Saudi CITC approves Integrated Telecom’s plan to sell all fiber-optic assets

Integrated Telecom Company’s (ITC) head office in Riyadh. (Wikimedia Commons)
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Updated 26 April 2022
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Saudi CITC approves Integrated Telecom’s plan to sell all fiber-optic assets

RIYADH: Integrated Telecom Co., or Salam, has been given the green light to sell all its fiber-optic assets to Technical Links Services.

Under the approval from Saudi Communications and Information Technology Commissio, all of the network will be sold to TLS on a three-phase implementation plan basis, according to CITC. 

According to the plan, the process of repositioning assets between Salam and TLS will extend until the end of 2024.

Also Salam will lease parts of the fiber-optic network’s infrastructure from TLS based on its needs.

Upon the sale completion, TLS will become one of the largest providers of telecommunications services for the Kingdom's fiber-optic infrastructure, Argaam reported. 


Saudi POS stays above $4bn as Ramadan spending lifts home goods

Updated 16 sec ago
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Saudi POS stays above $4bn as Ramadan spending lifts home goods

RIYADH: Saudi point-of-sale transactions remained above $4 billion in the week ending Feb. 14, with spending on furniture and home supplies rising ahead of Ramadan, central bank data showed. 

Overall POS activity totaled SR15.34 billion ($4.09 billion), representing a 4.8 percent week-on-week decrease, while the number of transactions dipped 1.6 percent to 252 million, according to the Saudi Central Bank. 

Spending on furniture and home supplies rose 5.9 percent to SR697.35 million, marking the strongest weekly increase among major retail categories. 

Expenditure on electronics increased 2.9 percent, while spending on construction and building materials rose 1.1 percent.

Sectors that saw declines includes freight transport and courier services, which posted a drop of 5 percent to SR64.86 million.

Pharmacy and medical supplies spending fell 8.2 percent to SR223.81 million, but outlays on medical services rose 5.7 percent to SR539.68 million. 

Food and beverage expenditure decreased 4.3 percent, but the total spend of SR2.57 billion meant it retained the largest share of POS activity.

Restaurants and cafes followed with SR1.73 billion, despite a 4.7 percent decline. Apparel and clothing outlays represented the third-largest share of POS spending during the monitored week, up 0.5 percent to SR1.38 billion.

The Kingdom’s major urban centers mirrored the mixed national changes. Riyadh, which accounted for the largest share of total POS spending, saw a 3.4 percent drop to SR5.32 billion. The number of transactions in the capital reached 80.7 million, down 0.8 percent week on week. 

In Jeddah, transaction values decreased 4.4 percent to SR2.12 billion, while Dammam reported a 3.3 percent decrease to SR746.29 million. 

POS data, tracked weekly by SAMA, provides an indicator of consumer spending trends and the ongoing growth of digital payments in Saudi Arabia.  

The data also highlights the expanding reach of POS infrastructure, extending beyond major retail hubs to smaller cities and service sectors, supporting broader digital inclusion initiatives.  

The growth of digital payment technologies aligns with Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 objectives, promoting electronic transactions and contributing to the Kingdom’s broader digital economy.