Lebanese Stores Close as Dollar Hits New High

The city of Baalbek sees a very shy commercial activity on Monday (NNA).
The city of Baalbek sees a very shy commercial activity on Monday (NNA).
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Lebanese Stores Close as Dollar Hits New High

The city of Baalbek sees a very shy commercial activity on Monday (NNA).
The city of Baalbek sees a very shy commercial activity on Monday (NNA).

The exchange rate of the dollar hit a new record in the Lebanese black market, exceeding LBP 13,000 (the official price is LBP 1,515 for one USD), forcing many shops to close their doors in various regions.

Lebanon’s National News Agency (NNA) reported that the shops in the southern city of Sidon were shut in the morning, after the dollar exchange rate reached the threshold of LBP 13,000. Some of them placed signs on the front doors saying: “We are closed because we refuse to raise prices.”

Also in Baalbek, the city’s markets witnessed light traffic and a very shy commercial activity.

According to NNA, a number of protesters organized a march in Tripoli markets, in the north, asking shopkeepers to close their stores and to announce a strike to protest the high exchange rate and the exorbitant prices.

In this context, the head of the Sidon Merchants Association, Ali Al-Sharif, said in a statement that the announcement by some commercial establishments in Sidon to temporarily close until the exchange rate stabilizes was a natural result of the sharp local currency devaluation.

The black market dollar exchange rate jumped to LBP 13,500 on Monday noon, from LBP 12,000 on Sunday and around LBP 8,000 earlier this month.



Saudi Arabia Issues 86 Industrial Licenses in April Worth $587 Million

A part of Ras Al Khair Industrial City, which is considered the main cornerstone of the mining industry in the Kingdom (SPA)
A part of Ras Al Khair Industrial City, which is considered the main cornerstone of the mining industry in the Kingdom (SPA)
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Saudi Arabia Issues 86 Industrial Licenses in April Worth $587 Million

A part of Ras Al Khair Industrial City, which is considered the main cornerstone of the mining industry in the Kingdom (SPA)
A part of Ras Al Khair Industrial City, which is considered the main cornerstone of the mining industry in the Kingdom (SPA)

Saudi Arabia's Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources issued 86 new industrial licenses in April, totaling investments of SAR2.2 billion (USD587 million). This brings the year-to-date total to 410 licenses.

According to a report from the ministry’s National Center for Industrial and Mining Information released on Sunday, 67 factories began production in April, investing SAR1.5 billion (USD400 million).

Food production led with 12 new factories, followed by chemicals with 11, and rubber/plastics with 10.

The report noted that 92.5% of new factories were domestic, with joint ventures at 5.9% and foreign investments at 1.49%.

As of April 2024, Saudi Arabia had 11,800 operational or under-construction factories, with investments totaling SAR1.4 trillion (USD373 billion), up from about 10,800 in April 2023.

Small-scale facilities received 80.2% of new licenses, followed by medium-scale at 13.9%. Domestic factories accounted for 100% of the licenses by investment type.

The new licenses were distributed across 10 regions, led by Riyadh with 36 factories, Makkah with 22, and the Eastern Region with 17. Medina had three factories, while Qassim and Hail had two each. Najran, Asir, Al Jouf, and Tabuk each had on.

The ministry’s updates provide insights into Saudi Arabia’s industrial activity, highlighting changes in new investments and factory openings on a monthly basis.