Saudi National Bank Celebrates Largest Bank Merger

With assets exceeding 900 billion riyals and capital amounting to 44 billion riyals, the new entity is believed to be the Kingdom’s largest bank
With assets exceeding 900 billion riyals and capital amounting to 44 billion riyals, the new entity is believed to be the Kingdom’s largest bank
TT
20

Saudi National Bank Celebrates Largest Bank Merger

With assets exceeding 900 billion riyals and capital amounting to 44 billion riyals, the new entity is believed to be the Kingdom’s largest bank
With assets exceeding 900 billion riyals and capital amounting to 44 billion riyals, the new entity is believed to be the Kingdom’s largest bank

The National Commercial Bank, or NCB, concluded the final phases of a merger deal with Riyadh-based Samba Financial Group on Jan. 6, 2022, to form the Saudi National Bank.

With assets exceeding 900 billion riyals ($240 billion) and capital amounting to 44 billion riyals ($11.7 billion), the new entity is believed to be the Kingdom’s largest bank.

SNB concluded the last phase of the transaction in a record time, within nine months since the process started on April 1, 2021.

The bank has opened more than 1.4 million new accounts for individual customers, which is 100 percent of the total individual customers.

As for corporate customers, the bank opened accounts for more than 11,000 customers, making up 100 percent of small and midsized corporate customers.

It also completed opening and activating 100 percent of the large corporate customer accounts.

Moreover, SNB completed the procedures for migrating the treasury sector, NCB Capital, Samba Capital, and other administrative sectors and branches.

SNB Chairman Ammar AlKhudairy stated that reaching the finish line of the merger agenda paves the way for a new stage of work and a promising future for the Saudi banking industry.

He added that the new entity - backed by a market share of 31 percent and its real wealth of 12,000 employees in Saudi Arabia and more than 4,000 employees in its subsidiaries - will support social prosperity and economic transformation in Saudi Arabia.

It will also contribute to empowering citizens and national businesses and enhancing their growth opportunities, in line with the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030, according to AlKhudairy.

Saeed bin Mohammed AlGhamdi, managing director and Group CEO of SNB, said that the merger – with its many phases, milestones, and complex requirements – wouldn’t have taken place with such excellence, accuracy, speed, and flexibility had it not been for the unique cooperation of all parties, including shareholders, executive, administrative, technical and logistical teams, as well as the positive engagement of the Bank’s customers and their responsiveness to the Bank’s directives and instructions.



Saudi Arabia Draws Silicon Valley with $21 Bn Investment Deals

Buildings are seen in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, December 18, 2017. REUTERS/Faisal Al Nasser/ File Photo
Buildings are seen in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, December 18, 2017. REUTERS/Faisal Al Nasser/ File Photo
TT
20

Saudi Arabia Draws Silicon Valley with $21 Bn Investment Deals

Buildings are seen in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, December 18, 2017. REUTERS/Faisal Al Nasser/ File Photo
Buildings are seen in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, December 18, 2017. REUTERS/Faisal Al Nasser/ File Photo

Tech and investment heavyweights from Silicon Valley descended on the Saudi capital this week on a historic visit alongside US President Donald Trump, marking a dramatic revival of strategic partnerships that had stalled under previous restrictive US policies.

The visit, seen as a pivot away from Washington’s earlier constraints on exporting artificial intelligence technology, featured some of the most influential figures in the global tech industry.

Among those attending Tuesday’s high-level gathering were Tesla CEO Elon Musk, NVIDIA founder Jensen Huang, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, Amazon chief Andy Jassy, BlackRock Chairman Larry Fink, and Palantir CEO Alex Karp.

The visit was hailed by officials as ushering in a “new golden era” of US-Saudi relations. It came just one day after Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman announced the launch of HUMAIN, a Saudi AI innovation venture aimed at reshaping the Kingdom’s future through advanced technology.

In just 48 hours, US investment pledges in Saudi Arabia’s AI sector surged from $3 billion to over $21 billion, according to forum organizers.

Also announced was an expanded strategic partnership between Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund and Google Cloud, projected to contribute approximately $70.6 billion to the Kingdom’s GDP in the coming years.

The series of announcements reflect Riyadh’s growing ambition to become a global hub for artificial intelligence, backed by top-tier US tech leadership and capital.

NVIDIA has delivered 18,000 next-generation AI chips to HUMAIN, in a move that could open the floodgates for artificial intelligence semiconductors across the Middle East.

The landmark delivery coincides with a sharp shift in US export policy, as the Trump administration begins dismantling restrictions on semiconductor exports imposed under President Joe Biden.

On Tuesday, the US Commerce Department announced it would scrap Biden’s “AI deployment rule,” which had created three broad tiers of access for countries seeking to acquire AI chips. The rule was due to take effect on Thursday.

The reversal signals a significant policy pivot, potentially expanding access to powerful AI technology for key allies in the region, including Saudi Arabia, which has been aggressively positioning itself as a future hub for artificial intelligence and advanced computing.

Industry analysts say the delivery of NVIDIA’s high-performance chips marks a major step toward establishing a regional AI infrastructure capable of supporting large-scale machine learning, cloud computing, and autonomous systems.

Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan affirmed that the Kingdom’s strategic partnership with the US in artificial intelligence and hyperscale data centers is expected to generate more than 22,000 high-quality jobs.

Speaking at a press conference, Prince Faisal emphasized that deepening cooperation in advanced technologies will play a key role in shaping Saudi Arabia’s economic future and workforce development.