Arab News
Arab news, Sat, Jul 05, 2025 | Muharram 10, 1447
Saudi PMI rises to 57.2 in June as non-oil sector hits 3-month high
Saudi Arabia:
Saudi Arabia’s non-oil private sector expanded at
its fastest pace in three months in June, supported by rising domestic demand,
accelerated hiring, and a pickup in purchasing activity, a survey showed.
According to Riyad Bank’s Purchasing Managers’
Index compiled by S&P Global, the headline PMI rose to 57.2, up from the 55.8
figure recorded in May, signaling a strong improvement in business conditions
and surpassing the long-run average of 56.9.
The index remains well above the neutral 50 mark,
indicating sustained expansion across the Kingdom’s non-oil economy.
The robust growth in Saudi Arabia’s non-oil
business activity aligns with the broader goals of the Vision 2030 program,
which seeks to diversify the Kingdom’s economy and reduce its reliance on oil
revenues.
Saudi Arabia’s PMI for June outpaced that of its
regional peers, with the UAE and Kuwait recording readings of 53.5 and 53.1,
respectively.
Naif Al-Ghaith,
chief economist at Riyad Bank, said: “The latest reading reflects a strong
improvement in overall business conditions, supported by higher output levels,
rising demand, and an active labor market.”
He added: “Firms largely linked the pickup in
activity to improving sales, new project starts, and better demand conditions,
although the pace of output growth was softer compared to previous highs.”
In May, a report released by Saudi Arabia’s
General Authority for Statistics revealed that the Kingdom’s gross domestic
product grew 2.7 percent year on year in the first quarter, driven by strong
non-oil activity.
Commenting on the GDP figures at the time,
Minister of Economy and Planning Faisal Alibrahim, who also chairs GASTAT’s
board, noted that the contribution of non-oil activities to the Kingdom’s
economic output reached 53.2 percent — an increase of 5.7 percent from previous
estimates.
The minister also added that the Kingdom’s
economic outlook remains positive, supported by structural reforms and
high-quality, state-led projects across various sectors.
In its latest PMI report, S&P Global stated that
non-oil firms in the Kingdom reported a further rise in new orders in June, with
the rate of growth continuing to accelerate from its recent low in April.
Companies that participated in the survey noted
that the acquisition of new clients and the benefits of enhanced marketing had
improved demand growth across non-oil sectors.
“New orders continued to lead the expansion,
registering the fastest growth in four months and surpassing the long-run trend.
Businesses credited this increase to stronger demand, effective marketing
strategies, and improved client acquisition,” added Al-Ghaith.
According to the report, non-oil private companies
in Saudi Arabia hired staff at the fastest rate since May 2011, as firms
expanded teams to manage increased workloads.
This historically strong increase continued a
robust period of job creation seen since the start of 2025, with companies
citing high demand for skilled staff as a driving force behind intensified
recruitment efforts and increased salary offers.
Consequently, overall staff costs rose at the
fastest pace since the survey began in 2009.
Purchasing activity accelerated to a two-year high
as firms responded to rising input needs, with nearly 40 percent of respondents
increasing their purchases.
Input prices also rose sharply, aligning with the
trend observed in the second quarter of the year. This compelled companies to
pass on higher costs to customers, although some businesses opted to reduce
prices as part of competitive pricing strategies.
Despite price pressures, non-oil firms in Saudi
Arabia remained confident of an uplift in activity over the next 12 months, with
sentiment ticking up to a two-year high.
S&P Global stated that this optimism for future
growth was largely driven by resilient domestic economic conditions, robust
demand, and improving sales pipelines.
“On the future outlook, sentiment among non-oil
businesses remains highly positive. Confidence about future activity climbed to
a two-year peak, supported by healthy order pipelines and stronger domestic
economic conditions. However, cost pressures became more pronounced in June,”
said Al-Ghaith.
He noted that staff costs had risen at a record
pace as firms sought to retain talent, while purchase prices recorded their
fastest increase since February, partly due to stronger demand and rising
geopolitical risks.
“Despite these cost challenges, firms broadly
raised their selling prices, reversing the declines seen in May and signalling
an improved ability to pass on higher costs to customers,” said Al-Ghaith.
The PMI survey data were collected from around 400
private sector companies across the manufacturing, construction, and wholesale
sectors, as well as retail and services.