Saudi Agricultural Investment Financing Witnesses 400 Percent Growth

A rice field in Al-Ahsa, Saudi Arabia. (Photo: Reuters)
A rice field in Al-Ahsa, Saudi Arabia. (Photo: Reuters)
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Saudi Agricultural Investment Financing Witnesses 400 Percent Growth

A rice field in Al-Ahsa, Saudi Arabia. (Photo: Reuters)
A rice field in Al-Ahsa, Saudi Arabia. (Photo: Reuters)

Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Environment, Water and Agriculture, Eng. Abdul Rahman bin Abdul Mohsen Al-Fadhli, emphasized the success of the Kingdom’s experience in the Sustainable Agricultural Rural Development Program, which was launched by the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman bin Abdulaziz.

In remarks during his participation in the meeting of the ministers of Agriculture of the G20 in the Italian city of Florence, Fadhli said that 12 billion riyals (USD 3.2 billion) were allocated to support small farmers.

The minister noted that agricultural investments in Saudi Arabia, funded by the Agricultural Development Fund, have grown over the past four years by about 400 percent, which has contributed to building a resilient and sustainable food system.

He added that the Kingdom has turned to modern technical methods in the field of agricultural extension, with the aim of reaching the largest segment of farmers in a faster and more efficient manner.

Meanwhile, the Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Hail (Northern Saudi Arabia), represented by the Agriculture and Food Committee, held a meeting in which it discussed the most important challenges facing farmers and agricultural marketing.

The meeting was held in the presence of specialized members and representatives of the Agricultural Development Fund, the Ministry of Environment, the Municipality of Hail, the Saudi Grains Organization, and the Ministry of Tourism.

Discussions during the meeting focused on the mechanism of establishing a farmer’s market, in addition to the agricultural crop festivals in the region – projects that were recently approved on the main platform of the Ministry of Environment, Water and Agriculture, and presented to investors and businessmen.



Fitch: Saudi Banks Well-Buffered Against Regional Tensions

The King Abdullah Financial District in Riyadh. (SPA)
The King Abdullah Financial District in Riyadh. (SPA)
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Fitch: Saudi Banks Well-Buffered Against Regional Tensions

The King Abdullah Financial District in Riyadh. (SPA)
The King Abdullah Financial District in Riyadh. (SPA)

Rating agency Fitch affirmed that Saudi banks have solid capital and liquidity buffers, making them less vulnerable to the impact of the recent regional conflict that has followed attacks launched by Israel and the US on Iran on February 28.

“The effect (of the regional conflict) on Saudi banks’ credit profiles is not likely to be significant, given their solid capital and liquidity buffers,” the rating agency said in a report published on Tuesday.

“The conflict could make it more challenging for GCC-based entities to issue debt in overseas capital markets,” it said, adding that this could particularly increase Saudi banks’ reliance on more expensive domestic markets, raising funding costs or leading to a slightly sharper slowing of loan growth than we had previously expected.

Fitch also said Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) banking systems face few immediate credit risks from the regional conflict and that bank ratings in the GCC are mostly driven by our expectations of sovereign support.

“GCC sovereign ratings generally have sufficient headroom to withstand a short regional conflict that does not escalate significantly further, including in most cases substantial assets that provide a buffer against short-term hydrocarbon revenue disruption,” the rating agency noted.

However, Fitch warned that lasting damage to key energy infrastructure or protracted hostilities could pose risks to these ratings.

“The longer-term orientation and stability of Iran’s government, and the associated implications for regional security, are unclear and could have negative or positive sovereign rating implications,” it said.

Geopolitical risk has long been an important credit consideration for GCC issuers, including banks, although the regional breadth and scale of the ongoing attacks is unprecedented, the rating agency added.

Fitch also said it believes a key area to watch will be the strength of operating conditions, particularly non-oil growth and general confidence in the region, as these are important for banks’ credit profiles.


Lagarde: ECB Has No Pre-set Response to Mideast Tensions

European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde delivers the 2026 Annual Global Risk Lecture in honor of Robert Mundell, at Johns Hopkins University, in Bologna, Italy, March 5, 2026. REUTERS/Michele Lapini
European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde delivers the 2026 Annual Global Risk Lecture in honor of Robert Mundell, at Johns Hopkins University, in Bologna, Italy, March 5, 2026. REUTERS/Michele Lapini
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Lagarde: ECB Has No Pre-set Response to Mideast Tensions

European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde delivers the 2026 Annual Global Risk Lecture in honor of Robert Mundell, at Johns Hopkins University, in Bologna, Italy, March 5, 2026. REUTERS/Michele Lapini
European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde delivers the 2026 Annual Global Risk Lecture in honor of Robert Mundell, at Johns Hopkins University, in Bologna, Italy, March 5, 2026. REUTERS/Michele Lapini

The European Central Bank has no pre-set stance as regards to geopolitical tensions from the conflict in the Middle East and will decide monetary policy on a "meeting-by-meeting" basis, President Christine Lagarde said on Thursday.

The ECB will take its decisions "in view of all the ⁠data that we can ⁠harness, and that we can analyze, and that we can scrutinize with sufficient confidence," Lagarde said in a Q&A session at the Johns Hopkins ⁠University in Bologna, Italy.

There is no "preset pace for our monetary policy stance. And I think that if you bring these two elements together, it places the ECB and the euro system in a good position to monitor very carefully and to try to understand ⁠what ⁠the consequences of the current shocks will be in the future," she added.

