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Luberef net profit falls 7% in Q1

A fall in by-products sales leads to profit dip.

SABIC net loss $322 million

The company's net profit was $66m in Q1 2024

PureHealth posts $137m Q1 net profit

The Group's revenue increased 8 percent YoY.

Borouge Q1 net profit $281 million

The total dividend paid to shareholders in 2024 $1.3bn.

Emirates expects first 777X delivery in H2 2026

Boeing had pushed back the first delivery to 2026 from 2025.

Non-resident foreigners may finally be allowed to own property in Saudi Arabia

The plants are being built under the Privatization Program, one of the goals of Vision 2030.
    • Saudi Shoura Council calls for non-resident foreigners to be given the right to own property

    • The Real Estate General Authority will finally decide on the Shoura Council’s proposal

    Non-resident foreign individuals might now be permitted to own real estate in Saudi Arabia, albeit with “specific controls.” The Shoura Council has called on the Real Estate General Authority to coordinate with the relevant authorities to study its proposal allowing non-resident foreign individuals to own real estate in Saudi Arabia amid specific controls.

    According to the Saudi Gazette, the Shoura Council also called on the authority on Wednesday to ensure transparent governance for the entities it established, such as the Saudi Real Estate Institute, the Saudi Center for Real Estate Arbitration and the Center for Research and Studies.

    The authority has been asked to strengthen the supervisory role in all of its work so that it can follow up on compliance with the rules and standards it has set for the real estate activities.
    The Shoura Council urged the authority to coordinate with the concerned authorities to ensure stability in the real estate sector and reduce risks that may occur in the real estate market.

    The council pointed out that the authority should prepare its annual report in line with the royal decree regarding the rules for preparing annual reports for ministries, institutions, and government agencies.

    The Shoura Council called for supporting the authority’s budget to enable it to carry out tasks entrusted to it, complete its projects, and hire more workforce to achieve its goals.