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  • Inaugural Esports World Cup signs off with historic closing ceremony

    Over the course of eight consecutive weeks, the EWC hosted 1,500 athletes and over 200 clubs, with a record-breaking $60m prize pool up for grabs across 22 tournaments and 21 titles. The ceremony concluded the biggest weekend in esports history, which also featured the 2024 Esports Awards and 2024 New Global Sport Conference.

  • Saudi Arabia launches Phase I of Riyadh Parking Project

    Phase I of the project is to create and manage over 24,000 public parking spaces in public and commercial streets, in addition to the management of more than 140,000 parking spaces in nearby residential neighborhoods. The phase will cover 12 areas distributed across the Al-Wurud, Ar Rahmaniyyah, West Olaya, Al-Murooj, King Fahd, and Al-Sulaimaniyah districts, in addition to four other areas in the southern neighborhoods of Riyadh.

  • BlackRock partners with Saudi Arabia to develop kingdom’s property finance market

    “We look forward to partnering with the Saudi Real Estate Refinance Company to advance mortgage securitisation and other capital markets solutions,” a BlackRock representative told The National. “SRC and BlackRock share the objective of enabling and unlocking institutional capital in this growing, high quality fixed income asset class.” The new deal comes after BlackRock announced a partnership with PIF in April to open a multi-class investment firm in Riyadh, anchored by an initial investment mandate of up to $5 billion from the Saudi wealth fund, to drive further growth of the kingdom's capital markets and attract more investment.

  • Here Are the People Who Lost Millions Backing Musk’s Twitter Takeover

    Elon Musk took Twitter private in 2022, but he didn’t do it alone: the deal was backed by his wealthy allies in Silicon Valley, embattled hip-hop mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs, and holding companies based in Saudi Arabia and Qatar, according to a court document ordered unsealed by federal judge on Tuesday, which were first seen by the public late Wednesday night.

  • Saudi father’s simple post on social media goes viral

    Abdulkarim Al-Kazraj, a respected author and passionate advocate for social and cultural issues, recently took to X to share a poignant moment from his family’s life. What began as a simple post to mark his daughter Laura’s first day of middle school quickly went viral, capturing the hearts of thousands and sparking meaningful conversations across the nation. Al-Kazraj’s post featured a side-by-side photo comparison of Laura on her first day of school in 2018 and her first day of middle school in 2024.

  • What Maersk’s $250M logistics park means for Saudi Arabia

    Danish shipping and logistics company Maersk is building a 225,000-square-meter facility in Saudi Arabia's Red Sea-facing Jeddah Islamic Port. The company is investing $250 million in developing a key logistics hub with the Saudi Ports Authority, also known as Mawani. The facility allows for connectivity over land, sea and air. It has warehouses for e-commerce and business requirements and caters to a wide range of sectors such as fast-moving consumer goods, frozen food, automotive, retail and lifestyle, petrochemicals, electronics and pharmaceuticals. The logistics hub will also provide and first- and last-mile deliveries, as well as custom services.

  • No longer a financial reservoir? Saudi Arabia’s spending confirms clear shift in strategy

    The fund’s investments in domestic infrastructure and real estate development grew 15% year-on-year to 233 billion riyals, while its foreign investments increased 14% to 586 billion riyals. At the same time, the Saudi government introduced laws and reforms to facilitate and even mandate investment in the country as it builds out its Vision 2030 plan to diversity its oil-reliant economy.

  • Riyadh airport breaks passenger traffic record, with 130,000 passengers in a single day

    King Khalid International Airport (KKIA) in Riyadh broke its highest-ever passenger traffic record at the end of July and beginning of August 2024. The KKIA, managed and operated by Riyadh Airports Company (RAC), announced in a press release on Thursday that the airport reported handling 3.5 million passengers in July 2024, surpassing the previous record of 3.1 million passengers set in June—an increase of 400,000 passengers. According to the release, the airport set a new single-day record on Thursday, August 1, 2024, with 130,000 passengers, surpassing the previous highs of 125,000 on July 25 and 124,000 on June 13. In July, the airport achieved a seat occupancy rate of 91 percent, demonstrating its high operational efficiency.

  • Saudi Arabia’s economy set to grow in second half of 2024

    Saudi Arabia’s economic growth is anticipated to recover in the latter half of 2024, as per research firm CreditSights. The kingdom’s GDP is projected to increase by 1.7% in 2024, with a further acceleration to 4.7% in 2025. This follows a 0.4% contraction in the second quarter of 2024, after a 0.8% contraction in 2023 and a 7.5% expansion in 2022.

  • 59% of Saudi family businesses have no succession plan: CEO of NCFB

    The regions of Qassim and Riyadh lead in the presence of family businesses in Saudi Arabia, constituting 95% of the active commercial establishments and employ 57% of the private sector's workforce, accounting for 48% of the total workforce in Saudi Arabia, Al-Eqtisadiah newspaper reported. Moreover, 69% of family businesses are concentrated in Riyadh, Makkah, and the Eastern Province, which is a natural reflection of the economic activity in Saudi Arabia.