Oman’s Commerce Minister: Omani-Saudi Trade, Economic Ties Witness Significant Growth

General view of Riyadh. SPA
General view of Riyadh. SPA
TT

Oman’s Commerce Minister: Omani-Saudi Trade, Economic Ties Witness Significant Growth

General view of Riyadh. SPA
General view of Riyadh. SPA

Omani Minister of Commerce, Industry, and Investment Promotion Qais bin Mohammad Al-Yousef has said that trade and economic relations between Oman and Saudi Arabia are experiencing significant growth, reflecting the strength of the fraternal and historical ties between the two countries.

During a news conference organized by the Omani Ministry of Information under the theme "Oman and the World," Al-Yousef explained on Thursday that joint projects reflect the efforts made to enhance economic cooperation between the two nations, particularly in areas that support trade exchange, regional economic development and expanding cooperation in fields such as energy, industry, technology, and tourism.

He highlighted Saudi Arabia’s efforts in opening the land route linking the Kingdom to Oman, which represents a qualitative leap in enhancing bilateral trade movement. It has facilitated the mobility of both companies and citizens and boosted tourism and public communication, alongside supporting both nations’ efforts to achieve economic integration through building advanced infrastructure, he said.

"Saudi-Omani relations are strong and prosperous, witnessing growth in all areas. We are confident that the continued cooperation between us will yield strategic gains that serve the interests of both countries in the commercial, industrial, or tourism sectors,” the minister said.

He also pointed out that Saudi Arabia has made significant strides in developing the industrial sector and modernizing the logistical infrastructure, which opens new horizons for joint cooperation, especially in areas related to industrial integration and investment in major projects.

He highlighted the recent visit by Saudi Minister of Commerce Majid Al-Kassabi to Oman, where he discussed several initiatives that both sides aim to implement in the near future, as well as opportunities to launch joint projects between the private sectors of both countries, particularly in industrial fields.

Al-Yousef stressed the Saudi-Omani relationship serves as a model for Arab economic cooperation, and that the future holds many opportunities to strengthen this cooperation at all levels.



Gold Rises as Dollar Softens, Lower Oil Prices Ease Inflation Fears

Gold bracelets and necklaces on display for sale in a gold shop in the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul (AFP)
Gold bracelets and necklaces on display for sale in a gold shop in the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul (AFP)
TT

Gold Rises as Dollar Softens, Lower Oil Prices Ease Inflation Fears

Gold bracelets and necklaces on display for sale in a gold shop in the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul (AFP)
Gold bracelets and necklaces on display for sale in a gold shop in the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul (AFP)

Gold prices rose on Tuesday, supported by a softer dollar and easing inflation fears as oil prices dropped on hopes of further US-Iran peace talks.

Spot gold was up 0.8% at $4,775.20 per ounce, as of 0755 GMT. US gold futures for June delivery rose 0.7% to $4,798.40, Reuters reported.

Oil prices fell below $100 a barrel as signs of potential ⁠talks to end the ⁠US-Iran war eased concerns about supply risks stemming from the US blockade of Iranian ports.

Higher crude prices feed into inflation by raising transportation and production costs. While gold is treated as a hedge against inflation, higher interest rates weigh on the non-yielding metal's demand.

Markets appear to ⁠think that there's still time for a deal between the United States and Iran, said Ilya Spivak, head of global macro at Tastylive. Reuters reported on Tuesday that negotiating teams from the US and Iran could return to Islamabad this week, days after talks between the two countries ended in the Pakistani capital without a breakthrough.

The US dollar fell to its lowest level in more than a month on hopes for a diplomatic breakthrough, making the greenback-denominated ⁠gold more ⁠affordable for holders of other currencies.

"Near-term, a thin macro calendar might make US-Iran headlines the driving engine. That sets the stage for choppy price action for now," Spivak said, adding that gold could face resistance around $4,850.

Traders currently see a 31% chance of a 25-basis-point US rate cut this year, up from about 13% last week. Before the war, there were expectations of two cuts for this year.

Among other metals, spot silver rose 2.9% to $77.73 per ounce, platinum gained 0.8% to $2,086.15, and palladium was up 0.7% at $1,585.42.


