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  • Oman
    Oman’s uncertain future

    When Qaboos seized power in 1970, Oman was an isolated and impoverished state beset by a Marxist insurgency. Yet, over the course of his 44-year reign, Qaboos has been credited with using Oman’s oil wealth to transform his nation into a rich country with a vibrant tourism industry and a high standard of living. Under Qaboos’ stewardship, Oman has also conducted an independent foreign policy that serves a unique role in the region.

  • Dollar-Riyal
    More peculiarity: Saudi riyal falls sharply against US dollar

    The surge of demand for dollars in the Saudi Arabian foreign exchange market may be linked to the recent plunge of global oil prices as well as a sharp fall of the Saudi stock market over the past two weeks, the traders said. They said banks were not panicking, but some were buying forwards because the dollar demand had pushed the Saudi riyal’s spot rate unusually far beyond its peg of 3.75 against the dollar.

  • Family Survey
    87.2 percent of Saudi families have drivers

    A recent survey conducted by the Public Opinion Survey Unit in King Abdulaziz Center for National Dialogue found that 66.7 percent of the 1,000 participants from the Kingdom had house-maids. The survey also found that 87.2 percent of the Saudi families participating in the polls said that they had private chauffeurs.

  • Twitter in KSA
    Saudi mufti blasts Twitter as evil

    “It is very unfortunate that people are asking one another about what had been posted as if it was a reliable and credible source of information when it fact it is a source of lies and misinformation,” he said, local daily Al Eqtisadiya reported on Tuesday. Al Shaikh has in the past blasted Twitter, one of the world’s fastest-growing social media platforms, as a source of misleading information and abuses.

  • Houthis and Yemen
    Beyond the Houthi Takeover of Yemen

    For now, the Houthis’ main opposition is Al Qaeda. What began as a tribal quarrel for revenge and the return of ideology, has quickly gained sectarian elements. On Oct. 9, Al Qaeda detonated a suicide bomb just before a Houthi rally in Tahrir Square, at the very center of Sana’a. The explosion killed 47 people and injured hundreds more. In their statement that claimed responsibility for the attack, Al Qaeda leaders promised “hundreds more bombs” in the future.

  • Saudia
    Saudi Arabian Airlines Plans IPOs of Three Service Units

    Saudi Arabian Airlines plans to raise at least 10 billion riyals ($2.7 billion) through the sale of shares in its ground-handling, cargo and maintenance units.

  • Israeli Public Opinion
    Three-quarters of Israeli Jews oppose detail of Palestinian state, poll shows

    The survey, conducted by a rightwing thinktank headed by a political ally of the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, makes for stark reading, contradicting previous polls showing up to 60% of Israelis in favour of a two-state solution. However, the poll confirms the argument that Israeli support for a Palestinian state is dramatically lower when they are presented with specific details rather than being asked to support the basic idea.

  • Retail Sector
    Saudi Retailer Jarir To Invest $293m In Doubling Stores Over Five Years

    Jarir is one of the stock market’s most direct plays on Saudi Arabia’s rapid population growth and rising incomes, which is why its shares are up 75 per cent since end-2012 compared to a 40 per cent gain for the main market index.

    The company, which sells books, office and art supplies, computers and some other electronics, has grown from a single store in a Riyadh street in 1979 into a chain with 36 stores. Thirty-one of them are inside Saudi Arabia with the remainder in Abu Dhabi, Kuwait and Qatar.

  • Oil
    The Energy Revolution’s Impacts on the Arab World

    Turmoil in the world’s hydrocarbon heartland is not good news for anyone, including the United States. Oil has been a fungible commodity for decades and gas increasingly so as a result of the rising share of LNG in the global gas market. Major disruptions to supply from the Arab world would have negative economic consequences even for an energy independent America.

  • Khafji Oil Field
    Saudi, Kuwait Seen Curbing Oil Output at ’Opportune Time’

    Saudi Arabia and Kuwait halted production at a jointly run oil field late this week, a move that could help ease a supply glut that has pushed global prices down 25 percent. The 300,000-barrel-a-day Khafji field, located in the neutral zone between the two countries, was being shut because of environmental concerns, a person familiar with Saudi Arabian oil policy said yesterday, who asked not to be identified because the information isn’t public. The shutdown comes as Saudi Arabia and other OPEC members face increasing pressure to scale back production while supply expands from the U.S. and other countries and demand growth slows. Asia’s oil market has become particularly flooded as the U.S. imports fewer cargoes.