萝莉视频

Population expansion to drive growth of 萝莉视频鈥檚 private healthcare sector: S&P Global

Population expansion to drive growth of 萝莉视频鈥檚 private healthcare sector: S&P Global
萝莉视频鈥檚 unique demographic dynamics are expected to play a crucial role in accelerating the growth of the healthcare sector.听Shutterstock
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Updated 09 October 2024

Population expansion to drive growth of 萝莉视频鈥檚 private healthcare sector: S&P Global

Population expansion to drive growth of 萝莉视频鈥檚 private healthcare sector: S&P Global

RIYADH: 萝莉视频鈥檚 private healthcare sector will see strong demand for its services thanks to a growing population and the government鈥檚 Vision 2030 program, according to an analysis.听

In its latest report, credit rating agency S&P Global said that the Kingdom should add 30,000 more public and private hospital beds between 2023 and 2030 to meet this rising demand.听

Strengthening the healthcare sector is one of the crucial goals outlined in 萝莉视频鈥檚 Vision 2030 program, as the Kingdom eyes to provide world-class medical services to its population.听

鈥淚t鈥檚 therefore not surprising that one of the Saudi government鈥檚 top priorities is the development of the healthcare sector. As the country accelerates the implementation of its national transformation program, growth opportunities for private healthcare providers are increasing,鈥 said S&P Global.

According to the release, 萝莉视频鈥檚 unique demographic dynamics are expected to play a crucial role in accelerating the growth of the healthcare sector.听

The Kingdom鈥檚 national transformation program targets a hospital bed density of 2.7 beds per 1,000 people by 2030. Based on estimated population data, this compares with 2.4 in 2023 and is more in line with the global average.听

鈥淚n particular, more than 70 percent of the population is below the age of 40, indicating an aging population in the medium term. This, coupled with higher life expectancy, should increase the demand for healthcare,鈥 added S&P Global.听

The analysis further said that government support will encourage investments, and mandatory insurance will boost demand in the private health听sector.听

In March 2021, the Saudi Council of Ministers approved the privatization law to encourage investment in the medical division, and many healthcare providers have announced expansion plans since then, the US-based firm said.听

In its report, S&P Global also outlined some of the major challenges faced by 萝莉视频 in the private medical sector.听

鈥淲e expect to see a widening gap in terms of hospital-bed availability between densely populated cities and more remote areas where demographic developments are less favorable,鈥 said the study.听

It added: 鈥淭his means that private healthcare providers鈥 profitability will vary depending on the regions they serve. Payor profiles also differ across the sector, and so we expect working capital management to remain key in determining cash flow visibility and capital allocation.鈥澨



Kuwait, Qatar, UAE maintain non-oil growth momentum; Egypt shows recovery signs while Lebanon struggles

Kuwait, Qatar, UAE maintain non-oil growth momentum; Egypt shows recovery signs while Lebanon struggles
Updated 6 sec ago

Kuwait, Qatar, UAE maintain non-oil growth momentum; Egypt shows recovery signs while Lebanon struggles

Kuwait, Qatar, UAE maintain non-oil growth momentum; Egypt shows recovery signs while Lebanon struggles

RIYADH: Non-oil business activity in the Middle East showed mixed trends in July, with Kuwait, the UAE, and Qatar maintaining strong growth while Egypt demonstrated signs of recovery and Lebanon remained under pressure.

According to the latest Purchasing Managers鈥 Index report released by S&P Global, Kuwait鈥檚 PMI ticked up to 53.5 in July from 53.1 in June, signalling a solid monthly improvement in the health of the non-oil private sector. 

This robust performance of non-energy business conditions in Kuwait aligns with the wider trend observed in the Gulf Cooperation Council region, where countries are pursuing economic diversification efforts to reduce dependence on crude revenues. 

鈥淜uwait鈥檚 non-oil private sector began the second half of 2025 in much the same way as it ended the first, with output and new orders up markedly again in July,鈥 said Andrew Harker, economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligence. 

