Corporate activities drive 11% loans surge from Saudi banks, SAMA data shows

Personal loans, encompassing all types of credit extended to individuals, totaled SR1.29 trillion. Shutterstock
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Updated 01 July 2024
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Corporate activities drive 11% loans surge from Saudi banks, SAMA data shows

RIYADH: Loans by Saudi Arabia’s banking sector increased to SR2.72 trillion ($726.44 billion) in May, marking an annual 11.14 percent rise, official data showed. 

Data released by the Saudi Central Bank, also known as SAMA, showed that corporate credit, which accounted for 53 percent of the total lending in the month, experienced higher growth rates compared to personal loans, which made up the remaining 47 percent. 

McKinsey also noted in a June report that mortgage lending is a leading growth factor in banking sector expansion in the Kingdom, despite high interest rates.

This comes as high oil prices, the government’s economic diversification efforts, increased government spending, and robust non-oil gross domestic product growth are creating substantial growth opportunities for Saudi banks, according to Fitch Ratings. 

Gulf Cooperation Council governments are promoting homeownership and enhancing residential finance as part of a broader trend aimed at developing mortgage markets, impacting regional banks’ retail loan portfolios. 

Globally, banking growth is driven by digital payments and fintech innovations, with artificial intelligence poised to revolutionize banking and asset management in advanced economies, the firm added. 

Personal loans, encompassing all types of credit extended to individuals, totaled SR1.29 trillion, marking a 7.3 percent growth year on year, the SAMA report noted. 

Among corporate loans, those granted for real estate activities comprised the majority, accounting for 20 percent of the total and amounting to SR281.1 billion. This category saw a 24 percent annual increase.

Closely following were loans extended for wholesale and retail trade, comprising 14 percent of corporate holdings and totaling SR196.61 billion. This category of claims saw an 11.64 percent rise from May 2023.

Lending for manufacturing activities constituted a 12 percent share totaling SR170.81 billion, reflecting a 2.43 percent decline compared to the same month last year. 

Meanwhile, the electricity, gas, and water supply sectors accounted for 11 percent of lending, growing by 30 percent during this period. 

In May, the Saudi Electricity Co. announced a SR472 billion capital expenditure program over six years. This initiative aims to enhance the Kingdom’s power generation, transmission, and distribution infrastructure to meet future demand growth. The transmission sector will receive the largest investment of SR351 billion. 

In June, Saudi Arabia also announced the world’s largest renewable energy survey, involving the installation of 1,200 measuring stations. Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz Al-Saud launched the Geographic Survey Project for Renewable Energy, which aims to identify optimal sites for solar and wind power projects across the Kingdom. 

These initiatives will likely spur demand for financing across infrastructure development, power generation, and transmission projects. 

In terms of growth rates, lending for professional, scientific, and technical activities recorded the highest annual increase among others at 63 percent, despite comprising a relatively low percentage share of total loans at SR8.16 billion.  

This growth can be driven by increasing demand for specialized services such as consulting, engineering, information technology services, and research and development. 

Government policies and initiatives aimed at diversifying the economy and promoting sectors such as technology and innovation may also be driving increased demand in these fields. These efforts can include incentives for startups, technology parks, and research institutions.


Fitch maintains neutral outlook on GCC corporates 

Updated 12 sec ago
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Fitch maintains neutral outlook on GCC corporates 

RIYADH: Gulf Cooperation Council corporates are expected to see largely stable conditions in 2026 as government-led investment supports earnings, offsetting pressure from lower oil prices and tighter funding conditions, according to a new analysis.

In a report published this week, Fitch Ratings said sustained public-sector capital expenditure — particularly in infrastructure and energy — will continue to underpin regional corporate performance, even as lower oil-price assumptions are likely to constrain public- and private-sector budgets. 

This comes as GCC economies are forecast to grow 4.4 percent in 2026 and 4.6 percent in 2027, driven by stronger non-hydrocarbon activity and rising hydrocarbon output, the World Bank said. 

