Closing Bell: Saudi main index edges up to close at 11,315

Trading turnover for the day stood at SR4.32 billion ($1.15 billion), with 169 stocks advancing and 76 declining. File
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Updated 07 July 2025
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Closing Bell: Saudi main index edges up to close at 11,315

  • MSCI Tadawul Index rose 0.55% to close at 1,451.40
  • Parallel market Nomu edged down 0.11% to 27,257.09

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index closed higher on Sunday, gaining 71.28 points, or 0.63 percent, to end the session at 11,315.73.

Trading turnover for the day stood at SR4.32 billion ($1.15 billion), with 169 stocks advancing and 76 declining. The MSCI Tadawul Index also registered gains, rising 7.94 points, or 0.55 percent, to close at 1,451.40.

Meanwhile, the parallel market, Nomu, edged down by 30.41 points, or 0.11 percent, to 27,257.09, with 32 stocks in the green and 43 in the red.

ACWA Power Co. emerged as the session’s top performer, with its shares surging 7.97 percent to SR265.60. Naseej International Trading Co. followed with a 6.60 percent rise to SR106.60, while Saudi Public Transport Co. climbed 5.64 percent to SR14.79.

On the other hand, Sahara International Petrochemical Co. posted the steepest decline, falling 1.81 percent to SR19.50. Shares of Saudi Industrial Export Co. and Alistithmar AREIC Diversified REIT Fund also slipped, dropping 1.72 percent and 1.42 percent to SR2.29 and SR8.34, respectively.

Meanwhile, Almarai Co. announced a net profit of SR646.8 million for the first half of 2025, marking a 4 percent year-on-year increase. The company attributed the improved results to a 3 percent growth in revenue, alongside disciplined cost control measures, a favorable product mix, and lower funding costs.

Knowledge Economic City Co. signed a 25-year development and leasing agreement with Riyadh Schools Holding Co., a subsidiary of the Mohammed bin Salman Non-Profit Foundation, to build an educational complex in Madinah valued at SR399.3 million.

The project will include a 20,000 sq. meter facility designed to accommodate 1,800 students, with lease payments starting at SR13.7 million in the first year and increasing progressively. The initiative is expected to support Madinah’s educational development and bolster KEC’s long-term financial sustainability and urban goals.

Future Vision for Health Training Co. also announced a 24-month agreement with Aliens Zone LLC to develop a smart e-learning and training platform.

The deal, valued at over 5 percent of the company’s 2024 revenue, will cover system design, content development, and AI-driven training solutions. The platform is expected to launch in the fourth quarter of 2025 and is part of Future Vision’s broader digital transformation strategy in line with Saudi Vision 2030.


Kuwait draws $725m in new FDI in 2024–25, KDIPA says  

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Kuwait draws $725m in new FDI in 2024–25, KDIPA says  

JEDDAH: Kuwait attracted about 222.9 million Kuwaiti dinars ($725 million) in new foreign direct investment during the 2024–2025 fiscal year, as the Gulf state seeks to boost private-sector activity and diversify its economy. 

The inflows were approved between April 1, 2024, and March 31, 2025, under Kuwait’s foreign investment framework, the Kuwait Direct Investment Promotion Authority said in its 10th annual report released this month.  

Approved investments during the period originated from countries including Jordan, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and the US, as well as the UK, China and the Netherlands, according to data cited by the state-run Kuwait News Agency.   

“The authority noted that cumulative approved investments from January 1, 2015, to March 31, 2025, increased to 1.97 billion dinars, spread across 105 investment entities from 34 countries, covering 16 vital sectors,” KUNA reported. 

KDIPA said these investments have supported the national economy through job creation, local talent development, technology transfer and localization, increased domestic content, and higher exports. 

Sheikh Meshaal Jaber Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, director general of KDIPA, said: “Investments have facilitated job creation, technology transfer, and export enhancement, with expenditures by licensed entities increasing by 17.6 percent to reach 1.09 billion dinars between 2015-2023.” 

He added: “The first decade of KDIPA’s journey has demonstrated Kuwait’s ability to attract value-added investments and maximize their impact in supporting economic development, thanks to institutional work and close cooperation with our partners in both the public and private sectors.” 

Al-Sabah said KDIPA had strengthened its Gulf relations through active participation in high-level meetings, committees, and regional economic initiatives.  

“Locally, it enhanced cooperation with the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, and with more than 15 other government entities to ensure the completion of investment licensing procedures, facilitating approvals, and granting incentives in accordance with its law, in addition to developing a digital integration mechanism to streamline procedures for investors,” he said, according to the report.

He emphasized that the annual report marks a key milestone in tracking progress, providing updates on developments, analyzing operational and investment trends, and identifying challenges and risks, along with ways to address them.   

“This aims to advance work methodology, improve decision-making processes, adjust course of action, and enhance performance in a manner that embraces credibility, transparency, and professionalism, while monitoring progress, evaluating efforts, and being more future-ready,” he concluded.   

KDIPA noted that the report coincides with the 10th anniversary of its establishment as Kuwait’s official authority for promoting the country and attracting value-added investments.