Saudi Arabia won't penalise banks that boycotted conference
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Saudi Arabia won’t penalise banks that boycotted conference

Saudi Arabia won’t penalise banks that boycotted conference

The SAMA governor said that institutions that pulled out of the Saudi conference will still be able to apply for and obtain banking licenses

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Saudi Arabia’s central bank governor said the kingdom will not penalise foreign banks that boycotted an investment conference in Riyadh because of the fallout from the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

He also reiterated the country’s commitment to defend its currency peg to the dollar after some recent weakness.

Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority (SAMA) governor Ahmed al-Kholifey, speaking in an interview with Al Arabiya TV on Wednesday, said that institutions that pulled out of the Saudi conference will still be able to apply for and obtain banking licenses to operate in the kingdom.

More than a dozen foreign banks have licenses to operate branches in Saudi Arabia, battling for business resulting from the kingdom’s efforts to itself off reliance on oil revenues.

Read: First Abu Dhabi Bank to start commercial banking in Saudi this year

But US and European reaction to Saudi Arabia’s account of the death of dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi is threatening to smother some of the enthusiasm among some Western banks for opportunities in the kingdom.

“We, at the central bank, deal in complete professional manner whether with local or international banks,” al-Kholifey said when asked if the banks that decided not to participate in the event will be penalised.

Saudi Arabia is holding this week in Riyadh a large investment conference, the Future Investment Initiative, despite boycotts by Western political figures, international bankers and executives.

Read: Saudi signs deals worth $50bn at summit despite boycott

Many Western banks and other companies, fearful of losing business such as fees from arranging deals for Saudi Arabia’s $250bn wealth fund, sent lower-level executives to the event even as their top people stayed away.

The governor also reiterated the country’s commitment to defend the Saudi riyal’s peg to the dollar, adding that the current pressure to the peg was much lower than in the past when oil prices crashed.

The riyal, which sank to a two-year low of 3.7526 against the US dollar earlier this month because of concern that the disappearance of journalist Jamal Khashoggi could hurt foreign investment in Saudi Arabia, has recovered some of the losses and on Wednesday stood at 3.7511.


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