Saudi Defense Firm SAMI Targets $5 Bln Annual Revenue by 2030

Saudi Arabian Military Industries (SAMI) aims to generate annual revenue of $5 billion by 2030. (SPA)
Saudi Arabian Military Industries (SAMI) aims to generate annual revenue of $5 billion by 2030. (SPA)
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Saudi Defense Firm SAMI Targets $5 Bln Annual Revenue by 2030

Saudi Arabian Military Industries (SAMI) aims to generate annual revenue of $5 billion by 2030. (SPA)
Saudi Arabian Military Industries (SAMI) aims to generate annual revenue of $5 billion by 2030. (SPA)

State-owned Saudi Arabian Military Industries (SAMI) aims to generate annual revenue of $5 billion by 2030, its chief executive said on Monday, part of a drive to build more defense equipment inside the Kingdom.

Saudi Arabia set up SAMI in 2017 to cut its reliance on imported weapons and military systems.

The government aims to spend 50% of its military budget by 2030 on equipment made at home.

Chief Executive Walid Abukhaled told Reuters at Abu Dhabi’s Idex defense exhibition that SAMI aimed to be among the world’s top 25 defense firms by 2030. “Being in the top 25 companies by 2030, you’re looking at $5 billion a year” in revenue, he said.

Abukhaled, who did not give a figure for current revenues, took over as CEO in April.

Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund, the Public Investment Fund, set up SAMI as part of a broad economic program to diversify the oil-dependent economy.

Abukhaled said SAMI would sign a deal on Monday with NIMR, a company in neighboring United Arab Emirates which builds military vehicles, to set up manufacturing in Saudi Arabia.

SAMI on Sunday signed a joint venture agreement with US firm Lockheed Martin, which is involved in installing a $15 billion missile defense system in Saudi Arabia.

Abukhaled said SAMI was developing systems to counter drones, a move that would help deal with drone attacks that are frequently launched at the Kingdom by the Iran-backed Houthi militias in Yemen.

“At the end of the day our ultimate objective is to really serve the (Saudi Arabian) armed forces,” Abukhaled said.



Russia is Using Bitcoin, Digital Currencies in Foreign Trade

FILE PHOTO: A woman passes by the Bitcoin Monument after bitcoin soared above $100,000, in Ilopango, El Salvador, December 5, 2024. REUTERS/Jose Cabezas/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A woman passes by the Bitcoin Monument after bitcoin soared above $100,000, in Ilopango, El Salvador, December 5, 2024. REUTERS/Jose Cabezas/File Photo
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Russia is Using Bitcoin, Digital Currencies in Foreign Trade

FILE PHOTO: A woman passes by the Bitcoin Monument after bitcoin soared above $100,000, in Ilopango, El Salvador, December 5, 2024. REUTERS/Jose Cabezas/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A woman passes by the Bitcoin Monument after bitcoin soared above $100,000, in Ilopango, El Salvador, December 5, 2024. REUTERS/Jose Cabezas/File Photo

Russian companies have begun using bitcoin and other digital currencies in international payments following legislative changes that allowed such use in order to counter Western sanctions, Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said on Wednesday.

Sanctions have complicated Russia's trade with its major partners such as China or Türkiye, as local banks are extremely cautious with Russia-related transactions to avoid scrutiny from Western regulators, according to Reuters.

This year, Russia permitted the use of cryptocurrencies in foreign trade and has taken steps to make it legal to mine cryptocurrencies, including bitcoin. Russia is one of the global leaders in bitcoin mining.

“As part of the experimental regime, it is possible to use bitcoins, which we had mined here in Russia (in foreign trade transactions),” Siluanov told Russia 24 television channel.

“Such transactions are already occurring. We believe they should be expanded and developed further. I am confident this will happen next year,” he said, adding that international payments in digital currencies represent the future.

Earlier this month, President Vladimir Putin said that the current US administration was undermining the role of the US dollar as the reserve currency by using it for political purposes, forcing many countries to turn to alternative assets.

He singled out bitcoin as an example of such assets, saying that no-one in the world could regulate bitcoin. Putin's remarks indicated that the Russian leader backs the extensive use of cryptocurrencies.