China’s Exports Slowed in March While Imports Soared

A staff works in front of a fruit shop in Beijing, China, 14 April 2026. (EPA)
A staff works in front of a fruit shop in Beijing, China, 14 April 2026. (EPA)
TT

China’s Exports Slowed in March While Imports Soared

A staff works in front of a fruit shop in Beijing, China, 14 April 2026. (EPA)
A staff works in front of a fruit shop in Beijing, China, 14 April 2026. (EPA)

China's exports grew at a slower pace last month after starting the year with a surge, official data showed Tuesday, as the global economy reels from war in the Middle East.

The world's second-largest economy produced a record-breaking trade surplus last year at $1.2 trillion.

Booming overseas shipments appeared set to continue this year after jumping by more than a fifth in January and February combined.

However, China's exports grew just 2.5 percent on-year in March, according to data published Tuesday by the General Administration of Customs (GAC).

The slowdown was more pronounced than expected, with a Bloomberg survey of economists forecasting 8.6 percent growth.

Exports to the United States also plunged last month, hit by blistering tariffs launched by President Donald Trump.

Shipments to the United States tumbled 26.5 percent on-year to $29.4 billion in March, the customs data showed.

In a more positive sign, imports soared 27.8 percent, according to the figures. That was higher than a forecast of 14 percent growth by Bloomberg.

The readings come at an uncertain time for international trade, with energy costs skyrocketing as a result of war between the United States and Iran.

Analysts say China's diversified energy supply insulates it from immediate shocks, though any global economic downturn would weaken demand for its exports.

GAC deputy head Wang Jun acknowledged "many uncertainties and instabilities in the external environment", at a news conference Tuesday.

"The impact of international geopolitical conflicts on global industrial and supply chains is still evolving in a complex manner," Wang said.

- Slowing growth -

Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management, added that "growth to major export destinations slowed across the board".

"The uncertainty of global macro outlook driven by the conflict in the Middle East likely weighed on the demand side," he wrote in a note.

Meanwhile, China's surge in import figures last month was the result of higher energy costs, Zhang said.

"I think China's trade surplus will likely shrink this year," he said, adding that "the high energy price is likely more damaging for China's competitors, given the scale and the efficiency of China's manufacturing sector."

Beijing is due to release closely watched economic growth data for the first quarter of the year on Thursday.

Leaders are targeting overall growth this year of 4.5-5.0 percent -- the lowest in decades.

Analysts expect China's economy to have expanded at 4.8 percent in the first quarter, up from 4.5 percent in the final three months of 2025, according to the median forecast of an AFP survey.

Many economists argue that China must adopt a growth model with a greater role for consumer spending rather than traditional drivers including exports and infrastructure investment.

A years-long crisis in the property sector, once a crucial engine for activity, has weighed on growth and spooked consumers.


Trump’s Blockade of Hormuz Strait to Have Severe Economic Implications

Lightning occurs when META 4, an Oil Products Tanker, sails into Muscat Anchorage on March 21, 2026 at Sultan Qaboos Port in Muscat, Oman (Getty)
Lightning occurs when META 4, an Oil Products Tanker, sails into Muscat Anchorage on March 21, 2026 at Sultan Qaboos Port in Muscat, Oman (Getty)
TT

Trump’s Blockade of Hormuz Strait to Have Severe Economic Implications

Lightning occurs when META 4, an Oil Products Tanker, sails into Muscat Anchorage on March 21, 2026 at Sultan Qaboos Port in Muscat, Oman (Getty)
Lightning occurs when META 4, an Oil Products Tanker, sails into Muscat Anchorage on March 21, 2026 at Sultan Qaboos Port in Muscat, Oman (Getty)

The global economy enters a new stage of uncertainty as the US Central Command (CENTCOM) said American forces began implementing a blockade of maritime traffic entering and exiting Iranian ports.

US President Donald Trump ordered the naval blockade after marathon peace talks with Iran in Islamabad, collapsed last week.

While the President’s decision aims to strangle the Iranian economy, it acts as a profound shock to the global economy and has far-reaching consequences that severely destabilize markets in East Asia and Europe.

Over the weekend, US Vice President JD Vance told reporters in Islamabad that negotiations with Iran on an end to hostilities have failed to result in a deal. Shortly after, Trump ordered the embargo on the strait with hoped that he can apply to Iran the model of his intervention in Venezuela, where the US seized then-president Nicolás Maduro in a military operation after a naval blockade of the Latin American nation.

“We’re putting on a complete blockade. We’re not going to let Iran make money on selling oil to people that they like, and not people that they don’t like, or whatever it is,” Trump told Fox News on Sunday.

