riyadh must do more to capitalize on saudi financial transformation
Last Updated : GMT 09:03:51
Almaghrib Today, almaghrib today
Almaghrib Today, almaghrib today
Last Updated : GMT 09:03:51
Almaghrib Today, almaghrib today

Riyadh must do more to capitalize on Saudi financial transformation

Almaghrib Today, almaghrib today

riyadh must do more to capitalize on saudi financial transformation

Frank Kane

Saudi Arabia has some pretty big ambitions in the financial sector. The largest initial public offering (IPO) in history is progressing as Saudi Aramco gets ready for the market next year; the $200 billion privatization drive is also moving ahead under the revamped National Transformation Program.
So why is Riyadh, capital of the Kingdom, not capitalizing on the unprecedented surge in financial activity underway there?
In Abu Dhabi earlier this week (and simultaneously in China) the twice-annual Global Financial Centers Index (GFCI) was unveiled to an expectant audience of bankers, regulators and other professionals in the money-making world. The GFCI is increasingly viewed as an important indicator of the respective strengths of the cities that are aiming for “financial hub” status.
There were few surprises at the top. London, New York, Hong Kong, Singapore and Tokyo have occupied the top five slots for a long time, with occasional jockeying for position among the leaders. Hong Kong and Singapore, for example, swapped places this time in the third and fourth slots.
Elsewhere, in the top rung, European centers like Frankfurt and Dublin jumped up the charts as potential gainers from any loss of business in post-Brexit London. In North America, San Francisco and Boston (though not New York) fell back on fears of the Trump administration’s protectionist trade policies. In Asia, Shanghai and Beijing climbed as a result of the ongoing eastward “tilt” of the global economy.
The point is that macroeconomic trends and policies had a very definite effect on the financial centers’ performances in the index. Except in Saudi Arabia, it seemed. The momentous changes going on in the Kingdom barely affected Riyadh’s performance in the league.
The Saudi capital fell one place to 77 out of 92 global centers, though it improved its GFCI rating — a measure of the quality of its financial offering calculated by the compilers according to measurable factors like business environment, human capital and reputation — by some 22 points to 596.
But Riyadh was still ranked at the bottom of the nine centers from the Middle East and Africa that made it into the full list. It is ranked below Bahrain and Casablanca in the MENA region, and even below Mauritius in the global tables.
Below Mauritius? The Indian ocean islands with a combined population of about 1.4 million and gross domestic product (GDP) of $23 billion scored better in the rankings — at 69 — than Saudi Arabia, with its population of 32 million and a GDP of $646 billion. Of course, Mauritius has strengths, notably in the offshore industry which serves as a bridge between big investing communities in India and Africa. But should it really be rated more highly as a financial center than Riyadh?
The same applies to Casablanca in Morocco, Gibraltar, and the Philippines capital, Manila. All scored better than Riyadh, before we even come to the tiny European centers, like the Isle of Man, Luxembourg and Liechtenstein, all of which were much higher up the tables than the Saudi capital.
In the region, the disparity is even starker. Dubai and Abu Dhabi, from a similar cultural background and with the same challenges of geography and climate, were prominently at the top of the table. The UAE capital made it into the top 25 for the first time. Neither has the same advantage of a big domestic consumer market as Saudi Arabia, but both have committed themselves to creating an indigenous financial industry and both are perceived as being welcoming to foreign finance and financiers.
Mark Yeandle, the Z/Yen executive who gave the presentation in Abu Dhabi, explained Riyadh’s shortcomings like this: “It is an international professional perception rather than a fundamental problem. Everyone knows there are vast reserves of wealth which will have a big impact on Riyadh. But it’s difficult to have an international capital without international people.”
He meant that Riyadh has basic problems in attracting the global elite that forms the mainstay of the international financial industry. The two UAE cities have built and promoted their own financial hubs, as expatriate centers with some autonomy in granting visas, independent legal systems, benefiting from hard and soft infrastructure appropriate for the modern world of finance.
Riyadh has largely built the King Abdullah Financial District on its outskirts, intended as the response to the UAE hubs, but the huge development has barely attracted any of the big global firms — banks, lawyers, accountants, consultants — necessary to make such a center work. Delays and bureaucratic obstacles have deterred the “international people” from opening up in the district.
Maybe Yeandle is right, and in the end the vast amounts of capital involved in one of the biggest privatization strategies the world has ever seen will eventually bring the international financial community flocking to Riyadh.
But really, more could be done to promote the attractions of the Kingdom. It undoubtedly has the business, but it needs more to attract the businessmen and women who will get it done.

 

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