Survey panelists linked higher new orders in July to advertising efforts and price discounting, which helped to further raise the output. 

According to the report, employment levels in Kuwait鈥檚 non-oil sector remained broadly unchanged in July, following a record increase in June. 

S&P Global added that inflationary pressures softened in the seventh month of the year, with purchase prices and staff costs increasing at the slowest rates in six and four months, respectively.

鈥淔irms will have been cheered by a softening of inflationary pressures during the month, but the reluctance to hire extra staff did mean that backlogs of work accumulated again,鈥 said Harker. 

The survey data also revealed that Kuwaiti companies remained strongly optimistic about future growth, on the hopes that output will rise further in the remaining months of the year. 

鈥淭he prospects for further expansions in new business in the months ahead appear bright, and we鈥檒l hopefully see this reflected in renewed hiring activity soon,鈥 added Harker. 

UAE鈥檚 PMI declines amid geopolitical tensions

UAE鈥檚 PMI slipped to 52.9 in July from 53.5 in June but remained well above the 50 mark that signals expansion of the non-energy business conditions. 

S&P Global attributed this decline to a slowdown in new business growth across the non-oil economy, as ongoing regional tensions made some clients hesitant to commit to new spending.

Panelists who took part in the survey also pointed to weaker tourism activity and headwinds from global trade disruptions to lower activities in July. 

Despite this decline, output expanded sharply in June, as non-oil firms in the Emirates sought to prevent further increases in backlogs of work.

鈥淏usiness conditions improved in July, but the rate of growth was the weakest since the middle of 2021. As has been the case recently, output was supported by positive demand trends,鈥 said David Owen, senior economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence. 

He added: 鈥淣ew order volumes helped firms to expand, but this trend is declining, with the latest data indicating the softest rise in incoming new work in almost four years.鈥 

The softer increase in new orders contributed to a slight easing in the rate of activity expansion in July, which was further dampened by intensified competitive pressures

The report also revealed that some firms reported that output increased in response to new sales opportunities, rising client incomes, advancements in technological investment, and the clearance of pending work.

The July survey data indicated that job growth softened in over the month, marking the weakest uplift in four months. 

鈥淪hould regional tensions ease, we may see a recovery in sales growth in the coming months. This would also be supported by the subdued price environment, with input costs rising only modestly despite the pace of increase reaching a three-month high,鈥 said Owen. 

He added: 鈥淣evertheless, the ongoing trends of rising competition, limited inventory, constrained hiring growth and relatively low confidence among surveyed firms suggest that downside risks remain elevated.鈥 

In the same report, S&P Global revealed that Dubai鈥檚 PMI rose to 53.5, up from a 45-month low of 51.8 in June, signalling a solid upturn in operating conditions across the Emirate鈥檚 non-oil private sector economy.

Dubai non-oil firms also expanded their output at the sharpest rate in five months in July, while continuing efforts to increase employment and inventories.

Non-energy business conditions improve in Qatar

In a separate report, S&P Global revealed that business conditions in Qatar鈥檚 non-energy sector continued to improve in July, with the country鈥檚 PMI remaining above the 50-expansion zone for the 19th consecutive month. 

The country鈥檚 PMI fell to 51.4 in July from 52 in June.

The report revealed that non-energy private sector employment in Qatar increased at the second-strongest rate in the eight-year survey history, driving a further sharp increase in wages.

鈥淭he PMI remained above the neutral threshold at 51.4 in July, signalling sustained overall growth in the non-energy private sector. But the headline figure continues to mask underlying weakness in demand and output, being heavily supported by another round of strong employment growth,鈥 said Trevor Balchin, economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligence. 

Companies in the non-energy private sector remained optimistic regarding the 12-month outlook for activity in July, due to expected growth in investment, tourism, and industrial development, as well as a recovery in construction, population expansion, and government initiatives. 

Egypt鈥檚 PMI nearing growth trajectory 

In another report, S&P Global revealed that Egypt鈥檚 PMI increased to 49.5 in July, up from 48.8 in June, but still remaining below the 50 no-change threshold for the fifth consecutive month. 

