Saudi hotel sector sees 10% spending growth despite overall POS dip: SAMA

The hotel sector also witnessed growth in terms of transactions. Shutterstock
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Updated 18 December 2024
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Saudi hotel sector sees 10% spending growth despite overall POS dip: SAMA

RIYADH: Spending in Saudi hotels saw a weekly rise of 10.4 percent between Dec. 8 and 14, reaching SR349.2 million ($92.9 million), according to official data.

The surge can be attributed to the ongoing festivities of Riyadh Season in the Saudi capital. The latest point-of-sale bulletin released by the Kingdom’s central bank, also known as SAMA, showed this was the only sector of the economy to record a positive change over the seven-day period.

It also witnessed growth in terms of transactions, surging 9.5 percent to reach 770,000.

Overall, the Kingdom’s POS data registered a weekly decrease of 9.7 percent to reach SR12.8 billion, down from SR14.2 billion the week before. The central bank’s figures showed that the education sector saw the largest drop at 44.4 percent to SR119.8 million. 

Spending on telecommunication followed, recording a 17.7 percent slide to SR114.2 million. 

Jewelry recorded a decline of 9.8 percent to come in at SR260 million, while expenditure on construction and building materials dipped by 6.2 percent to SR358.2 million.

Spending on food and beverages dropped by 15.6 percent to SR1.8 billion, claiming the second most significant share of the total POS value. Expenditure in restaurants and cafes claimed the biggest share, recording the smallest decline at 0.3 percent to SR1.9 billion.

Miscellaneous goods and services still accounted for the third largest POS share despite a 10.9 percent dip, reaching SR1.5 billion.

Spending in the leading three categories accounted for approximately 42 percent or SR5.3 billion of the week’s total value.

At 2.8 percent, the second smallest decrease occurred in gas stations, leading total payments to reach SR904.5 million. Expenditures on transportation decreased by 3.6 percent to SR712.7 million, claiming the third smallest downstick.

Geographically, Riyadh dominated POS transactions, representing around 35.1 percent of the total, with expenses in the capital reaching SR4.5 billion — an 8.5 percent decrease from the previous week. 

Jeddah followed with a 7.1 percent dip to SR1.7 billion, and Dammam came in third at SR640 million, down 11 percent.

Hail experienced the most significant dip in spending, decreasing 15.1 percent to SR199.1 million. Tabuk recorded a decline of 14.1 percent to SR241.4 million, while Abha dropped 12.9 percent to SR145 million.

Hail and Abha saw the largest transaction decreases, dipping 7.9 percent and 6.8 percent, respectively, to 3.6 million and 2.8 million transactions.


Gulf-EU value chain integration signals shift toward long-term economic partnership: GCC secretary general

Updated 03 February 2026
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Gulf-EU value chain integration signals shift toward long-term economic partnership: GCC secretary general

RIYADH: Value chains between the Gulf and Europe are poised to become deeper and more resilient as economic ties shift beyond traditional trade toward long-term industrial and investment integration, according to the secretary general of the Gulf Cooperation Council.

Speaking on the sidelines of the World Governments Summit 2026 in Dubai, Jasem Al-Budaiwi said Gulf-European economic relations are shifting from simple commodity trade toward the joint development of sustainable value chains, reflecting a more strategic and lasting partnership.

His remarks were made during a dialogue session titled “The next investment and trade race,” held with Luigi Di Maio, the EU’s special representative for external affairs.

Al-Budaiwi said relations between the GCC and the EU are among the bloc’s most established partnerships, built on decades of institutional collaboration that began with the signing of the 1988 cooperation agreement.

He noted that the deal laid a solid foundation for political and economic dialogue and opened broad avenues for collaboration in trade, investment, and energy, as well as development and education.

The secretary general added that the partnership has undergone a qualitative shift in recent years, particularly following the adoption of the joint action program for the 2022–2027 period and the convening of the Gulf–European summit in Brussels.

Subsequent ministerial meetings, he said, have focused on implementing agreed outcomes, enhancing trade and investment cooperation, improving market access, and supporting supply chains and sustainable development.

According to Al-Budaiwi, merchandise trade between the two sides has reached around $197 billion, positioning the EU as one of the GCC’s most important trading partners.

He also pointed to the continued growth of European foreign direct investment into Gulf countries, which he said reflects the depth of economic interdependence and rising confidence in the Gulf business environment.

Looking ahead, Al-Budaiwi emphasized that the economic transformation across GCC states, driven by ambitious national visions, is creating broad opportunities for expanded cooperation with Europe. 

He highlighted clean energy, green hydrogen, and digital transformation, as well as artificial intelligence, smart infrastructure, and cybersecurity, as priority areas for future partnership.

He added that the success of Gulf-European cooperation should not be measured solely by trade volumes or investment flows, but by its ability to evolve into an integrated model based on trust, risk-sharing, and the joint creation of economic value, contributing to stability and growth in the global economy.

GCC–EU plans to build shared value chains look well-timed as trade policy volatility rises.

In recent weeks, Washington’s renewed push over Greenland has been tied to tariff threats against European countries, prompting the EU to keep a €93 billion ($109.7 billion) retaliation package on standby. 

At the same time, tighter US sanctions on Iran are increasing compliance risks for energy and shipping-related finance. Meanwhile, the World Trade Organization and UNCTAD warn that higher tariffs and ongoing uncertainty could weaken trade and investment across both regions in 2026.