The US-Israeli war on Iran, which has spread to other countries in the Gulf, is threatening to drive up inflation and hit sluggish euro zone growth by making energy more expensive and disrupting supply chains.


Rising Fuel Prices Lash Airline Sector as Iran Conflict Widens

An Emirates Airbus A380 aircraft that has remained parked at the airport after the flight was cancelled, amid the U.S.-Israel conflict with Iran, at Incheon International Airport in Incheon, South Korea, March 5, 2026. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
An Emirates Airbus A380 aircraft that has remained parked at the airport after the flight was cancelled, amid the U.S.-Israel conflict with Iran, at Incheon International Airport in Incheon, South Korea, March 5, 2026. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
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Rising Fuel Prices Lash Airline Sector as Iran Conflict Widens

An Emirates Airbus A380 aircraft that has remained parked at the airport after the flight was cancelled, amid the U.S.-Israel conflict with Iran, at Incheon International Airport in Incheon, South Korea, March 5, 2026. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
An Emirates Airbus A380 aircraft that has remained parked at the airport after the flight was cancelled, amid the U.S.-Israel conflict with Iran, at Incheon International Airport in Incheon, South Korea, March 5, 2026. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji

Airline shares seesawed on Thursday, as some regained ground on more flights taking off from the Middle East while others dipped on spiking oil prices after US-Israeli strikes on Iran sparked major disruption across the global aviation industry.

Governments have scrambled to arrange flights out of the Middle East for tens of thousands of citizens stranded by the intensifying conflict, which has closed most of the region's airspace due to the risk of missiles hitting planes.

Takeoffs from Dubai International Airport more than doubled on Wednesday, the latest data from Flightradar24 show, as activity slowly restarts at the world's busiest travel hub, which was brought to a near standstill amid the conflict.

Traffic remains far below normal levels, with global aviation disruption likely to take some time to normalize as the conflict shows little sign of easing. Air cargo has also been hit, disrupting the movement of perishables and aircraft parts.

"The past few days have been unprecedented," Dubai Airports CEO Paul Griffiths said on Thursday on LinkedIn in his first public remarks since the airstrikes began, adding that teams were pulling together and "navigating with confidence".

In a sign of the ongoing threat to airlines, Azerbaijan - part of one key flight corridor from Asia to Europe - temporarily closed part of its airspace near Iran after a drone strike in the southern Nakhchivan area near the Iranian border.

Flights appeared to still be crossing the country further to the north, according to realtime tracking from Flightradar 24.

The war has pummelled airline stocks since initial strikes last weekend on fears a protracted conflict could block key routes and raise fuel costs. Carriers have varying levels of Middle East exposure and different hedging strategies.

Some stocks rebounded on Thursday. Cathay Pacific Airways , Qantas Airways and Korean Air Lines rose. Japan Airlines edged down 1%.

Major Chinese carriers such as Air China, , China Eastern Airlines and China Southern Airlines fell between 1% and 4% in both Hong Kong and Shanghai.

Gary Ng, a senior economist at Natixis, said Asian airlines were sensitive to Iran's situation given the impact on routes, revenue and costs.

In Europe, Air France KLM was slightly higher, but Lufthansa, British Airways-owned IAG and budget carrier Ryanair dipped. Wizz Air, which flagged a $58 million hit to profits from the conflict, tumbled 10%.

Wizz Air's CEO told Reuters the financial hit should be limited to its current financial year that ends this month and said that the firm was shifting its capacity towards Europe.

REPATRIATION FLIGHTS RAMP UP

Emirates and Etihad are now operating limited services from Dubai and Abu Dhabi through safe air corridors. An Emirates spokesperson said more than 100 flights should depart from Dubai with passengers and cargo on Thursday and Friday.

Qatar Airways said it would run limited relief flights from Thursday for stranded passengers, departing from Muscat in Oman to six European destinations including London, Berlin and Rome as well as from Riyadh to Frankfurt.

Governments from the US to Canada and across Europe have arranged charter flights and helped secure seats on commercial services to repatriate citizens. More than 17,500 Americans have returned to the US since February 28.

A flight carrying Kenyans and others fleeing the UAE arrived in Nairobi on Thursday, including 13 children and their teachers who had been on a school trip to the Gulf.

"We were stuck there for five days ... it was scary, every day we would get alerts and the children would just lose it," school director Olive Tindika told Reuters, saying the children arrived in tears at teachers' hotel rooms whenever explosions lit up the sky.

"It was a very, very traumatising experience."

AIRLINE SECTOR OUTLOOK TIED TO IRAN CONFLICT

Jet fuel prices have soared globally since the strikes on Iran, hitting an all-time high in Singapore on concerns over supply disruption, S&P Global Platts said on Thursday.

Many Asian airline shares have rebounded or pared double-digit declines in recent days, though analysts said the gains may not last.

"I consider this rebound to be primarily short-term in nature," said Kenny Ng, a securities strategist at China Everbright Securities International. "Its sustainability will still depend on the ongoing situation in the Iranian conflict."

Restrictions on airspace have forced airlines to reroute flights, load extra fuel or make additional refuelling stops to guard against sudden diversions or longer flights on safer routes. Prices on some key global routes have risen sharply.

Marooned tourists and some expatriates have also tried to find their own way out of the Middle East through Saudi Arabia or Oman, where airspace remains open.