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Home Latest News

Saudi Arabia foreign reserves to rise for third straight month central bank chief reveals

byCT Report
26/01/2018
in Latest News
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RIYADH: Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority (SAMA) issues its regular monthly update on Sunday.
The impending increase in reserves for the month of December was revealed by Ahmed Al- Kholifey, governor of SAMA  the Kingdom’s central bank  on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos. Monthly reserves will be inching up again. It is a good thing, showing there is great momentum in Saudi Arabia’s economy,” he said at an event organized by the Bahrain Economic Development Board. In November, reserves rose by $1 billion (SR3.748 billion) to $486.9 billion, after an $8.3 billion leap the previous month.
A full quarter of consecutive rises will ease fiscal pressure in the Kingdom, after low oil revenues led to a steady drain on reserves for the previous three years. SAMA’s reserves peaked at $737 billion in the summer of 2014, before the value of oil fell on world markets.
The oil price has been in steady recovery for most of the second half of last year, as the deal between OPEC and some non-OPEC producers to limit crude output took effect.
Al-Kholifey said: “From the point of view of a central bank governor, $70 a barrel would be good.”
Asked if a rising oil price would distract policymakers from pushing through with the Vision 2030 strategy to reduce the economy’s dependence on oil, he replied: “I know that has happened in the past, but this time it’s different.”

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