Saudi Arabia, South Africa sign 11 deals to promote investment

1 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Investment organized the Saudi-South African Investment Forum in Jeddah. (SPA) 
2 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Investment organized the Saudi-South African Investment Forum in Jeddah. (SPA) 
3 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Investment organized the Saudi-South African Investment Forum in Jeddah. (SPA) 
4 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Investment organized the Saudi-South African Investment Forum in Jeddah. (SPA) 
5 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Investment organized the Saudi-South African Investment Forum in Jeddah. (SPA) 
6 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Investment organized the Saudi-South African Investment Forum in Jeddah. (SPA) 
7 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Investment organized the Saudi-South African Investment Forum in Jeddah. (SPA) 
8 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Investment organized the Saudi-South African Investment Forum in Jeddah. (SPA) 
9 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Investment organized the Saudi-South African Investment Forum in Jeddah. (SPA) 
Short Url
Updated 15 October 2022
Follow

Saudi Arabia, South Africa sign 11 deals to promote investment

  • The deals were signed in the fields of energy, water, green hydrogen, waste diversion, logistics, and aerial survey services  

JEDDAH: Saudi Arabia and South Africa on Saturday signed 11 agreements and memoranda of understanding in the government and private sectors, aimed at promoting their developing investment sectors.

The deals, which were signed at the Saudi-South African Investment Forum in Jeddah, covered the fields of energy, water, green hydrogen, waste diversion, logistics and aerial survey services.

The forum, organized by the Saudi Ministry of Investment, was attended on the South African side by President Cyril Ramaphosa, Minister of Commerce and Industry and Competition Ebrahim Patel and others.

 

 

Saudi attendees included Investment Minister Khalid Al-Falih, Tourism Minister Ahmed Al-Khateeb, and Minister of Industry and Mineral Resources Bandar Al-Khorayef.

In his address at the forum, Al-Falih praised Saudi-South African relations, including economic and trade cooperation spanning more than three decades.

“Our nations share many traits. The Kingdom is the largest economy in the Middle East and in the Arab world, and holds a leading political and economic role in the region,” he said.

 

 

“Meanwhile, South Africa is the second-largest economy in Africa and the most diverse and technologically advanced economy on the African continent, with great market potential, well-developed infrastructure and a competitive private sector,” he added.

“These circumstances present an invaluable opportunity to strengthen our cooperation, which can be seen as an exceptional South-to-South exchange, especially given the timing, with the world undergoing tremendous shifts and challenges.”

Al-Falih said Saudi Arabia is growing at the fastest rate among the G20 economies, as it enjoys a strategic location linking three continents, and has a coastline of 1,200 km along the Red Sea, through which about 15 percent of global trade travels.

 

 

He added that Saudi-South African trade is constantly growing, has increased from $4.6 billion in 2019 to around $4.8 billion last year, and is expected to exceed $5.3 billion in 2022.

He said these numbers could increase further by activating the great commercial and logistical capabilities of the two countries.

Al-Falih underscored priority areas of cooperation, including renewable energy, mining, agriculture and food processing, manufacturing, defense and aerospace industries, tourism, communications and information technology.

 

 

He said South Africa represents a major access point to Africa, while Saudi Arabia is an important gateway to the Middle East and a link between East and West.

The forum’s agenda included sessions on major projects in the Kingdom, mining, agriculture, food, tourism and energy.


Global Markets: Asian stocks fall as Iran war keeps oil at $100, upends rate outlook

Updated 13 March 2026
Follow

Global Markets: Asian stocks fall as Iran war keeps oil at $100, upends rate outlook

  • Asian stocks set for consecutive weeks in the red
  • Traders rapidly cut Fed rate cut ‌wagers for the year
  • Investors focus on oil prices, inflation risks

SINGAPORE: Asian stocks slumped on Friday, poised for a second straight weekly decline as fast-dwindling hopes of a resolution to the US ​and Israel’s war with Iran kept oil prices aloft, casting a shadow over global markets and spurring inflation fears.

The US dollar has become the safe-haven of choice during the tumult, putting most other currencies under pressure. The dollar was set for a second consecutive week of gains and is up 2 percent since the war broke out at the end of February.

The yen hit its weakest level since July 2024 at 159.69 per US dollar on Friday as Japan warned that it was ready to take action to protect against yen declines. It was last at 159.41.

Analysts said the bar for intervention is higher this time around as any intervention now could prove futile in the face of the relentless dollar buying.

In ‌Asia, MSCI’s broadest ‌index of Asia-Pacific shares slipped 1 percent, on course for a 2.2 percent decline for ​the week. ‌Japan’s ⁠Nikkei fell ​1.4 percent, ⁠while tech-heavy South Korean stocks slid nearly 2 percent.

European futures point to a slightly higher open but may struggle to hold those gains on weak sentiment.

Oil prices remained close to $100 per barrel level, although they eased a bit on Friday after US issued a 30-day license for countries to buy Russian oil and petroleum products currently stranded at sea.

Brent futures were at $100.70 a barrel at 9:47 a.m. Saudi time, while West Texas Intermediate crude was at $95.59. They were both hovering around $60 levels at the start of 2026.

“Headlines are coming at the market like water from a fire hose, which is impacting the price of oil, and consequently, financial markets,” said Mitch ⁠Reznick, group head of fixed income at Federated Hermes.

“The question remains to what extent ‌we are caught in the $80-plus range even as the headlines become ‌banal with their frequency and contradictions.”

With Iran stepping up attacks across the Middle ​East as its new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei vowed to ‌keep the Strait of Hormuz shipping lane closed, investors are bracing for a prolonged conflict and higher oil prices.

The ‌spectre of rising inflation has led markets to rapidly reprice what they expect from central banks this year, with traders now anticipating just 20 basis points of easing from the Federal Reserve compared to 50 bps of cuts priced in last month.

The selloff in global stocks and bonds shows no signs of easing. US stocks fell sharply overnight and the two-year Treasury yields, which typically move in ‌step with Fed interest rate expectations, scaled a six-month high on Thursday.

“With the possibility of higher oil prices still elevated, investors should be prepared for continued volatility and potentially further ⁠downside in the near ⁠term,” said Vasu Menon, managing director of investment strategy at OCBC in Singapore.

Shifting rates outlook

Jose Torres, senior economist at Interactive Brokers, said the impact of rising oil prices on corporate margins, inflation expectations, rate-cut prospects and yields is sparking volatility, leaving participants with few places to hide.

“Indeed, sinking optimism about Fed rate reductions amid strengthening cost pressures is weighing on traditional safe havens such as silver, gold, and government debt.”

The two-year note yield eased 3 bps to 3.730 percent after hitting its highest level since August 22 on Thursday. The yield has gained 35 bps in the two weeks since the war started.

The yield on the longer-dated 30-year bond has risen 24 bps this month.

Investor focus will switch to a slate of policy meetings next week with the Fed, the Bank of Japan, the European Central Bank and the Bank of England all due to meet, with most expected to keep rates unchanged. The Reserve Bank of Australia is broadly expected to hike ​rates next week.

In currencies, the euro was steady ​at $1.15035, on course for a weekly decline of nearly 1 percent. The dollar index was at 99.816, set for about a 1 percent weekly advance.
Gold was 0.4 percent higher at $5,101 per ounce on Friday but set for a 1 percent drop for the week.