Saudi EXIM Bank targets African markets with 4 new MoUs 

On the sidelines of the African Development Bank Group’s Annual Meetings, Saudi EXIM Bank CEO Saad Al-Khalb signed an MoU with Ravi Gupta, managing director of Blend International Ltd., aimed at exploring new commercial opportunities and strengthening global partnerships to support Saudi exports. SPA
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Updated 29 May 2025
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Saudi EXIM Bank targets African markets with 4 new MoUs 

  • Deals come as Saudi exports to Africa surged 20.6% year on year to SR7.84 billion in March
  • Saudi delegation held in-depth discussions with leaders of several international financial institution

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia is accelerating the expansion of its non-oil exports into African markets, with the Saudi Export-Import Bank securing four new strategic agreements to strengthen trade and investment ties across the continent.  

Saudi Export-Import Bank CEO Saad bin Abdulaziz Al-Khalb signed memoranda of understanding with Africa50, the Ghana Export-Import Bank, Blend International Limited, and Guinea’s Ministry of Planning and International Cooperation, the Saudi Press Agency reported.  

The deals were finalized on the sidelines of the African Development Bank Group’s annual meetings, held in Cote d’Ivoire from May 26 to 30. 

The newly signed deals come as Saudi exports to Africa surged 20.6 percent year on year to SR7.84 billion ($2.09 billion) in March 2025, reflecting growing trade ties between the Kingdom and the continent.  

Al-Khalb said the bank’s participation in the meetings aims to deepen international trade relations and forge partnerships that support Saudi non-oil export growth in African markets. 

The SPA report added: “He stated that the memoranda of understanding are an extension of the bank’s efforts to promote trade exchange, stimulate development projects, and enable local exporters to export their services and products to African markets through effective and extended partnerships, contributing to supporting sustainable development goals and enhancing economic integration.” 

He also described the gathering as a valuable opportunity to boost economic cooperation and engage with officials from export credit agencies and financial institutions across African countries. 

The agreements were signed by Saudi EXIM CEO Saad bin Abdulaziz Al-Khalb, along with Alain Ebobisse, CEO of Africa50; Sylvester Mensah, CEO of the Ghana Export-Import Bank; Ravi Gupta, managing director of Blend International Limited; and Ismail Nabeh, minister of planning and international cooperation of Guinea.

The MoU with Africa50 is aimed at enhancing cooperation in infrastructure projects by partnering with Saudi companies. The agreement with the Ghana Export-Import Bank will focus on exploring cooperation opportunities and enhancing bilateral exports of services and products. 

Meanwhile, the MoU with Blend International Limited is aimed at targeting broader trade opportunities and international partnerships. The deal with Guinea’s Ministry of Planning and International Cooperation seeks to bolster development projects and investment in priority sectors, enabling Saudi exports of engineering services and industrial supplies. 

Also, on the sidelines of the event, Al-Khalb and his delegation held in-depth discussions with leaders of several international financial institutions, focusing on expanding trade ties and boosting the flow of Saudi non-oil exports into African markets.


Oil supply disruption in Gulf raises inflation risks and growth concerns worldwide

Updated 08 March 2026
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Oil supply disruption in Gulf raises inflation risks and growth concerns worldwide

RIYADH: Rising oil prices are emerging as an inflation and growth shock for the US and the global economy as Gulf producers cut output, declare force majeure, and warn that storage constraints could trigger wider shut-ins. 

Kuwait said it had started reducing crude production and declared force majeure, while Iraq has already cut about 1.5 million barrels per day and warned reductions could exceed 3 million bpd if export routes remain blocked. 

Qatar has halted liquefied natural gas liquefaction and declared force majeure on exports, while Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. said it is actively managing offshore output as storage pressures build. 

Asian refiners and petrochemical producers have begun cutting runs and declaring force majeure as Middle East feedstock supplies are disrupted, Reuters reported. 

The immediate result is a sharper pass-through of energy costs to consumers and industry. 

A note from JPMorgan Chase said “supply disruptions in the Gulf are accelerating faster than expected as storage constraints begin to force upstream shut-ins across the region.” Brent crude opened March 6 near $83 a barrel and quickly rose above $94, with the bank estimating about 2.5 million barrels a day of shut-ins after seven days of conflict, although reported disruptions currently appear closer to 2 million barrels a day. It said more than 4 million barrels a day of production may need to be curtailed by March 13. 

Goldman Sachs said in a global economics report that “the main economic impact for most countries is that the recent rise in oil prices to around $80/bbl will boost inflation and slow growth,” estimating that oil near current levels would add 0.2 percentage point to global headline inflation and shave 0.1 point off global growth. A temporary move to $100 a barrel would lift the inflation hit to 0.7 point and deepen the growth drag to 0.4 point. 

For the US, the shock is milder than for oil-importing economies but still material. Goldman Sachs said the effect on US core inflation should remain relatively limited compared with Europe and emerging markets because the country relies more heavily on domestic energy supply, although households are already seeing higher fuel costs. 

Reuters reported that US gasoline prices have risen more than 10 percent in a week, while AAA said the national average for regular gasoline climbed nearly 27 cents week on week to $3.25 a gallon as crude prices advanced. 

Higher fuel costs threaten to squeeze consumer spending, raise freight and airline expenses, and complicate the path for the Federal Reserve if headline inflation remains sticky. 

Outside the US, the impact could be greater as many economies are more exposed to imported oil and gas. 

Goldman Sachs said the biggest headline inflation effects would likely be felt across parts of Central and Eastern Europe and Asia, while Europe and Asia also face added pressure from gas markets after the shutdown of Qatar’s LNG production, which the bank said affects 19 percent of global LNG supply. 

The bank raised its April 2026 TTF gas price forecast to €55 ($64) per megawatt-hour from €36, warning that a prolonged disruption could recreate conditions similar to the 2022 European energy crisis. 

The supply shock is also being amplified by logistics. The Strait of Hormuz, which normally handles roughly 20 percent of global oil and LNG supply, has been blocked for days, leaving Gulf exporters with fewer available vessels and rapidly filling storage tanks. 

That is pushing producers to reroute barrels where possible rather than maintain normal output. 

Saudi crude is increasingly being redirected toward Yanbu on the Red Sea, while Egypt is seeking to position itself as part of that alternative corridor.  

Asharq Bloomberg reported, citing two government officials, that Egypt has offered 10 crude and petroleum-product storage tanks for lease at Ain Sokhna and Ras Badran, targeting global oil traders and shippers with spare storage estimated at about 29 million barrels. 

Goldman Sachs said global financial conditions had already tightened by 31 basis points since March 6 and estimated that, if sustained, this alone could trim global gross domestic product growth by another 0.3 percentage point over the next year. 

The bank added that central banks have historically looked through many oil shocks, but a larger move in prices or stronger pass-through to consumer costs could delay rate cuts, particularly in emerging markets.