According to S&P Global, Egyptian non-oil business conditions deteriorated for the fifth consecutive month in July, although the decline was less severe than in June, with firms reporting softer contractions in both activity and new orders.

The report added that businesses increased headcounts for the first time since last October, while cuts in purchases softened. 

鈥淎lthough the Egypt PMI stayed below 50 in July, indicating a worsening of non-oil business conditions, the latest survey data provided some cause for optimism. Several firms reported the securing of new work, which helped to soften the rate of decline in sales,鈥 said Owen. 

He added: 鈥淏usinesses also had the confidence to hire new staff, leading to an increase in employment for the first time in nine months, if only a fractional one.鈥

Input prices also rose at a slightly quicker pace in July, with survey panelists attributing this trend to higher costs for items such as cement, fuel and packaging. Increased staff wages also contributed to cost pressures, although the rate of growth was mild. 

Regarding future activity, companies in Egypt continued to express concerns about demand strength and broader economic uncertainty, with optimism improving slightly from June鈥檚 record low. 

Lebanon鈥檚 PMI drops 

According to the latest report, Lebanon鈥檚 private sector economy remained under pressure at the start of the second half of the year, with the PMI in July dropping to 48.9 from 49.2 in June. 

The report revealed that business activity volumes across Lebanon鈥檚 private sector fell further in July, extending the current sequence of contraction to five months, driven by subdued demand conditions, particularly from abroad.

鈥淭he July 2025 BLOM Lebanon PMI dropped to 48.9. This result was not unexpected as the economy lacked any meaningful demand stimulus: the government does not have any money to spend and the private sector is not able and willing to spend,鈥 said Ali Bolbol, chief economist and head of research at BLOMInvest BANK. 

Private sector companies in Lebanon lowered their purchasing volumes as a part of their efforts to reduce costs. 

Looking ahead, surveyed companies remained pessimistic toward the year-ahead outlook for business activity, with these firms expressing negative consequences of a potential escalation of conflict and tensions across the Middle East region. 


萝莉视频鈥檚 non-oil growth stays strong despite softer July PMI

萝莉视频鈥檚 non-oil growth stays strong despite softer July PMI
Updated 53 min 34 sec ago

萝莉视频鈥檚 non-oil growth stays strong despite softer July PMI

萝莉视频鈥檚 non-oil growth stays strong despite softer July PMI

RIYADH: 萝莉视频鈥檚 non-oil business activity continued to expand in July, even as growth momentum softened, with the Purchasing Managers鈥 Index easing to 56.3, down from 57.2 in June, a market tracker showed. 

Compiled by S&P Global for Riyad Bank, the PMI remained well above the neutral 50-point threshold, signaling ongoing improvement in private sector operating conditions. 

The robust growth in 萝莉视频鈥檚 non-oil business activity aligns with the broader goals of Vision 2030, which aims to diversify the Kingdom鈥檚 economy and reduce its reliance on oil revenues. 

This comes as 萝莉视频鈥檚 economy grew by 3.9 percent year on year in the second quarter of 2025, driven by strong non-oil sector performance, according to flash estimates released last month by the General Authority for Statistics. 

Naif Al-Ghaith, chief economist at Riyad Bank, said: 鈥溌芾蚴悠碘檚 non-oil economy remained on a solid growth track in July, supported by higher output, new business, and continued job creation. Although the headline PMI edged down to 56.3 from 57.2 in June, the reading still pointed to a healthy level of activity across the private sector.鈥 

He added: 鈥淔irms continued to benefit from ongoing project work, resilient domestic demand, and focused marketing efforts, even as some indicators showed signs of cooling compared to earlier in the year.鈥 

Al-Ghaith noted that the slight dip in the headline index was primarily due to a moderation in new order growth. He said businesses were still experiencing improved demand, though 鈥渃ompetitive pressures and more cautious client spending weighed on the pace of expansion.鈥 

He also pointed out that external demand was softer and that purchasing activity had increased at a slower pace. 

