Saudi banks focus on equity to support pvt firms

Reuters
2 Min Read

RIYADH: Saudi banks raised their investment in securities to support a cash-hungry private sector in April, according to a fresh set of official data that also showed a continued decline in money supply.

M3 growth, one factor potentially influencing inflation, slowed for a seventh straight month in April to 2.6 percent — the lowest in at least 7 years — against 4.6 percent in March as customers cut rewarded deposits with banks faster than in the previous month, central bank data showed on Sunday.

Time and savings deposits — M3’s second biggest component — fell by almost 41 billion riyals — or 11.7 percent — in the 12 months to end-April while their annual fall was about 10 percent in March.

Demand deposits, — M3’s biggest component —, meanwhile added 71.5 billion riyals or 18.5 percent in the 12 months to end-April.

Bank claims on the private sector added just 23.2 billion riyals — or 3.2 percent — in the 12 months to April to a total of 750.6 billion riyals, which is the highest since the 748.8 billion riyals of November, 2009, the previous record.

A breakdown of these claims shows however that much of their growth came from investment in private securities which grew 41.4 percent — or by 8.8 billion riyals — to a record 29.9 billion riyals in the 12 months to end-April.

In the meantime bank credit to the private sector totaled 720.7 billion riyals — an increase of 2 percent in the year to end April — and still below the 723.4 billion riyals record of November, 2009.

Share This Article
Follow:
Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms.