Riyadh Hosts Inaugural Saudi Proptech Summit  

The inaugural Saudi Proptech Summit will kick off in Riyadh on Monday. (Saudi Proptech Summit)
The inaugural Saudi Proptech Summit will kick off in Riyadh on Monday. (Saudi Proptech Summit)
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Riyadh Hosts Inaugural Saudi Proptech Summit  

The inaugural Saudi Proptech Summit will kick off in Riyadh on Monday. (Saudi Proptech Summit)
The inaugural Saudi Proptech Summit will kick off in Riyadh on Monday. (Saudi Proptech Summit)

The inaugural Saudi Proptech Summit will begin in Riyadh on Monday to review the most prominent technical developments and beneficiaries’ experiences.

The two-day conference includes dialogue sessions and workshops with more than 25 speakers representing 20 countries and will be accompanied by a real estate technology exhibition.

Minister of Municipal and Rural Affairs and Housing and Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Real Estate General Authority Majid bin Abdullah al-Hogail will inaugurate the conference.

Hogail said on his X account that he looks forward to meeting the creative and innovative people at Saudi Proptech, hoping it would develop the sector.

The Minister also expected the conference to enhance innovation and open investment horizons for entrepreneurs and emerging companies in real estate technologies to help achieve Vision 2030.

Real estate technology is an integrated system of emerging and rapidly growing companies that provide various innovative products or services in commercial and residential real estate.

It consists of four main areas: smart real estate, building technology, financial technology within real estate, and consumer-facing technology.

The summit will bring together a diverse array of participants, including specialists and experts in proptech, investors, and real estate service providers, with the participation of startups in the real estate and technology sectors.

It will also attract the latest international technical practices and experiences in the real estate field and showcase them within the Saudi market through partnership agreements among stakeholders.

Proptech brings together key activities, namely the technological ecosystem of real estate, government entities responsible for regulating the real estate sector, support for startups, real estate developers, proptech platforms, pioneering investment companies, and business accelerators.

It will also address the technological solutions sector in property and facilities management, artificial intelligence, data analysis, virtual and augmented reality, financing, mortgage, and construction technologies.

The conference will review several global technologies in real estate in the European market and the real estate technology in Hong Kong, China Sea region.

The Authority explained that the conference will discuss several topics through plenary sessions and workshops.

It would address important themes such as the role of technology in shaping public policies, the digital transformation of the Saudi real estate sector, the digital infrastructure of the Kingdom, and the future outlook for the real estate sector.

Moreover, the conference will explore urban environment innovations, the influence of smart city development on the real estate sector through information and decision-making mechanisms, and real estate technology solutions and their need in building the cities of the future.

Proptech connects technology and real estate and refers to various digital technologies used in the real estate sector and asset management.

It also contributes to managing various aspects of the real estate industry, including sales and delivery, facilities management, maintenance operations, and contract management utilizing computer technologies and software and mobile phone applications along with related devices, such as sensors, cameras, VR, and augmented reality technologies.



China’s October New Lending Tumbles More than Expected despite Policy Support

 A masked woman walks at a fashion boutique displaying posters to promote Singles' Day discounts at a shopping mall in Beijing, Monday, Nov. 11, 2024. (AP)
A masked woman walks at a fashion boutique displaying posters to promote Singles' Day discounts at a shopping mall in Beijing, Monday, Nov. 11, 2024. (AP)
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China’s October New Lending Tumbles More than Expected despite Policy Support

 A masked woman walks at a fashion boutique displaying posters to promote Singles' Day discounts at a shopping mall in Beijing, Monday, Nov. 11, 2024. (AP)
A masked woman walks at a fashion boutique displaying posters to promote Singles' Day discounts at a shopping mall in Beijing, Monday, Nov. 11, 2024. (AP)

New bank lending in China tumbled more than expected to a three-month low in October, as a ramp-up of policy stimulus to buttress a wavering economy failed to boost credit demand.

Chinese banks extended 500 billion yuan ($69.51 billion) in new yuan loans in October, down sharply from September and falling short of analysts' expectations, according to data released by the People's Bank of China (PBOC).

Economists polled by Reuters had predicted a fall in new yuan loans to 700 billion yuan last month from 1.59 trillion yuan the previous month and against 738.4 billion yuan a year earlier.

"Corporate financing demand remains weak due to poor profitability," said Luo Yunfeng, an economist at Huaxin Securities. "Credit demand may not pick up soon despite recent central bank policy measures."

The PBOC does not provide monthly breakdowns but Reuters calculated the October figures based on the bank's Jan-October data released on Monday, compared with the Jan-September figure.

The PBOC said new yuan loans totaled 16.52 trillion yuan for the first ten months of the year.

Household loans, including mortgages, dropped to 160 billion yuan in October from 500 billion yuan in September, while corporate loans dipped to 130 billion yuan from 1.49 trillion yuan, according to Reuters calculations based on central bank data.

Chinese policymakers have been working to arrest further weakness in an economy stuttering in recent months from a prolonged property market downturn and swelling local government debt.

Among their goals is to tackle the side-effects from a mountain of debt left from previous stimulus dating back to the 2008-2009 global financial crisis.

China's central bank governor Pan Gongsheng said China will step up counter-cyclical adjustment and affirm a supportive monetary policy stance, a central bank statement showed on Monday, citing a report Pan delivered to the top legislative body last week.

In late September, the central bank unveiled an aggressive stimulus package including rate cuts, and Chinese leaders pledged "necessary fiscal spending" to bring the economy back on track to meet a growth target of about 5%.

MORE STEPS ON THE CARDS

China unveiled a 10 trillion yuan debt package on Friday to ease local government financing strains and stabilize flagging economic growth, as it faces fresh pressure from the re-election of Donald Trump as US president.

New measures planned will include sovereign bonds issuance to replenish the coffers of big state banks, and policies to support purchase of idle land and unsold flats from developers, Finance Minister Lan Foan said.

Analysts at OCBC Bank expect the central bank to deliver another cut in banks' reserve requirement ratio in November or December to support the planned bond issuance.

China watchers are skeptical the steps will produce a near-term boost in economic activity as most of the fresh funds will be used to reduce local government debt, but China's central bank said it will continue supportive monetary policy to create a favorable monetary and financial environment for economic growth.

The PBOC also said it will study and revise money supply statistics to better reflect the real situation of the country's money supply.

Trump's election win could also prompt a stronger fiscal package in expectations of more economic headwinds for China. Trump threatened tariffs in excess of 60% on US imports of Chinese goods, rattling China's industrial complex.

Broad M2 money supply grew 7.5% from a year earlier, central bank data showed, above analysts' forecast of 6.9% in the Reuters poll. M2 grew 6.8% in September from a year ago.

Outstanding yuan loans grew 8.0% in October from a year earlier. Analysts had expected 8.1% growth, the same pace as in September.

The outstanding total social financing (TSF), a broad measure of credit and liquidity in the economy, slowed to a record low of 7.8% in October, from 8.0% in September. Acceleration in government bond issuance could help boost growth in TSF.

TSF includes off-balance sheet forms of financing that exist outside the conventional bank lending system, such as initial public offerings, loans from trust companies, and bond sales.

In October, TSF fell to 1.4 trillion yuan from 3.76 trillion yuan in September. Analysts polled by Reuters had expected TSF of 1.55 trillion yuan.