Arab News
Arab news, Wed, Jun 11, 2025 | Dhu al-Hijjah 15, 1446
Saudi commercial bank profits jump 16% in April, topping $2bn before zakat, tax
Saudi Arabia:
Saudi Arabia’s banking sector extended
its winning streak in April, posting SR7.77 billion ($2.07 billion) in pre-zakat
and tax profits, a 16 percent increase compared to the same month last year.
According to the Saudi Central Bank, also known as
SAMA, this brought year-to-date earnings to SR32.97 billion, an annual rise of
20 percent, keeping the Kingdom firmly on course for another record-breaking
period.
The sustained momentum is attributed to a robust
mix of state spending on giga-projects, resilient consumer demand, and
still-elevated interest rates.
Financing volumes continue to climb, driven
primarily by corporate borrowers across a growing range of industries, including
manufacturing, utilities, insurance, and private education.
Contractors are also racing to secure long-term
credit for giga-projects such as NEOM, Diriyah, and the Jafurah gas field.
A wider Gulf picture
Strong as those local figures are, the broader
region is also gaining momentum. A Kamco Invest report released in May showed
that Gulf banks collectively earned a record $15.6 billion in the first quarter
of 2025, an 8.6 percent increase from a year earlier.
Financial institutions in the UAE posted the
largest absolute increase, adding $639.6 million, while Saudi lenders recorded
the fastest annual growth at 17.2 percent.
Kamco added that fee income is rising,
costs are under control, and loan-loss provisions fell sharply during the
period, cushioning a small dip in net interest income.
Investor appetite is visible in market valuations.
Forbes Middle East’s “30 Most Valuable Banks 2025” March list includes 10 Saudi
lenders with a combined market cap of about $269 billion— roughly one-third of
the entire ranking.
Al Rajhi Bank led the pack at $105.6 billion, with
Saudi National Bank following at $54.7 billion.
Global Finance named Saudi Awwal Bank the
Kingdom’s best lender in its May “World’s Best Banks in the Middle East 2025”
release, highlighting its HSBC-backed mobile app upgrades, Visa Direct payments,
and one-stop small and medium-sized enterprises lending platform.
Cleaning the books and raising cash
Banks are also getting balance sheets ready for
the next investment wave.
Bloomberg reported in March that lenders are
exploring sales of older non-performing loans to specialist investors to free up
capital for upcoming mega project drawdowns.
They’re also tapping capital markets. By June,
they had issued over $5.6 billion in Additional Tier-1 bonds, already a
full-year record and the world’s second-largest AT1 issuance in 2025, according
to Bloomberg.
The spree includes Al Rajhi Bank’s $1.25 billion
deal in April, Banque Saudi Fransi’s $650 million perpetual at 6.375 percent in
May, Saudi Awwal Bank’s $650 million inaugural issue, and Alinma Bank’s $500
million of sustainable sukuk, all heavily oversubscribed.
By tapping eager investors now, while margins
remain healthy and global demand for Gulf paper is strong, lenders are bulking
up capital buffers and keeping loan-to-deposit ratios in check. That leaves them
better prepared to fund the fast-rising credit needs of projects like NEOM and
Diriyah without tripping liquidity alarms later in the year.
Fintech role
Fintech is reshaping Saudi banking from the
ground up. The Saudi Central Bank’s Open Banking Framework — most recently
updated in September to cover payment-initiation services — sets common
technical rules that let lenders and start-ups plug their systems together
safely and at speed.
Speaking at the inaugural 24 Fintech conference in
September, Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan revealed that the Kingdom had
licensed 224 fintech firms by the second quarter of 2024, up from fewer than 100
just three years earlier.
One of the newest players is Riyadh-based Stitch,
which closed a $10 million seed round on May 28. The company offers a single set
of application-programming interfaces that lets banks, fintechs and even
non-financial brands bolt on real-time payments and open-banking functions far
faster than older systems.
Early adopters already include Lulu Exchange and
point-of-sale platform Foodics. The founders say the fresh cash will go toward
doubling the engineering team and expanding the product suite.
Looking ahead
Riyad Capital’s first-quarter preview,
released in April, expects another double-digit profit rise this year, about
SR19 billion for the listed banks it tracks, as loan growth stays strong and
rate cuts arrive slowly.
S&P Global, in its Saudi Arabia Banking Sector
Outlook 2025 report, says a 10 percent increase in lending should outweigh a 20-
to 30-basis-point dip in margins, keeping sector returns on assets near 2.1
percent to 2.2 percent.
Funding is the main watchpoint. Moody’s shifted
its system outlook to stable on Feb. 25, saying strong credit growth is
tightening liquidity, but capital buffers remain solid.
For now, asset-quality risks remain low. S&P
expects non-performing loans to edge up to just 1.7 percent by the end of 2025,
while loan-loss provisions are projected to stay around 50 to 60 basis points.
Banks’ total capital ratios, hovering near 19 percent, provide a solid buffer to
absorb potential shocks from falling oil prices or rising private-sector
leverage.
Saudi lenders are still the region’s earnings
workhorse. Profits are rising, market values are high, and fresh money — from
bond buyers to venture capitalists — is flowing in. If they can keep gathering
deposits quickly enough to fund a fast-growing loan book, the Kingdom’s banks
look set to stay ahead of their Gulf neighbors in both profit and ambition well
into next year.