“You saw what we did with Venezuela. It’ll be something very similar to that, but at a higher level.”

Direct Threat to Energy Stability

Analysts say the naval embargo risks further destabilizing global energy markets and triggering a new surge in oil prices.

Jennifer Kavanagh, military analysis director of Defense Priorities, a Washington think tank on restrained force, told the Financial Times that Trump appears to feel frustrated about his options for the war.

“Closing the strait entirely will spike oil prices even more than they did before, and put more pressure on the US from the international community,” Kavanagh said.

“It definitely shows how frustrated and at the end of his options the president feels,” she added.

Her comments came as OPEC issued its Monthly Oil Market Report.

It said OPEC crude oil production plummeted by approximately 7.87 million barrels per day (bpd) in March 2026 compared to February 2026, primarily due to the US-Israeli conflict with Iran which has largely closed the Strait of Hormuz.

OPEC's total output stood at about 20.7 million bpd, according to the group's latest Monthly Oil Market Report. The steepest production declines were recorded in Iraq, where crude output dropped by roughly 2.5 million bpd to about 1.63 million bpd.

Implication for Oil Flows

Blocking Iranian shipments would disconnect a significant source of oil from the world's markets, according to Reuters.

Iran exported 1.84 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude in March and has shipped 1.71 million bpd thus far in April, compared with a full-year average of 1.68 million bpd in 2025, according to Kpler data.

However, a surge in Iranian output before the war started on February 28 has led to near-record levels of Iranian oil loaded on ships, with more than 180 million barrels floating as of earlier this ⁠month, according to Kpler data.

“The US quarantine of Iran's ports will cost Iran about $435 million a day in economic damage,” Miad Maleki, a former official with the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control, said.

The estimated losses include about $276 million in lost exports, mainly crude oil and petrochemicals.

He explained that the blockade would result in the disruption of imports worth nearly $159 million daily, amounting to monthly losses estimated at around $13 billion.

Data indicates that Iran’s heavy reliance on southern shipping lanes leaves its economy exposed to maritime disruption, with more than 90% of its $109.7 billion annual trade passing through the Strait of Hormuz, while oil and gas constitute approximately 80% of government export revenues and nearly 23.7% of GDP.

From Energy to Food

While the Strait of Hormuz closure has acutely touched hydrocarbon markets, it will also affect food safety as it coincides with spring planting across hundreds of millions of acres of global cropland.

Therefore, turning the Strait into a military zone creates an immediate and severe crisis in global agricultural supply chains, severing the flow of key petrochemicals and nitrogen-based fertilizers.

Urea spot prices at the US Gulf Coast approached $700 per metric ton (up over 30% from the start of the war), and dealers in major importing markets began limiting sales. Urea is a nitrogen fertilizer that increases the yields of many crops, especially staple grains like corn, rice, and wheat.

Also, transforming the Strait from a free-trade artery into a conflict zone under military control, forces major companies to reroute shipping, leading to significantly higher operational costs, “imported inflation,” and severe logistical bottlenecks that conventional monetary policies struggle to address.

The blockade also initiates strategic risks as disruption of fertilizers comes precisely during the Northern Hemisphere's spring planting season, when demand peaks.

Furthermore, the implications extend to the costs of food logistics. Even crops produced far from the conflict zone will be affected by an increase of shipping and insurance prices, adding significant costs along the supply chain.

Inflation

The Strait of Hormuz blockade represents the trigger of a transboundary inflation driven by supply-side constraints that traditional monetary policy tools cannot easily mitigate.

Surging maritime insurance premiums alongside forced route diversions away from the Red Sea and Gulf, have caused global logistics costs and freight rates to soar.

The blockade has shifted the global economy to a phase of “imported inflation” which represents a dilemma for major central banks, as a shock rise in the cost of some goods will depress household purchasing power, causing consumers to cut back on spending, which in turn puts downward pressure on other goods and services and leads to the risk of “stagflation.”

China in the Crosshairs

The blockade also risks drawing the world’s second-largest economy into the confrontation. China remains Iran’s largest oil buyer and has continued to receive shipments through the strait since the war began, analysts say.

A blanket ban on tankers carrying Iranian crude threatens to cut off that supply, potentially reigniting US tensions with Beijing ahead of Trump’s planned trip to China next month.

The Trump administration on Monday also threatened to impose an additional 50% tariff on China if Beijing supplies advanced defense equipment to Tehran.