broad-based revenue growth and improved cost efficiency, according to Kuwait-based Kamco Invest. 

The performance aligns with a projection made by accounting firm Ernst & Young in March, which said the GCC banking sector was poised for robust growth in 2025, supported by ongoing economic diversification and favorable global financial conditions. 

In its latest report, Kamco stated: “The sequential increase (of net profit) was once again mainly led by a broad-based increase in revenues for the sector and lower cost-to-income ratio that more than offset an increase in impairments during the quarter.”  

It added: “Loan impairments once again witnessed a double-digit increase, reaching a three-quarter high level of $2.6 billion during the third quarter of 2025 vs $2.4 billion during the second quarter of this year.”  

Aggregate banking sector revenues reached a new record high of $36.8 billion during the quarter, registering a three-quarter high sequential growth of 3.3 percent, according to Kamco Invest. 

Qatari banks recorded the strongest sequential revenue growth at 5.9 percent in the third quarter, compared to the previous three months. 

Bahrain-listed banks followed with revenue growth of 5 percent, while UAE-listed banks posted an expansion of 3.4 percent. 

Kuwaiti and Saudi-listed banks were next, with revenue growth of 3.3 percent and 2.1 percent, respectively. 

Lending activity among listed GCC banks rose by 3.7 percent in the third quarter, one of the strongest increases in more than four years, bringing net loans to $2.31 trillion by the end of September. 

“The growth (in lending) reflected resilient non-oil sector growth in the region with non-oil manufacturing consistently well above the growth mark for key economies in the region,” said Kamco Invest.  

Gross loans increased by 3.6 percent during the quarter to $2.41 trillion. 

The aggregate net loan-to-deposit ratio for the GCC banking sector remained elevated above 80 percent at the end of the third quarter, reaching a record high of 82.8 percent. 

Saudi banks posted a record loan-to-deposit ratio of 97.6 percent in the third quarter, up 330 basis points from the previous quarter, driven by higher lending and a decline in customer deposits. 

Qatari banks followed with a loan-to-deposit ratio of 91 percent in the third quarter, up from 90.3 percent in the previous three months. 

UAE-listed banks recorded an increase in the loan-to-deposit ratio for the second consecutive quarter after a decline in the first quarter. The aggregate ratio for the UAE banking sector stood at 69.4 percent — one of its highest levels, but still the lowest in the GCC.