Gulf Debt Instruments Rise 16%

National Bank of Kuwait. (Reuters)
National Bank of Kuwait. (Reuters)
TT
20

Gulf Debt Instruments Rise 16%

National Bank of Kuwait. (Reuters)
National Bank of Kuwait. (Reuters)

Gulf Cooperation Council global sovereign issues reached a historic level of USD50 billion in 2017, contributing to the increase in the total value of the Gulf issues, including the public and private ones. They exceeded the USD100 billion for the second year in the row.

Revenues of debt fluctuated in a limited range until they closed the year at various levels due to tensions in the political scene and the strength of economic data.

A report issued by National Bank of Kuwait revealed that the due revenues of Gulf bonds in eight to nine years were variable. Some of them witnessed a slight change, while risks of others relapsed hugely.

Revenues were influenced by the drop in oil prices and the tension in the region. However the relative success achieved by the GCC countries in carrying out financial reforms and expanding the OPEC-led deal contributed to the hike of revenues.

Further, the re-balance of prices at the end of the year contributed to supporting the stability of these revenues. Revenues improved on Saudi bonds due in 2026, Kuwaiti bonds due in 2027 and Omani bonds due in 2027. They improved between 19 to 40 points compared to only 6 to 9 points for Qatari and Bahraini bonds.

Majority of Gulf central banks followed the example of the US Federal Reserve System in raising the interest prices up to 25 percent three times, while excluding Kuwait and Oman. These steps came in tandem with the need to maintain the currencies’ link to dollar.

For the second year in the row, the GCC total public and private issues exceeded the USD100 billion limit, led by the strength of sovereign issues. The world Gulf debt instruments covered around 50 percent of the government funding needs.



Putin Says Recession in Russia 'Must Not Be Allowed to Happen'

Putin wants officials to keep a 'close eye on all indicators of the health of our industries, companies and even individual enterprises'. Olga MALTSEVA / AFP
Putin wants officials to keep a 'close eye on all indicators of the health of our industries, companies and even individual enterprises'. Olga MALTSEVA / AFP
TT
20

Putin Says Recession in Russia 'Must Not Be Allowed to Happen'

Putin wants officials to keep a 'close eye on all indicators of the health of our industries, companies and even individual enterprises'. Olga MALTSEVA / AFP
Putin wants officials to keep a 'close eye on all indicators of the health of our industries, companies and even individual enterprises'. Olga MALTSEVA / AFP

President Vladimir Putin on Friday urged officials not to let Russia fall into recession "under any circumstances", as some in his own government warned of a hit to economic growth.

Economists have warned for months of a slowdown in the Russian economy, with the country posting its slowest quarterly expansion in two years for the first quarter of 2025, reported AFP.

The Kremlin has said this was to be expected after two years of rapid growth as it ramped up military expenditure to fund the Ukraine campaign, but officials including the country's economy minister have raised alarm about possible pain ahead.

"Some specialists and experts are pointing to the risks of stagnation and even a recession," Putin told attendees at Russia's flagship economic forum in Saint Petersburg.

"This must not be allowed to happen under any circumstances," he said.

"We need to pursue a competent, well-thought-out budgetary, tax and monetary policy," he added.

The Russian economy grew in 2023 and 2024 despite the West's sweeping sanctions, with massive state spending on the military powering a robust expansion.

But analysts have long warned that heavy public investment in the defense industry is no longer enough to keep Russia's economy growing and does not reflect a real increase in productivity.

At his address to the forum on Friday, Putin was upbeat about Russia's economic prospects and denied the economy was being driven solely by the defense and energy industries.

"Yes, of course, the defense industry played its part in this regard, but so did the financial and IT industries," he said.

He said the economy needed "balanced growth" and called on officials to keep a "close eye on all indicators of the health of our industries, companies and even individual enterprises."