China In-Focus — Stocks end higher; Russian gas, coal imports rise; Soybean imports from Brazil fall

China has been importing more fuel from Russia (Shutterstock)
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Updated 20 July 2022
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China In-Focus — Stocks end higher; Russian gas, coal imports rise; Soybean imports from Brazil fall

BEIJING: Mainland China stocks tracked global peers higher on Wednesday, while an official pledge to support economic recovery from the COVID-19 fallout also helped lift market sentiment.

At the close, the Shanghai Composite index gained 0.77 percent to 3,304.72 points, while the blue-chip CSI300 index was up 0.34 percent at 4,283.8 points.

The financial sector sub-index edged up 0.17 percent, the consumer staples sector climbed 0.32 percent, and the health care sub-index finished higher by 0.95 percent.

China boosts Russian gas imports: Gazprom

China has been increasing Russian gas imports via the Power of Siberia pipeline, while supplies reached a new daily record high on July 19, Kremlin-controlled energy giant Gazprom said on Wednesday.

It also said that the company is supplying gas to China above its daily contractual obligations. The company did not provide any figures.

China’s imports of Russian coal rise 22 percent due to cheaper cargoes

China’s coal imports from Russia rose 22 percent in June from a month ago, despite a decline in its total coal purchases, as traders were drawn to discounted cargoes following western sanctions on Moscow over the war in Ukraine.

The world’s biggest consumer of the fossil fuel brought in 6.12 million tons of coal from Russia last month, data from the General Administration of Customs showed on Wednesday.

That compares with 5.01 million tons in May and 5.24 million tons in June 2021.

China has been increasing coal imports from Russia since March, when global coal prices soared to record highs but Russian cargoes were traded at steep discounts, as western allies weaned themselves away from doing business with Moscow after Russia attacked Ukraine.

Soybean imports from Brazil fall in June

China’s soybean imports from Brazil in June fell, while shipments from the US increased, customs data showed on Wednesday, as high prices curbed demand for South American cargoes.

China, the world’s top soybean buyer, imported 7.24 million tons of the oilseed from Brazil in June, down from 10.48 million tons a year earlier, data from the General Administration of Customs showed.

Total imports last month dropped 23 percent from a year before, to 8.25 million tons, as high global prices and weak demand curbed appetite for the oilseed, customs data showed earlier.

Shipments from the US in June came in at 773,114 tons, up from 54,806 tons in the same month last year, according to customs data.

Chinese buyers turned to US soybeans for better profits during the peak Brazilian soybean export season, as bad weather pushed up prices of the oilseed in the South American country.

For the first six months of the year, China brought in 27.71 million tons of Brazilian beans, up from 26.13 million tons in the same period of 2021.

Imports from the US for January to June came in at 17.54 million tons, down from 21.57 million tons the previous year.

(With input from Reuters) 


Saudi Arabia’s venture scene goes global 

Updated 04 January 2026
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Saudi Arabia’s venture scene goes global 

  • 2026 to see more exits, more AI, and a bigger push to tell Saudi’s story abroad  

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s business landscape is set to see a “record year of liquidity events” in 2026,  Philip Bahoshy, CEO of venture data platform MAGNiTT, has told Arab News.

Setting out his expectations for the upcoming 12 months, Bahoshy said he expects a shift from the domination by funding momentum seen in 2025 to one defined by exits.
The CEO thinks Saudi Arabia is “likely to see one, if not two, IPOs happening within the Kingdom,” and alongside public listings he forecast “a record year of merger and acquisition transactions,” positioning M&A as another major route to liquidity for founders 
and investors. 
Being cautious about using hype-driven labels like unicorns, Bahoshy still expects that 2026 will see the emergence of multiple billion-dollar companies. 
All this comes after a year in which Saudi Arabia’s venture capital market increasingly attracted international investors alongside a growing base of local institutional capital, with marquee events helping pull global players into the Kingdom and the wider Gulf Cooperation Council region. 

Maturity, focus, appeal 
Bahoshy summed up Saudi Arabia’s venture capital market in 2025 in three words — “attractiveness, focus and maturity.” 
In his view, the ecosystem is “maturing” after “about five years or six years now of investment,” with capital increasingly reaching “every stage of the funnel.” 
Bahoshy said he has long argued the market needs investment “across each stage, early stage, medium stage, late stage,” and he framed 2025 as a year when that breadth became more visible. 
He contrasted the current cycle with recent years, noting that “two years back, it was mega deals,” while “last year we saw the underlying ecosystem.” 
In 2025, he said, the market showed “a balance of early stage, middle stage and late stage investment,” which he described as “a positive sign of a continually evolving ecosystem.” 
Bahoshy also pointed to “focus by the government on problem-solution” as another marker of maturity. 
On the international front, he said global players are arriving “not just because it makes sense for political reasons,” but because of “the companies and the scale that they’ve achieved.” 

Heading for records 
Bahoshy said Saudi Arabia’s venture market closed 2025 with strong momentum, with leading indicators suggesting an unusually active finish to the year. 
His remarks point to a market where deal flow remained steady through the back half of the year rather than tapering off, supporting a narrative of sustained fundraising appetite among investors and continued capital formation among startups.  
Balancing the funnel 
Bahoshy said the spread of activity across mega rounds, later-stage deals, and earlier funding in 2025 was not accidental, but the result of a deliberate effort to “make sure that each step of the stage, the funding stage, has been taken care of.” 
In his account, government-backed infrastructure has been built to support the full pipeline, “whether it’s through incubators and accelerators at early stage … accelerator programs that are both private and public,” and “seed funds that continue to get capital from some of the fund to fund structures to support at the seed and series A stages.” 

A bigger push to tell Saudi’s story abroad
Beyond deal outcomes, Bahoshy framed 2026 as a year to refine Saudi Arabia’s investor strategy. 
He said “a lot of work has been done to bring people to the Kingdom,” and described that as “a credit to the Kingdom.” 
In his view, the next phase is expanding outbound engagement — “the type of delegation trips that they do” — citing recent visits to London, Silicon Valley, Korea, and Hong Kong. 
He argued the Kingdom has already achieved “the 70 percent, 80 percent attractiveness of bringing people to the Kingdom,” and now needs to “share the story outwards.”
He also expects artificial intelligence to take a much larger share of venture deployment.
“I anticipate that AI will contribute close to 20 to 30 percent or 25 percent plus of all venture capital deployed in the Kingdom,” Bahoshy said.