Saudi-listed sukuk and bonds rise to $185.5bn in Q3

Listed sukuk and bonds represented 18.4 percent of Saudi Arabia’s gross domestic product, slightly higher than 18.2 percent in the previous quarter. Shutterstock
Short Url
Updated 27 October 2025
Follow

Saudi-listed sukuk and bonds rise to $185.5bn in Q3

RIYADH: The total value of Saudi-listed sukuk and bonds increased to SR695.8 billion ($185.5 billion) at the end of the third quarter of 2025, up 3 percent quarter on quarter.  

Listed sukuk and bonds represented 18.4 percent of Saudi Arabia’s gross domestic product, slightly higher than 18.2 percent in the previous quarter, Argaam reported, citing data from Tadawul’s quarterly debt market report.  

Government sukuk and bonds continued to dominate the market, accounting for 97.6 percent of total listed debt at the end of the quarter, reaching SR679.1 billion. Corporate sukuk and bonds made up the remaining 2.4 percent, or SR16.7 billion.  

The growth in listed sukuk and bonds also aligns with the government’s broader debt management strategy.  

The National Debt Management Center announced its 2025 annual borrowing plan with projected funding needs of SR139 billion, covering both the anticipated budget deficit and upcoming debt maturities.   

As part of this plan, the NDMC completed a domestic sukuk issuance in August valued at SR5.31 billion, distributed across four tranches. These issuances are part of ongoing efforts to strengthen the domestic debt market and diversify the government’s financing sources in line with Saudi Vision 2030 objectives.  

Saudi investors held majority of listed debt instruments, owning SR677.4 billion, or 97.4 percent of the total.   

Foreign investors accounted for SR15 billion, representing 2.2 percent, while investors from Gulf Cooperation Council countries held SR3.4 billion, or 0.5 percent.  

Despite the increase in total market value, trading activity slowed significantly. The traded value dropped 89 percent quarter on quarter to SR1.78 billion from SR16 billion in the previous quarter.  

The number of executed trades also decreased to 10,414 in the third quarter, compared with 12,251 in the second quarter of 2025.  

The number of listed sukuk and bond issuances stood at 60, down slightly from 61 in the previous quarter.  

According to the data, the size of Saudi Arabia’s listed sukuk and bond market has nearly doubled over the past five years, rising from SR358 billion in the first quarter of 2020 to SR695.8 billion in the third quarter of 2025.   


Closing Bell: Saudi main index holds steady at 10,626

Updated 08 December 2025
Follow

Closing Bell: Saudi main index holds steady at 10,626

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index was broadly stable on Monday, as it marginally declined by 0.05 percent to close at 10,625.50.

The total trading turnover of the benchmark index stood at SR3.42 billion ($910 million), with 84 of the listed stocks advancing and 167 declining.

The Kingdom’s parallel market Nomu shed 150.97 points or 0.63 percent to close at 23,911.47.

The MSCI Tadawul Index edged up by 0.18 percent to 1,397.01.

The best-performing stock on the main market was Bupa Arabia for Cooperative Insurance Co. Its share price increased by 5.68 percent to SR150.80.

The share price of East Pipes Integrated Co. for Industry rose by 3.58 percent to SR138.80.

On Tuesday, the company announced that it signed a six-month contract worth SR485 million with the Saudi Water Authority to manufacture and supply steel pipes.

The firm added that the financial impact of the contract will be visible on the company’s financials in the final three months of this year and the first quarter of 2026.

On the main market, ARTEX Industrial Investment Co. also saw its stock price increase by 3.57 percent to SR11.59.

Conversely, the share price of Abdullah Saad Mohammed Abo Moati for Bookstores Co. declined by 6.47 percent to SR44.24.

On the announcements front, Power and Water Utility Co., Marafiq for Jubail and Yanbu, said that it reached an amicable settlement with Saudi Aramco in relation to the supply of heavy fuel oil to the firm’s facility in Yanbu 2.

Under the agreement, Saudi Aramco will pay approximately SR70 million, and Marafiq will be exempted from paying certain handling fees, as well as operation, maintenance, and rental costs for specific facilities over varying timeframes, with an amount not exceeding approximately SR15 million annually until 2033.

The share price of Marafiq edged up by 0.78 percent to SR38.64.