SABIC Solutions Win 5 Edison Awards for Best New Products

SABIC has been awarded five of the prestigious Edison Awards 2023. (SABIC)
SABIC has been awarded five of the prestigious Edison Awards 2023. (SABIC)
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SABIC Solutions Win 5 Edison Awards for Best New Products

SABIC has been awarded five of the prestigious Edison Awards 2023. (SABIC)
SABIC has been awarded five of the prestigious Edison Awards 2023. (SABIC)

SABIC, a global diversified chemicals company, has been awarded five of the prestigious Edison Awards 2023 for its innovative solutions, designed to meet the needs of their customers and the broader value chain, and as well aligned with Saudi Vision 2030, reported the Saudi Press Agency on Friday.

SABIC won three gold and two bronze awards across three separate areas for its new products and solutions. These areas include “Food and Agriculture”, “Material Science” and “Sustainability.”

The awards reflect SABIC’s commitment to pushing the limits of science, technology, and innovation and defining the future of chemistry that allows SABIC and its customers to address some of the world’s biggest challenges.

This is the third consecutive year that SABIC’s solutions have been recognized by Edison Awards, which honor the world’s most innovative new products, services, and business leaders. This is also the second consecutive year that SABIC received at least five Edison awards.

“SABIC is proud to be recognized for the third consecutive year by Edison Awards, demonstrating our continued leadership in new technology and innovation advancements. These are key elements of our continued business growth on our journey to be the preferred world leader in chemicals and provide innovative solutions for the future that create a more sustainable world,” said Abdulrahman Al-Fageeh, CEO at SABIC.



Public Investment Funds Assets in Saudi Arabia Rise by 37%

The headquarters of the Saudi Capital Market Authority in Riyadh. Asharq Al-Awsat
The headquarters of the Saudi Capital Market Authority in Riyadh. Asharq Al-Awsat
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Public Investment Funds Assets in Saudi Arabia Rise by 37%

The headquarters of the Saudi Capital Market Authority in Riyadh. Asharq Al-Awsat
The headquarters of the Saudi Capital Market Authority in Riyadh. Asharq Al-Awsat

The value of public investment fund assets—both domestic and foreign—in the Saudi financial market recorded an annual growth of 37%, increasing by nearly SAR43 billion ($11.6 billion) by the end of the third quarter (Q3) of 2024, bringing the total to SAR160.087 billion ($43.22 billion), compared to SAR117.117 billion ($31.62 billion) during the same period in 2023.

Quarterly, the asset value grew by 10.4%, representing an estimated increase of SAR15.120 billion ($405 million), compared to SAR144.967 billion ($38.6 billion) at the end of the second quarter (Q2) of this year, according to data from the quarterly statistical bulletin of the Capital Market Authority for 2024.

The number of subscribers recorded a 51% increase, representing nearly 528,000 subscribers, to reach 1,570,452 subscribers, compared to 1,042,484 at the end of the same period last year.

This growth was supported by an increase in domestic investment assets, which grew annually by 42%, at SAR39.598 billion, bringing the total to approximately SAR134.431 billion. These assets represent 84% of the total asset value.

Meanwhile, foreign investment assets recorded an annual growth of 15.1%, increasing by over SAR3 billion to reach SAR25.656 billion, which accounts for 16% of the total asset value.
The number of public investment funds grew annually by 10%, with an increase of 27 funds, bringing the total to 310 funds.
Public investment fund assets were distributed across 14 investment types, with the highest value being the money market fund assets, valued at SAR44.868 billion and representing 28% of total assets. Equity fund assets ranked second in value at SAR34.767 billion, accounting for 27.3% of total assets. Real estate investment fund assets were third, reaching SAR29.263 billion and representing 18.3% of total assets. Debt instrument fund assets were fourth, valued at SAR22.236 billion, making up 14% of total assets.