On the employment front, Al-Ghaith said firms continued to expand their workforce to support rising activity, with 鈥淛uly marking another solid month of hiring as companies worked to keep operations running smoothly.鈥 

He further noted that firms expect growth to continue over the coming year, underpinned by steady demand, strong pipelines, and Vision 2030-linked investments. 

Employment is expected to remain supportive, although rising input costs and wages led to price hikes 鈥 especially in services, construction, and manufacturing. 

The PMI report also showed that non-oil private sector output grew strongly in July, driven by ongoing projects and new orders. However, the pace of expansion was the slowest in three and a half years. 

Order books continued to develop, buoyed by solid domestic demand and active sales efforts. However, growth was partially offset by intensifying competition, lower footfall, and the first drop in export orders in nine months, as firms faced challenges in attracting new foreign clients. 

In response to rising activity and backlogs, firms recorded another sharp increase in hiring, following June鈥檚 14-year employment peak. The uptick was attributed to capacity constraints and growing workloads. 

Inventory levels rose significantly in July, particularly among manufacturers and wholesale and retail firms, even as new input purchases slowed. Delivery times improved but at a slower rate, in part due to customs delays. 

Input prices in the Kingdom鈥檚 non-oil sector increased strongly during the month 鈥 albeit at a slightly slower pace than in the second quarter 鈥 driven by steep salary hikes to retain staff. This contributed to a rise in selling prices for the second straight month. 


MENA IT spending to reach $169bn in 2026听

MENA IT spending to reach $169bn in 2026听
Updated 05 August 2025

MENA IT spending to reach $169bn in 2026听

MENA IT spending to reach $169bn in 2026听

RIYADH: Information technology spending in the Middle East and North Africa region is forecast to reach $169 billion in 2026, marking an 8.9 percent increase from 2025, according to the latest projections from Gartner.

The surge is driven by accelerated adoption of artificial intelligence, intelligent automation, and AI-optimized infrastructure upgrades, as organizations across the region prioritize digital transformation amid global economic and geopolitical uncertainties. 

Gartner鈥檚 forecast is already taking shape in 萝莉视频, where AI adoption is surging, as seen with the launch of Humain, a state-backed AI company unveiled in May by the Public Investment Fund.

Positioned at the forefront of the Kingdom鈥檚 ambition to become a global AI hub, Humain focuses on deploying advanced AI infrastructure, developing Arabic multimodal large language models, and forging strategic partnerships with global technology leaders such as Nvidia, AMD, and Amazon Web Services. 

鈥淭he MENA region is rapidly emerging as a global tech powerhouse, with the Gulf Cooperation Council leveraging its stability, infrastructure and forward-looking policies to attract global partners and build digital skills that empower innovation and support resilient AI-driven economies,鈥 said Mim Burt, practice vice president at Gartner. 

鈥淓ven amid global economic and geopolitical uncertainty, chief information officers in MENA are making strategic investments in AI, intelligent automation and multi-cloud strategies, while strengthening cyber defenses and advancing talent upskilling,鈥 Burt added. 

Data center systems will remain the highest-growth segment in 2026, with spending projected to increase by 37.3 percent to $13 billion. 

However, Gartner noted that the pace will moderate compared to 2025鈥檚 69.3 percent growth, as the market transitions from rapid buildouts to more incremental and sustained investments. 

鈥淒ata center system spending is expected to accelerate as MENA CIOs and technology leaders invest in AI-enabled software and AI-optimized infrastructure,鈥 said Eyad Tachwali, vice president, advisory at Gartner. 

鈥淭his surge is largely fueled by pent-up demand for generative AI and advanced machine learning, which depend on robust computing power for large-scale data processing,鈥 Tachwali added. 

鈥淢ost of this demand is being driven by governments, hyperscalers, technology providers and organizations focused on developing and deploying AI models, rather than traditional enterprises or consumers,鈥 he noted. 

