Search Site

Trends banner

UAB net profit up by 50% for H1

Total assets increase by 11 percent.

TSMC Q2 profit up 60%

TSMC is the world's largest contract maker of chips.

ADNOC shifts OMV stake to XRG

XRG is ADNOC's wholly-owned international investment company.

SIB H1 net profit $189m

The bank's total assets increased by $1.49 billion.

TSMC’s H1 revenue up 40 percent

Robust demand for AI technology behind the surge.

Saudi Arabia records $20 bn surplus after oil price surge

Qatar has called for the formulation of policies that discourage the politicization of the oil and gas trade. File pic
  • The surplus is largely due to oil revenues rising to more than 250 billion riyals, compared to around 132 billion during the same period in 2021, a jump of 89 percent
  • In December, Saudi Arabia approved its 2022 budget projecting a surplus for the first time since oil prices slumped in 2014

Saudi Arabia said Thursday it had achieved a rare budget surplus of over $20 billion in the second quarter of 2022, as oil revenues surged 90 percent compared to a year ago.

Despite being among the world’s top crude exporters and the largest Arab economy, Saudi Arabia has failed to balance its books since the 2014 oil price slump, forcing the Gulf state to borrow to make up for shortfalls.

In the second quarter of 2022, Saudi Arabia earned more than it spent, with a surplus of 78 billion riyals ($20.8 billion), the finance ministry said.

The surplus is largely due to oil revenues rising to more than 250 billion riyals, compared to around 132 billion during the same period in 2021, a jump of 89 percent.

Saudi Arabia has benefited from both an economic bounce after restrictions imposed to tackle the Covid-19 pandemic were eased, and then again as oil prices surged following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

In December, Saudi Arabia approved its 2022 budget projecting a surplus for the first time since oil prices slumped in 2014.

Economists had said the kingdom needed a crude price of around $80 a barrel to balance the budget.

Prices have exceeded $100 in recent months, though they have since fallen.

On Wednesday, the OPEC+ oil cartel, led by Saudi Arabia and Russia, decided to undertake a small production increase for September.