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Hints of reforms to ease foreign-ownership limits in Saudi Arabia set off the sharpest rally for its equity market in years this autumn,1 reigniting investor curiosity. The prospect of lifting the 49% cap has already boosted sentiment and, if realized, could channel billions in passive inflows and deepen the Kingdom’s liquidity base.

While no formal policy has yet been enacted, the Capital Market Authority (CMA) has begun consulting on a draft framework that could allow greater direct foreign access to Saudi equities. The move reflects a broader shift: The Kingdom is actively positioning itself to integrate more fully with global capital markets.

For global investors, these indicators point to a market still in transition—but increasingly open, liquid and institutionally credible. In the one month since the reform news, Saudi Arabia’s equity market has outperformed that of other major oil-producing nations, up 1.1% compared to Canada, Brazil and China, which all showed relatively flat or negative returns for the period.2

Saudi Arabia’s new Investment Law, effective as of February 2025, has enshrined equal treatment for foreign and domestic investors and has streamlined registration, and—with CMA updates—is demonstrating clear intent to align with global capital-flow standards.

Meanwhile, the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 giga-projects—from NEOM and Qiddiya to Soudah Peaks—continue to drive diversification. Its Public Investment Fund (PIF), with assets around US$900 billion, anchors this transformation and attracts global capital. At the same time, investment in renewables and hydrogen underscores the shift toward energy diversification, offering index investors exposure beyond oil.

Cooperation and economic growth among Gulf nations also stand to be amplified by Saudi Arabia’s capital projects, Qatar’s gas expansion and Kuwait’s policy reforms, with consumption in Saudi markets particularly robust.

Within the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), Saudi Arabia remains the most dynamic equity market, yet we believe its approximately 4% weighting in the FTSE Emerging Markets Index understates its significance.3 As new listings, privatizations and ownership reforms expand the investable universe, Saudi Arabia’s influence on regional and global benchmarks could gradually rise.

Even under current limits, many large capitalization companies have foreign holdings under 15%.4 Easing or removing the foreign-ownership cap could unlock latent demand and prompt upward repricing. Regional cooperation and strong consumption trends add further tailwinds. While policy shifts remain a risk, we believe this ongoing liberalization—involving social reforms such as greater female workforce participation—continues to spur growth drivers in retail, real estate and services.

Fiscal and market backdrop

Saudi Arabia recorded a first quarter 2025 deficit of US$15.6 billion, reflecting accelerated Vision 2030 spending. The 2025 budget projects a full-year shortfall of roughly US$27 billion, about 2.3% of gross domestic product—modest by emerging-market standards.5 Additionally, credit ratings agency S&P Global raised its long-term rating to A+ from A with a stable outlook in March 2025.

From the investor perspective, Saudi Arabia’s fiscal stance reinforces the broad reform narrative: state-led investment, healthy reserves and rising liquidity continue to underpin growth. Riyadh’s equity market activity has also accelerated, with a steady pipeline of initial public offerings (IPOs) and secondary offerings broadening the investable universe. Yet, its benchmark weighting still understates Saudi Arabia’s scale and structural potential.

IPO deals and proceeds by GCC country
2024

Sources: Markaz (GCC IPO Report FY 2024) and PwC. Percentages may not sum to 100% due to rounding.

As of mid-2025, however, foreign investors held about US$105 billion in Saudi equities—only a fraction of total market value—underscoring both limited participation and room for growth.6 During the first quarter of the year, oil revenues also fell roughly 18% year-on-year and fluctuations in global crude prices and OPEC+ production quotas directly affect fiscal balances, potentially more than policy adjustments can offset.7 Non-oil income rose about 2%, representing about 43% of government revenue for that quarter.8 These figures point to diversification progress, but also to concerning reliance on hydrocarbons and execution risk around major projects.

With a broader capital base and deepening corporate sector, Saudi Arabia is steadily gaining weight in emerging-market portfolios. Still, sentiment will hinge on oil prices, policy consistency and global liquidity. While risks persist, we believe the Kingdom’s market trajectory increasingly merits a fresh look from global investors.



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