Software spending is also expected to see significant growth, rising 13.9 percent to $20.4 billion in 2026, as organizations across MENA integrate GenAI capabilities into their operations. 

Gartner projects that by 2028, 75 percent of global software spending will be directed toward solutions embedded with GenAI functionality. 

鈥淐IOs will increasingly be offered embedded GenAI capabilities in enterprise applications, productivity and developer tools, more advanced large language models as well as AI-optimized servers to support AI-as-a-service,鈥 said Burt. 鈥淧roviders are also exploring new pricing models across software and hardware to drive revenue.鈥 

IT services spending in the region is projected to grow 8.3 percent in 2026, reflecting the shifting priorities as AI becomes a central component of enterprise strategies. 

鈥淲ith the rapid acceleration of AI infrastructure and adoption in MENA, CIOs must move beyond GenAI as a productivity tool and embed it into the heart of their business strategy,鈥 said Tachwali. 

鈥淭he real competitive edge will come from building strong data foundations, composable technology platforms and cultivating AI-fluent talent 鈥 core enablers for unlocking differentiated value from AI,鈥 he added. 

Initiatives in this field across the region include those contained in 萝莉视频鈥檚 broader Vision 2030 strategy, under which the Saudi Data and AI Authority is spearheading nationwide efforts to embed AI across economic sectors and elevate the country鈥檚 competitiveness. 

Similarly, the UAE continues to reinforce its leadership in the sector with its UAE AI Strategy 2031, which aims to position the nation among the top AI-driven economies worldwide. 

The UAE鈥檚 partnership with OpenAI under the Stargate UAE initiative will establish a 5-gigawatt AI campus in Abu Dhabi, providing nationwide ChatGPT access and positioning the country as a regional AI hub with global-scale compute infrastructure. 


Global M&A hits $2.6tn peak year-to-date, boosted by AI and quest for growth

Global M&A hits $2.6tn peak year-to-date, boosted by AI and quest for growth
Updated 05 August 2025

Global M&A hits $2.6tn peak year-to-date, boosted by AI and quest for growth

Global M&A hits $2.6tn peak year-to-date, boosted by AI and quest for growth
  • M&A value up 28 percent from last year, driven by US megadeals
  • AI and regulatory changes boost corporate growth motivations
  • Private equity re-enters market, fueling deal activity

LONDON: Global dealmaking has reached $2.6 trillion, the highest for the first seven months of the year since the 2021 pandemic-era peak, as a quest for growth in corporate boardrooms and the impact of a surge in AI activity has overcome the uncertainty caused by US tariffs.

The number of transactions to August 1 is 16 percent lower than the same time last year, but their value is 28 percent higher, according to Dealogic data, boosted by US megadeals valued at more than $10 billion.

They include Union Pacific Corp鈥檚 proposed $85 billion acquisition of small rival Norfolk Southern and OpenAI鈥檚 $40 billion funding round led by Softbank Group.

The upsurge will be a relief to bankers who began the year with expectations the administration of US President Donald Trump would lead to a wave of consolidation.

Instead, his trade tariffs and geopolitical uncertainty made companies pause until renewed confidence in corporate boardrooms and the US administration鈥檚 anti-trust agenda changed the mood.

鈥淲hat you鈥檙e seeing in terms of deal rationale for transactions right now is that it鈥檚 heavily growth-motivated, and it鈥檚 increasing,鈥 Andre Veissid, EY Global Financial Services Strategy and Transactions Leader, told Reuters.

鈥淲hether it鈥檚 artificial intelligence, the change in the regulatory environment, we see our clients not wanting to be left behind in that race and that鈥檚 driving activity.鈥

Compared with August 2021, when investors, rebounding from pandemic lockdowns drove the value of deals to $3.57 trillion, this year鈥檚 tally is nearly a $1 trillion, or 27 percent, lower.

Still deal-makers at JP Morgan Chase have said there is more to come, with companies pursuing bigger deals in the second half of the year as executives adapt to volatility.