In its Global Economic Prospects report released earlier this month, the World Bank said non-oil sectors, which account for more than 60 percent of GCC GDP, are expected to be supported by large-scale investment across the region. 

Samer Haydar, Fitch’s head of GCC corporates, said: “We expect sustained public-sector capex to support steady earnings for GCC Corporates in 2026, especially in infrastructure and energy, even as lower oil price assumptions constrain fiscal flexibility.” 

He added: “Sub-investment-grade credits will face low leverage headroom and increased interest-rate sensitivities.” 

Fitch expects non-energy sectors to keep benefiting from state-backed investment programs — especially in Saudi Arabia and the UAE — while projecting GCC non-oil GDP growth of 3.7 percent in 2026, a moderation from 4.2 percent previously. 

The agency also said regulatory reforms tied to diversification are supporting initial public offering activity, with a “robust” pipeline into 2026 supported by policy measures and deep local markets. 

Credit profiles remain largely stable, with Fitch noting that about 95 percent of rated GCC issuers carry Stable Outlooks, and eight upgrades were recorded during 2025, partly linked to sovereign rating actions. 

Ratings across Fitch’s GCC corporate universe span from “AA” to “B”, with government-related entities tending to be larger; Fitch said GREs represented about half of its rated GCC corporates in 2025. 

On balance-sheet metrics, Fitch expects leverage to be modestly higher in 2026, with average leverage at 2.4 times before easing to 2.3x in 2027. 

While strong 2025 earnings provided headroom for sectors including oil and gas, real estate, utilities and telecoms, the agency said industrials, retail and homebuilders typically operate with tighter leverage capacity, leaving less cushion amid still-elevated input and operating costs. 

Funding conditions are expected to remain a key differentiator, Fitch said, adding that GCC issuers pushed their “maturity wall” out to 2028, helped by 2025 bond and sukuk issuance — particularly from UAE and Saudi Arabia-based issuers refinancing maturities early. 

The agency estimates aggregate corporate fixed-income maturities for UAE and Saudi Arabia-based entities at about $50 billion over the next five years, and said persistently higher funding costs are likely to weigh more on high-yield issuers with sizable near-term maturities than on investment-grade peers. 

Fitch also flagged rising capex as a near-term cash-flow constraint. It expects capex intensity to increase in 2026, keeping free cash flow subdued for most GCC corporates, after negative free cash flow peaked in 2025 due to the timing and scale of investment programs. 

Highly rated issuers are increasingly using asset-light approaches — such as joint ventures — to reduce upfront spending, while others may rely on hybrid instruments, equity increases, or asset disposals to manage funding pressures. 

Macro assumptions remain closely tied to the oil backdrop. Fitch forecasts Brent crude will average $63 per barrel in 2026, down from $70 per barrel in 2025, as supply growth — particularly from the Americas — outpaces demand. 

Prices are expected to remain above fiscal breakevens for most GCC producers, though Fitch highlighted exceptions including Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, with Oman only marginally below breakeven. 

Across sectors, Fitch expects GCC property earnings to be underpinned by regional economic expansion and projected average occupancy above 90 percent in 2026, broadly in line with 2025. 

It also pointed to a new Saudi regulatory provision freezing annual rent increases for five years across residential, commercial, and land leases, which it expects to limit landlords’ ability to pass on base rent increases. 

For homebuilders, Fitch expects higher working-capital needs as pre-sales payment plans in prime Dubai locations ease toward 50 percent in 2026 from a peak of 70 percent, while projecting earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization margins around 26.8 percent for most UAE-based homebuilders and gross leverage averaging about 2 times. 

Fitch highlighted three key risks to monitor in 2026: potential regional escalation around the Red Sea that could disrupt supply chains and raw material costs; a widening scope of rescaling mega projects in Saudi Arabia; and funding costs staying higher than expected, which could curb access to debt capital markets for non-GRE issuers.