Saudi CMA Waives Sukuk, Bonds Trading Commission to Develop Market

Saudi Arabia’s Capital Market Authority (CMA) on Sunday announced waiving its share in sukuk and bonds trading commission starting from May 2023. (AP)
Saudi Arabia’s Capital Market Authority (CMA) on Sunday announced waiving its share in sukuk and bonds trading commission starting from May 2023. (AP)
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Saudi CMA Waives Sukuk, Bonds Trading Commission to Develop Market

Saudi Arabia’s Capital Market Authority (CMA) on Sunday announced waiving its share in sukuk and bonds trading commission starting from May 2023. (AP)
Saudi Arabia’s Capital Market Authority (CMA) on Sunday announced waiving its share in sukuk and bonds trading commission starting from May 2023. (AP)

Saudi Arabia’s Capital Market Authority (CMA) on Sunday announced waiving its share in sukuk and bonds trading commission starting from May 2023.

This step comes as part of the efforts to reduce costs on market participants in a way that enhances liquidity, increases competitiveness in the local market and expands domestic investors' base in government debt issues.

This will contribute to achieving the strategic objectives of Vision 2030 related to developing a diversified and effective financial sector to support the development of the economy and create an advanced capital market, the market regulator said in a statement.

By this decision, the CMA affirms its pledge to stimulate activities of debt instruments secondary market. This comes in line with the authority's strategic objective relevant to developing the sukuk and debt instruments market to boost its attractiveness to issuers and investors.

CMA hopes this resolution will contribute to stimulating issuers to list local currency-denominated sukuk and bonds in the Saudi debt instruments market and encouraging investors to trade such instruments in a way that will help to deepen the market and raise its liquidity.

This is along with diversifying finance choices before public and private sectors by creating a new asset class available for all investors’ segments.

In other news, CMA extended the deadline for Tadawul-listed insurance companies to disclose Q1 2023 financial statements until July 2.

In a statement on Sunday, the market regulator said the decision aims to support all capital market participants.

It was also driven by the challenges facing the insurance sector for applying International Financial Reporting Standard (IFRS) 17 “Insurance Contracts", and the request received from the insurance executive committee to extend the deadline for disclosing the first-quarter results.

Trading on shares of any Tadawul-listed insurance services provider that has not disclosed Q1 2023 financial statements by July 2 will be suspended for one trading session following the end of the specified deadline. These stocks will restart trading on July 4 for 20 trading sessions.

Tadawul-listed insurance companies must disclose their interim financial statements during this period. Otherwise, their stocks will be re-suspended starting from Aug. 1, until they disclose the first-quarter results.



French People Need to Work More to Boost Growth, Minister Says

French Minister for the Economy, Finance and Industry Antoine Armand arrives to attend a governmental seminar at the Hotel Matignon in Paris, on November 4, 2024. (AFP)
French Minister for the Economy, Finance and Industry Antoine Armand arrives to attend a governmental seminar at the Hotel Matignon in Paris, on November 4, 2024. (AFP)
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French People Need to Work More to Boost Growth, Minister Says

French Minister for the Economy, Finance and Industry Antoine Armand arrives to attend a governmental seminar at the Hotel Matignon in Paris, on November 4, 2024. (AFP)
French Minister for the Economy, Finance and Industry Antoine Armand arrives to attend a governmental seminar at the Hotel Matignon in Paris, on November 4, 2024. (AFP)

People in France must work more, Finance Minister Antoine Armand said on Monday, adding that the fact that French people worked less than their counterparts in Europe was harming the economy due to lower tax contributions and social security payments.

The government is examining reforms to speed up its sluggish economic growth, although changes to work practices are often opposed by trade unions.

"On average, a French person works clearly less than his neighbors, over the course of a year," Armand told C News TV.

"The consequence of this is fewer social security payments, less money to finance our social models, fewer tax receipts and ultimately fewer jobs and less economic growth."

France, the euro zone's second biggest economy, wants to cut its public deficit to a targeted 5% of GDP by 2025.

The country's 35-hour work week, introduced in 2000, has typically been fiercely defended by trade unions, while reforms to France's pension system have also faced widespread protests.

"Let's all work a bit more, collectively speaking, starting off by making sure that everyone respects the working hours that they have been given, in all sectors," Armand said.