Saudi Arabia launches $270m cultural financing product with private sector 

The announcement was made at the Cultural Investment Conference in Riyadh. AN
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Updated 30 September 2025
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Saudi Arabia launches $270m cultural financing product with private sector 

JEDDAH: Saudi Arabia’s Cultural Development Fund unveiled its first co-lending product, aiming to unlock more than SR1 billion ($270 million) in financing for cultural projects through public-private partnerships. 

The program, announced at the Cultural Investment Conference in Riyadh, is designed to expand access to funding across cultural industries and attract more private capital into the sector, the Saudi Press Agency reported. 

The launched product will enable access to flexible financing solutions across various cultural sectors, supporting expansion, and contributing to enhancing financing access for entrepreneurs and startups. 

Saudi Arabia’s cultural sector is expanding rapidly, having attracted $500 million in foreign direct investment and participation from 1,700 non-Saudi investors to date. The growth underscores the Kingdom’s ambition to position itself as a global cultural hub under its National Culture Strategy, launched in 2019. 

The initiative reflects efforts to increase the private sector’s role in supporting cultural projects, job creation and economic diversification under Vision 2030. 

In a post on its official X account, the CDF said: “We launch the first-of-its-kind joint funding initiative to support the growth of cultural projects, in a qualitative partnership with 5 leading financial institutions.” 

Leading Saudi financial institutions participating in the initiative include Al-Raedah Finance, Manafa Finance, and Raya Financing, along with Lendo and Abdul Latif Jameel Finance, the CDF’s post added. 

The new product uses a collaborative mechanism between the CDF and private financial institutions to multiply financing impact and expand access for enterprises and entrepreneurs, the SPA report added. 

The initiative reflects the CDF’s commitment to developing innovative financial solutions that empower cultural projects, attract private investment, enhance cultural production, and strengthen the private sector’s role in sustaining growth. 

The fund emphasized that the launch reaffirms its role as a center of excellence for financial empowerment, focusing on solutions that foster cultural projects, generate jobs, and contribute to the Kingdom’s gross domestic product. 


Saudi Arabia set to attract $500bn in private investment, Al-Falih tells conference

Updated 09 December 2025
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Saudi Arabia set to attract $500bn in private investment, Al-Falih tells conference

RIYADH: Sustainability, technology, and financial models were among the core topics discussed by financial leaders during the first day of the Momentum 2025 Development Finance Conference in Riyadh.

The three-day event features more than 100 speakers and over 20 exhibitors, with the central theme revolving around how development financial institutions can propel economic growth.

Speaking during a panel titled “The Sustainable Investment Opportunity,” Saudi Investment Minister Khalid Al-Falih elaborated on the significant investment progress made in the Kingdom.

“We estimate in the midterm of 2030 or maybe a couple of years more or so, about $1 trillion of infrastructure investment,” he said, adding: “We estimate, as a minimum, 40 percent of this infrastructure is going to be financed by the private sector, so we’re talking in the next few years $400 (billion) to $500 billion.”

The minister drew a correlation between the scale of investment needs and rising global energy demand, especially as artificial intelligence continues to evolve within data processing and digital infrastructure in global spheres.

“The world demand of energy is continuing to grow and is going to grow faster with the advent of the AI processing requirements (…) so our target of the electricity sector is 50 percent from renewables, and 50 percent from gas,” he added.

Al-Falih underscored the importance of AI as a key sector within Saudi Arabia’s development and investment strategy. He made note of the scale of capital expected to go into the sector in coming years, saying: “We have set a very aggressive, but we believe an achievable target, for AI, and we estimate in the short term about $30 billion immediately of investments.”

This emphasis on long-term investment and sustainability targets was echoed across panels at Momentum 2025, during which discussions on essential partnerships between public and private sectors were highlighted.

The shared ambition of translating the Kingdom’s goals into tangible outcomes was particularly essential within the banking sector, as it plays a central role in facilitating both projects and partnerships.

During the “Champions of Sectoral Transformation: Development Funds and Their Ecosystems” panel, Saudi National Bank CEO Tareq Al-Sadhan shed light on the importance of partnerships facilitated via financial institutions.

He explained how they help manage risk while supporting the Kingdom’s ambitions.

“We have different models that we are working on with development funds. We co-financed in certain projects where we see the risk is higher in terms of going alone as a bank to support a certain project,” the CEO said.

Al-Sadhan referred to the role of development funds as an enabler for banks to expand their participation and support for projects without assuming major risk.

“The role of the development fund definitely is to give more comfort to the banking sector to also extend the support … we don’t compete with each other; we always complement each other” he added.