鈥淧eople have got used to the prevailing uncertainty, or maybe the unpredictability post-US election is just more predictable now,鈥 Simon Nicholls, co-head of Slaughter and May Corporate and M&A group, said.

Nigel Wellings, partner at Clifford Chance said the market was moving beyond tariffs. 鈥淏oardrooms are seeing the M&A opportunity of a more stable economic environment and positive regulatory signals. But it is not a frothy market.鈥

From health to tech

While the healthcare sector drove M&A in the years after the pandemic, the computer and electronics industry has produced more takeover bids in the US and the UK in the last two years, according to Dealogic.

Artificial intelligence is expected to drive more dealmaking. M&A activity has increased around data center usage, such as Samsung鈥檚 $1.7 billion acquisition of Germany鈥檚 FlaktGroup, a data center cooling specialist.

Palo Alto Networks $25 billion deal for Israeli cybersecurity peer CyberArk was the largest deal in Europe, Middle East and Africa so far this year as rising AI-driven threats push companies to adopt stronger defenses.

Private equity, which had been sitting on the sidelines, has once again been active, with Sycamore Partners鈥 $10 billion deal to take private Walgreens Boots Alliance and rivalling 4.8 billion pound offers from KKR and Advent for UK scientific instrument maker Spectris.

The US was the biggest market for M&A, accounting for more than half of the global activity. Asia Pacific鈥檚 dealmaking doubled over the same year to date period last year, outpacing the EMEA region. 


Oil Updates 鈥 crude little changed as OPEC+ output hikes counter Russia disruption concerns

Oil Updates 鈥 crude little changed as OPEC+ output hikes counter Russia disruption concerns
Updated 05 August 2025

Oil Updates 鈥 crude little changed as OPEC+ output hikes counter Russia disruption concerns

Oil Updates 鈥 crude little changed as OPEC+ output hikes counter Russia disruption concerns

BENGALURU/SINGAPORE: Oil prices were little changed on Tuesday as traders assessed rising supply by OPEC+ against worries of weaker demand and US President Donald Trump鈥檚 new threats on India over its Russian oil purchases.

Brent crude futures dipped 1 cent to $68.75 a barrel by 9:31 a.m. Saudi time, while US West Texas Intermediate crude was down 2 cents at $66.28.

Both contracts fell by more than 1 percent in the previous session to settle at their lowest in a week.

Both benchmarks have receded because extra capacity from OPEC+ is acting as a buffer for any shortfalls in Russian supplies, said Priyanka Sachdeva, a senior market analyst at Phillip Nova.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies, together known as OPEC+, agreed on Sunday to raise oil production by 547,000 barrels per day for September.

It marks a full and early reversal of the group鈥檚 largest tranche of output cuts, amounting to about 2.5 million bpd, or around 2.4 percent of global demand, though analysts caution the actual amount returning to the market will be less.

The rising supplies come amid renewed concerns about demand, with some analysts expecting faltering economic growth in the second half of the year.

JPMorgan analysts said on Tuesday the risk of a US recession was high as labor demand has stalled. In addition, China鈥檚 July Politburo meeting signalled no additional policy easing, with the focus shifting to structural rebalancing of the world鈥檚 second-largest economy, the analysts wrote in a note.

At the same time, investors are eyeing possible supply disruptions.

US President Donald Trump has said he could impose 100 percent secondary tariffs on Russian crude buyers such as India after announcing a 25 percent tariff on Indian imports in July.

On Monday, Trump again threatened higher tariffs on Indian goods over the Russian oil purchases. New Delhi called his attack 鈥渦njustified鈥 and vowed to protect its economic interests, deepening the trade rift between the two countries.

India is the biggest buyer of seaborne crude from Russia, importing about 1.75 million bpd from January to June this year, up 1 percent from a year ago, according to data provided to Reuters by trade sources.

Traders are also awaiting any developments on the latest US tariffs on its trading partners, which analysts fear could slow economic growth and dampen fuel demand.