Saudi Arabia to Host Real Estate Exhibition with Participants from 170 Countries

Visitors attend Cityscape Jeddah during a past edition of the exhibition. (SPA)
Visitors attend Cityscape Jeddah during a past edition of the exhibition. (SPA)
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Saudi Arabia to Host Real Estate Exhibition with Participants from 170 Countries

Visitors attend Cityscape Jeddah during a past edition of the exhibition. (SPA)
Visitors attend Cityscape Jeddah during a past edition of the exhibition. (SPA)

Riyadh will host the Cityscape Global exhibition from September 10 to 13.

Held under the theme “The Future of Living”, the exhibition will be sponsored by the Saudi Ministry of Municipal, Rural Affairs, and Housing and is organized by Tahaluf.

The event will gather homebuyers, property experts, designers, and real estate developers from around the world at the Riyadh International Convention and Exhibition Center.

Visitors from more than 170 countries are expected to attend, including 2,000 investors.

More than 350 exhibitors will showcase their offerings, while over 250 speakers will share insights and experiences throughout over 250 hours of sessions.

Cityscape Global showcases the best international practices in future development and construction techniques. In addition, it sheds light on the real estate legislation system.

Cityscape Global will showcase high-profile and giga projects throughout the Kingdom under one roof, such as Kuzam, Al Fursan, and Sadayem Suburbs by the National Housing Company, NEOM, Roshn, Jeddah Central Development Company, AlUla, Masar Destination, as well as local and international projects across 24 countries in the presence of the Real Estate General Authority as a regulation partner, the Ministry of Investment as an investment partner, and Tourism Development Fund as a strategic partner, and BIM Ventures as PropTech zone partner.

"We are thrilled to be hosting Cityscape Global in Riyadh, the largest real estate exhibition in the world, within which the most significant major projects under the umbrella of Vision 2030 are participating, along with quality projects from 24 countries," said Minister of Municipal, Rural Affairs, and Housing Majid Al-Hogail.

Visitors of Cityscape Global can attend seminars in the NEOM Future of Living Summit, the Real Estate Institutional Investor Forum, the Property Portfolio Forum, the PropTech stage, and the Design and Architecture area.

The event will also feature Cityscape Innovation Challenge, which allows start-ups to pitch their ideas toward creating a more innovative future, and the Cityscape Global ROSHN Hackathon, which creates competition to find qualitative solutions in the sector.



Euro Zone Inflation Edges up in 'Difficult Print' for ECB

A general view of a fruit and vegetable stand on a weekly market in Berlin, Germany, March 14, 2020. REUTERS/Annegret Hilse/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
A general view of a fruit and vegetable stand on a weekly market in Berlin, Germany, March 14, 2020. REUTERS/Annegret Hilse/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
TT

Euro Zone Inflation Edges up in 'Difficult Print' for ECB

A general view of a fruit and vegetable stand on a weekly market in Berlin, Germany, March 14, 2020. REUTERS/Annegret Hilse/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
A general view of a fruit and vegetable stand on a weekly market in Berlin, Germany, March 14, 2020. REUTERS/Annegret Hilse/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights

Euro zone inflation unexpectedly edged up in July, data showed on Wednesday, although a widely watched gauge of price growth in the services sector eased.

Wednesday's figures did not seem to derail market expectations for an interest rate cut by the European Central Bank in September, but they were likely to strengthen concerns about a difficult last mile in the ECB's efforts to bring down inflation.

According to Reuters, price growth in the 20 countries that share the euro accelerated to 2.6% in July from 2.5% in June according to Eurostat's flash estimate.

A key measure of underlying growth in prices -- which excludes energy, food, alcohol and tobacco -- failed to show the expected decline and came in unchanged at 2.9%.

"It's a difficult print for the ECB," said Fabio Balboni, an economist at HSBC. "Disinflation on the goods side is coming to an end and services inflation remains high."

Still, Balboni stuck to his call for ECB cuts in September and December, as did investors in euro zone money markets, on expectations that inflation would eventually ease.

A general view of a fruit and vegetable stand on a weekly market in Berlin, Germany, March 14, 2020. REUTERS/Annegret Hilse/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights.

"I still expect a second rate cut to come in September," said Kyle Chapman, a foreign exchange markets analyst at Ballinger Group. "I don’t think it matters too much if we get the odd data point that’s slightly stronger than expected."

Euro zone inflation has fallen a long way since briefly hitting double digits in late 2022, when it had been boosted in large part by a brisker-than-expected reopening of the economy after the COVID-19 pandemic and more expensive fuel in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

But that progress has stalled in recent months as prices in the services sector got a boost from higher salaries.

In a small, positive sign for the ECB, services' price growth eased to 4.0% from 4.1% in June as an expected boost from the Olympics in Paris failed to materialise, with some consumers balking at what they saw as price-gouging.

"This kind of pushback bodes well for the medium term inflation outlook," economists at ABN-Amro wrote in a note.

The ECB has made clear it would not be swayed by individual data points and will focus instead on the broader trend for inflation, which it expects to bounce around current levels this year before pulling back towards its 2% target in 2025.

The central bank started cutting rates last month, paused in July and is widely expected to slowly dial back over the next 1-1/2 years some of the steepest hikes it has made in its 25-year history.