Anticipated Surge in Saudi Corporate Profits

Traders in one of the Saudi stock exchange halls (SPA)
Traders in one of the Saudi stock exchange halls (SPA)
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Anticipated Surge in Saudi Corporate Profits

Traders in one of the Saudi stock exchange halls (SPA)
Traders in one of the Saudi stock exchange halls (SPA)

The anticipated rise in profits of companies listed on the Saudi financial market in the banking, communications, and healthcare sectors during Q3 of 2023 can be attributed to several factors.

Leading these factors are cost reduction, reliance on digital infrastructure, expansion of projects, and advancements in service delivery, according to economic analysts.

Some forecasts suggest a substantial increase in healthcare sector profits, approaching 50% compared to the same period in the previous year.

Meanwhile, other sectors show profit increases ranging between 20% and 30%, with the communications sector’s average expected increase falling between 30% and 40%.

Most banks, on the other hand, are expected to record profit increases ranging from 10% to 20%.

Economic analyst Abdullah Al-Jubaili asserted that the increased profitability of banking institutions can be attributed to their operational cost reduction and the closure of some branches.

These banks have also embraced digital infrastructure, which has led to higher profit margins despite a decrease in their real estate lending portfolios, representing a significant portion of the total lending portfolio of these banks, Al-Jubaili told Asharq Al-Awsat.

The rise in healthcare sector profits, on the other hand, can be attributed to substantial capital expenditures on expansion projects in the sector’s hospitals in recent years and increased demand for healthcare services.

According to Al-Jubaili, this has significantly improved the performance of healthcare companies, along with an increase in private sector employment and a decrease in unemployment rates, leading to an improvement in the health insurance portfolio relied upon by healthcare sector companies to enhance their financial performance and profitability.

Al-Jubaili also mentioned companies in the communications sector expanding their investment reach and increasing expenditure on new company listings, services, digital payments, tower leasing, infrastructure investment, and providing substantial liquidity for non-operational profit generation.



Trump Tariffs Loom Large in South Korea’s ‘Steel City’

This picture taken on February 13, 2025 shows steelworks of South Korea's largest steelmaker POSCO in Pohang. (AFP)
This picture taken on February 13, 2025 shows steelworks of South Korea's largest steelmaker POSCO in Pohang. (AFP)
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Trump Tariffs Loom Large in South Korea’s ‘Steel City’

This picture taken on February 13, 2025 shows steelworks of South Korea's largest steelmaker POSCO in Pohang. (AFP)
This picture taken on February 13, 2025 shows steelworks of South Korea's largest steelmaker POSCO in Pohang. (AFP)

Smoke billows from chimneys as factories churn in South Korea's steelmaking heartland, now under threat from Washington's swingeing new tariffs on the port city's largest export.

The city of Pohang on South Korea's east coast for decades pumped out the steel that fueled the country's breakneck economic rise.

South Korea was the fourth largest exporter of the metal to the United States last year, accounting for 13 percent of its total steel imports.

But the industry has faced intense strain in recent years from foreign competition.

And businesses, officials and workers in the city now fear a planned 25 percent tariff on all steel imports to the United States beginning next month could have devastating impacts -- and major knock-on effects on South Korea's economy.

"The steel industry is a vital national industry that serves as a fundamental material for key sectors such as construction, automotive and shipbuilding," Pohang's mayor Lee Kang-deok told AFP.

"If the steel industry collapses, the entire South Korean economy will be destabilized," Lee warned.

"If we fail to respond effectively to President Trump's tariff measures, our country's economy could face an even greater shock, leading to an irreversible situation."

- 'Steel city' -

Lying around 270 kilometers (168 miles) southeast of Seoul, Pohang has carved out a rare place as a key industrial hub in a country beset by deepening regional inequality -- and where most resources are tightly concentrated in the capital.

It is home to the nation's top steelmaker, POSCO, a major force in South Korea's industrialization and development as an export powerhouse, alongside giants like Hyundai Steel and Dongkuk Steel.

"Pohang has long been a symbolic steel city that has supported South Korea for decades, serving as a backbone for the country's development," said Bang Sung-jun, a former Hyundai Steel worker and an official at the Korean Metal Workers' Union's Pohang branch.

"The steel industry has provided quality jobs and sustained the local economy," he told AFP, while acknowledging the pollution produced and the often dangerous conditions for workers in the industry.

How those workers respond to the current crisis, he added, "will determine whether the city of Pohang can sustain its steel industry, putting its very survival at stake".

- 'Significant' impact -

South Korea's steel industry has faced intense pressure in recent years as it grapples with oversupply -- particularly from China -- and a decrease in global demand.

The US tariffs are likely to intensify those challenges, and analysts warn that should cheap Chinese steel barred from the US market begin to flood regions like Southeast Asia and Europe, South Korean steel producers will face deepening price competition.

"Trump's protectionism certainly will affect South Korea's long-suffering steel industry, already squeezed by low-price exports from China and unfavorable Japanese yen exchange rate," Vladimir Tikhonov, professor of Korea studies at the University of Oslo, told AFP.

"The impact will be significant," he said.

Some suggest the tariffs could offer opportunities for South Korean firms to find new export markets.

But for workers in Pohang, where several mills have already shut down, job security and the threat of further layoffs overshadow any potential benefits.

AFP reporters visited a factory owned by Hyundai Steel which closed late last year. It did not appear to be operating and was guarded by a handful of staff at the time of the visit.

Journalists saw signs hung by unionized workers criticizing the management and demanding an apology, and through an open door, what looked like debris piled up inside.

"For us workers, it has always been a crisis without any opportunities," said Bang, the unionist.

Worker Lee Woo-man, who has worked as a subcontractor for POSCO for two decades, told AFP that 20 of his colleagues have lost their jobs in the past year.

He expected employment in the city to "decrease even more" over the next four years and believes Trump's tariffs will speed up the decline of the city, which he said has lost the vibrancy it had when he was young.

Lee said he grew up watching the smoke rise from the chimneys of massive mills, thinking to himself: "POSCO is feeding Pohang".

But now that view makes him worry.

"I don't know when this will all fall apart."