Oil exports help Saudi Arabia’s current account touch $26bn in 4Q of 2021

  • 4/4/2022
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RIYADH: A rise in oil exports helped increase Saudi Arabia’s current account deposits touch $26 billion in the fourth quarter of 2021, according to a Saudi Central Bank report. The rise in the current account balance was attributed to a strengthening surplus in the goods balance, which reached $48.9 billion in the fourth quarter, up from $37.9 billion in the previous quarter. Oil exports surged by 16.5 percent, quarter-on-quarter, to stand at $64 billion while non-oil exports rose by 18 percent to $21.5 billion. Additionally, the Kingdom’s net flow of foreign direct investment reached $1.92 billion in the fourth quarter, easing significantly from the second quarter"s figure of $13.8 billion. Yet, it went up compared to the third quarter, which witnessed a net inflow of $1.75 billion. The massive second quarter figure of net FDI was primarily attributed to a $12.4 billion infrastructure deal between Aramco and a global investor consortium, in which the consortium acquired a 49 percent stake in Aramco Oil Pipelines Company, according to Aramco press release issued 18 June 2021. Equity and investment fund shares reached $21 billion in the fourth quarter of 2021, up 61 percent when compared to the previous quarter.

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