The Riyadh Bank PMI for Saudi Arabia continues to point to robust activity in the non-oil private sector, with the reading for December remaining unchanged from November at a value of 57.5. New orders rose sharply, up from 66.3 in November to reach 68.3 in December, the measure's highest reading since June 2023.
Oman’s 2024 budget has been passed, with expectations for a deficit equivalent to 1.5% of GDP, driven by projected spending worth OMR 11.65bn and revenue of OMR 11.1bn. These official projections assume of an average oil price of USD 60/b. Using an average expected oil price of USD 82.5/b, the Emirate NBD forecast for Oman estimates a larger budget revenue, resulting in a small surplus of just under 1% of GDP in 2024.
A report from Global SWF suggests that the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia was the most active spender amongst sovereign wealth funds in 2023, accounting for roughly a quarter of all spending. While no detailed breakdown of the PIF’s USD 31.5bn spend is published, the fund did make notable investments in sports clubs and tournaments, as well as the purchase of US gaming company Scopley.
The final print of the December UK S&P Global/CIPS manufacturing PMI was revised down to 46.2, from an initial estimate of 46.4. The December print was materially lower than the 47.2 recorded in November. Manufacturers appear to be pessimistic about the year ahead, with the future output index falling to a 12-month low and the employment balance declining to 46.1 in December from 47.1 the month prior.
A measure of UK food price inflation produced by the British Retail Consortium (BRC) saw a material fall in December, slowed to 6.7% from 7.7% in November. A slower pace of inflation in food will be welcomed by the Bank of England, with higher food costs having played a significant role in driving UK inflation over 2023.
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