Samba Launches Credit Card with Various, Innovative Features

Samba Launches Credit Card with Various, Innovative Features
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Samba Launches Credit Card with Various, Innovative Features

Samba Launches Credit Card with Various, Innovative Features

Samba Financial Group has launched a new credit card, designed to give its customers unlimited distinction.

Samba “Unlimited” credit card provides card holders with a cashback feature every time they use the card for the purpose of purchasing.

It was designed according to a number of research and marketing visions to allow all its users have a cash refund of 1.5 percent of their total monthly purchases.

This makes the card an ideal companion for shoppers looking to double their credit rewards, and it is available in all Samba branches in the Kingdom.

The card is enhanced with unique and unlimited benefits offered by Samba credit cards, not to mention its travel and lifestyle features.

It allows its holders to access more than 1,000 private airport lounges around the world, with many exclusive shopping offers by European shopping malls, hundreds of free purchase offers and leisure and recreation offers.

The card also provides emergency and travel insurance in any country.

Samba Financial Group has always placed its customers at the center of its attention, said Branch Banking Head at Samba Financial Group Maan al-Kahmous.

Kahmous pointed to the extent to which Samba is committed in its continuous innovation process to improve product offerings.

He said it targets fulfilling its customers’ aspirations and contributing to enhancing its position as one of the leading banks in the field of credit cards in the Kingdom.



OPEC+ Sticks to Oil Policy

The online joint ministerial monitoring committee meeting (JMMC) held on Thursday. Photo: OPEC on X
The online joint ministerial monitoring committee meeting (JMMC) held on Thursday. Photo: OPEC on X
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OPEC+ Sticks to Oil Policy

The online joint ministerial monitoring committee meeting (JMMC) held on Thursday. Photo: OPEC on X
The online joint ministerial monitoring committee meeting (JMMC) held on Thursday. Photo: OPEC on X

A meeting of top OPEC+ ministers has kept oil output policy unchanged including a plan to start unwinding one layer of output cuts from October, and repeated that the hike could be paused or reversed if needed.
Several ministers from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies led by Russia, or OPEC+ as the group is known, held an online joint ministerial monitoring committee meeting (JMMC) on Thursday.
OPEC+ is currently cutting output by a total of 5.86 million barrels per day, or about 5.7% of global demand, in a series of steps agreed since 2022 to bolster the market amid uncertainty over global demand and rising supply outside the group.
In a statement after Thursday's meeting, OPEC+ said the members making the most recent layer of cuts - a 2.2 million bpd voluntary cut until September - reiterated that its gradual phase-out could be paused or reversed, depending on market conditions.
Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak said on Thursday the current level of oil prices was comfortable for Russia, its budget, and other participants in the market. Supply and demand remained in balance, he added.
Algeria's Energy Minister Mohamed Arkab said uncertainties affecting oil markets were unlikely to continue for much longer, as long as the market remains adequately supplied.
Oil demand, he added, was expected to follow a sustained upward trend in the coming weeks.
OPEC+ agreed at its last meeting in June to phase out the 2.2 million bpd cut over the course of a year from October 2024 until September 2025. It also agreed then to extend earlier cuts of 3.66 million bpd until end-2025.
Soon after that, Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said OPEC+ could pause or reverse the production hikes if it decided the market is not strong enough.

Thursday's meeting also noted assurances from Iraq, Kazakhstan and Russia made during the meeting to achieve full conformity with pledged output cuts, the statement said. Those countries had earlier delivered plans to compensate for past overproduction.
An OPEC+ source said the chair of the meeting was insisting that members show commitment to the compensation plan.