Diriyah signs agreements worth over $700m at PIF forum

Jerry Inzerillo, Group CEO of the Diriyah Gate Development Authority, during an interview with Arab News. Photo by Huda Bashatah
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Updated 08 February 2024
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Diriyah signs agreements worth over $700m at PIF forum

RIYADH: Riyadh will witness a surge in the entertainment, leisure and tourism sectors, with Diriyah Co. aiming to break ground on 11 new assets by the end of 2024.

In the first step toward this endeavor, the company signed two agreements on the sidelines of the Public Investment Fund’s Private Sector Forum. 

Speaking to Arab News, Jerry Inzerillo, Group CEO of the Diriyah Gate Development Authority, outlined that the firm’s agreement worth SR700 million ($186 million) with Saudi Constructioneers Ltd., known as Saudi Co., entails the development of the Ritz-Carlton residences.

The second deal, worth SR2 billion, was inked with Al-Ayuni Investment and Contracting Co. for infrastructure development. 

Inzerillo affirmed that this is a testament to the fact that the company is “moving very, very fast along” and will open assets, announce and break ground every year “until we pull off the most spectacular EXPO the world has seen in 2030.”

The executive said that among the 11 upcoming initiatives in 2024 is the King Salman Boulevard, which he deemed Saudi Arabia’s version of Paris’ Champs-Elysees. It will be revealed this December.

“This will have a new contemporary art museum, one of the most beautiful museums in the world. Our version of the Sydney Opera House, the new King Salman Mosque. It will take a while to build it but we will show that blueprint in December of this year,” he said. 

In December of each year, the company holds its “Bashayer” event to announce its upcoming initiatives. The last meeting saw the unveiling of the Diriyah Art Futures museum, which the executive noted will “have its first exhibit shortly.”

Since then, the company has opened 9 km of parks in order to “fulfill His Royal Highness (the crown prince’s) vision of having all Saudis outside enjoying the weather, bicycling, horseback riding, skateboarding, walking, jogging, even picnicking with families. So we did nine km of parks. We’ve planted 6 million trees and bushes and shrubs in the wadi, all with smart city technology and we opened up our community center,” said Inzerillo. 

He added: “We opened up our sales center for the residences, and we already put 106 of our new Ritz-Carlton villas on sale, which sold very well. We introduced our new Wadi Spa residential community in what is for our district. We finished nine of the 27-hole golf course, the Greg Norman Golf Course, so we did a lot in one year. Wait to see what we do by this December.”

Outlining the importance of the private sector in bringing giga-projects like Diriyah to fruition, Inzerillo recapped that while the government will fund these projects “to get them going,” the commercial opportunities available through these projects around the Kingdom are “quite substantial.”

Thus, this year, the company intends to allocate more than $3 billion in contracts, predominantly focusing on the infrastructure and design engineering fields, as mentioned during his participation in a panel discussion at the forum.

Furthermore, he noted that several significant projects would be listed on the Saudi Stock Exchange, Tadawul, “at some particular point,” adding that Diriyah has mainly garnered “very good private sector support” from Saudi and Gulf countries. 

“Assets that have high commercial returns, hotels, restaurants, retail, residential, we’re seeing great interest from the private sector,” he said. 


Closing Bell: Saudi main index slips to close at 11,228 

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Closing Bell: Saudi main index slips to close at 11,228 

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index slipped on Sunday, lost 23.17 points, or 0.21 percent, to close at 11,228.64. 

The total trading turnover of the benchmark index was SR2.99 billion ($797 million), as 170 of the stocks advanced and 82 retreated.    

On the other hand, the Kingdom’s parallel market Nomu gained 449.38 points, or 1.90 percent, to close at 24,093.12. This comes as 43 of the stocks advanced while 27 retreated.    

The MSCI Tadawul Index lost 6.07 points, or 0.40 percent, to close at 1,511.36.     

The best-performing stock of the day was Obeikan Glass Co., whose share price surged 7.54 percent to SR27.66.  

Other top performers included Alamar Foods Co., whose share price rose 6.80 percent to SR47.10, as well as Saudi Kayan Petrochemical Co., whose share price climbed 6.79 percent to SR5.66.   

Saudi Investment Bank recorded the steepest drop, falling 3.21 percent to SR13.56. 

Jahez International Co. for Information System Technology also saw its share price fall 3.15 percent to SR13.55. 

Rabigh Refining and Petrochemical Co. declined 2.78 percent to SR7.34. 

On the announcements front, Tanmiah Food Co. reported its annual financial results for the period ending Dec. 31. According to a Tadawul statement, the company recorded a net loss of SR18.8 million, compared with a net profit of SR95.8 million a year earlier. 

The net loss was mainly due to ongoing market challenges that resulted in continued pricing pressures in fresh poultry, inflationary cost pressures, higher financing expenses, and depreciation and ramp-up costs from new facilities, partially offset by increased production volumes and cost-optimization initiatives.  

Tanmiah Food Co. ended the session at SR58.20, up 3.72 percent. 

United International Holding Co., also known as Tas’heel, announced its annual financial results for the period ending Dec. 31. A bourse filing showed the company recorded a net profit of SR273.64 million in 2025, up 23.05 percent from 2024, primarily driven by a 23.4 percent rise in revenues. The revenue growth helped lift gross profit by 23.7 percent. 

Tas’heel ended the session at SR146.80, down 0.28 percent.