Saudi Central Bank Extends Deferred Payment Program for Private Sector MSMEs

The Saudi central bank.
The Saudi central bank.
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Saudi Central Bank Extends Deferred Payment Program for Private Sector MSMEs

The Saudi central bank.
The Saudi central bank.

With the Saudi economy set on a dynamic track to return to pre-pandemic levels, the Saudi central bank (SAMA) said on Tuesday it is extending a deferred payment program to help small businesses impacted by the coronavirus crisis by another period of three months, starting July 1.

The program - meant to support micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) affected by precautionary measures during the COVID-19 pandemic - was launched in March 2020.

Moreover, SAMA reaffirmed its keenness to maintain stability in the Kingdom’s financial sector.

SAMA clarified that during this extension MSMEs will be subject to assessment by the financing entities on the extent to which they are still affected by the COVID-19 precautionary measures, in order to be qualified for the extension.

It is worth noting that, since its launch on March 14, 2020 to date, the Deferred Payment Program has benefited more than 106,000 contracts with a total value of deferred payments worth SAR 167 billion.

The number of contracts benefiting from the Guaranteed Financing Program has exceeded 5,282 with a total financing value of more than SAR 10 billion.

The purpose of those programs is to support the liquidity level in the financial sector (banks and finance companies) and to enable the financial sector to ease the economic impact of the COVID-19 precautionary measures on the private sector, especially the MSMEs.

Last March, SAMA announced an extension of the program for three months, ending at Q2 2021. The same reasons for this month’s extension applied then.



Saudi Energy Minister: Two Billion People Worldwide Suffer from Energy Shortages

Saudi Minister of Energy Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman (OPEC website) 
Saudi Minister of Energy Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman (OPEC website) 
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Saudi Energy Minister: Two Billion People Worldwide Suffer from Energy Shortages

Saudi Minister of Energy Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman (OPEC website) 
Saudi Minister of Energy Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman (OPEC website) 

Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman has warned that the global energy transition must not come at the expense of economic growth and the cost of living. He highlighted that nearly two billion people around the world are currently facing energy shortages.

Speaking at the opening session of the 9th OPEC International Seminar in Vienna, the minister stressed that the path toward energy transition must be realistic and practical. He emphasized that this shift should not be viewed as a threat to oil producers, but rather as an opportunity for technological innovation.

Despite the growing use of renewable, nuclear, and hydrogen energy sources, Prince Abdulaziz maintained that oil and gas will remain essential and irreplaceable components of the global energy mix. He welcomed the fact that an increasing number of countries are adopting a more pragmatic view of the transition.

Also speaking at the seminar, UAE Energy Minister Suhail Al Mazrouei said on Wednesday that oil markets have been able to absorb OPEC+ production increases without a rise in inventories, indicating that global demand still requires more crude.

Al Mazrouei explained that the group is not concerned about oversupply and has seen no significant stockpile build-up, even after recent production hikes.

OPEC+, which supplies around half of the world’s oil, has been cutting production for several years to support market stability. However, the group recently began easing these cuts in response to rising global demand, particularly during the summer.

OPEC+ began unwinding its 2.17 million barrel-per-day production cut in April, increasing output by 138,000 barrels per day. That was followed by monthly hikes of 411,000 barrels per day in May, June, and July. On Saturday, the group approved a further increase of 548,000 barrels per day for August.

Al Mazrouei pointed out that the absence of a significant buildup in inventories despite these steady increases suggests that the market needed those barrels.

He added that stability - not just price - should be the focus, stressing that short-term thinking based solely on price is insufficient. He noted that oil prices must remain attractive enough to draw in new investments, warning that countries with large oil reserves still are not investing at the necessary levels.