Good morning, folks. The US is “very close” to ending the war on Iran — that’s the main takeaway from US President Donald Trump’s address early this morning. While we were expecting some grand announcement — a ceasefire agreement or a ground invasion — the speech didn’t provide any of that.
Here’s what you need to know: Trump shifted his tone regarding the re-opening of the Strait of Hormuz, downplaying Washington’s role. Instead, he said, the operation should be led by countries that — unlike the US — rely heavily on the strait for oil imports, adding that the waterway will “open up naturally” after the war ends. This runs counter to Trump’s call on NATO allies to help Washington revive traffic in the waterway last month.
Trump also reiterated his timeline of continuing strikes on Iran for the next two to three weeks, threatening to target its energy infrastructure if “there’s no deal.” He also thanked US allies in the region — including Saudi Arabia and the UAE — and vowed that Washington would “not let them get hurt.”
Market reax: Oil and equities tumbled following the speech, which investors hoped would bring news of a de-escalation. Following the speech, Brent crude futures rose 5% to USD 106.42, and Asian markets opened in the red, with Japan’s Nikkei and South Korea’s Kospi looking at steep losses. Wall Street is also looking at a volatile day of trading, with futures down.
WEATHER- Trickling on: Light to moderate thunderstorms are still hanging over most of the Kingdom, so pack your umbrellas.
- Riyadh: 29°C high / 16°C low;
- Jeddah: 38°C high / 25°C low;
- Makkah: 40°C high / 27°C low;
- Dammam: 28°C high / 16°C low.
Watch this space
GDP WATCH — The GCC is likely to slip into a war-induced recession this year, with GDP now projected to contract by 0.2%, according to a recent research note from Oxford Economics. The forecast represents a massive 4.6 percentage point downgrade from pre-war estimates as the Iran war enters its second month and reshapes the region's economic outlook.
Saudi Arabia is seeing a much shallower downgrade than its neighbors, the note explains. The differentiator here is geography, as the Kingdom’s ability to bypass the Strait of Hormuz allows it to maintain strong export levels while the rest of the bloc is choked by logistical blockades. Also, the Kingdom’s public finance could see some positive gains as they are able to export oil at higher prices.
The Kingdom, Qatar, and Jordan are calling for a joint Arab action to address the economic fallout from the war, The National reported. The announcement came after a high-level summit in Jeddah, where leaders from each of the three nations discussed the war’s impact on energy, trade, and regional stability.
ENERGY — Aramco raised April’s liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) official selling prices sharply — with propane up by USD 205 to USD 750 per ton and butane up by USD 260 to USD 800 per ton, Reuters reports, citing traders.
Is this about demand? Or is supply getting hit hard? Aramco’s Juaymah terminal outage last month cut shipments to Asia in March, right when the market needed them, while a third of global seaborne LPG supply was cut off due to Hormuz constraints and damaged capacity.
IPO — Facilities Management Company is on track to make its Tadawul debut after the Capital Market Authority greenlit its IPO. The facility management provider will list 30% of its share capital — represented by 42 mn shares. We’ll be watching the company’s prospectus for more details on the offering.
Data point
The unemployment rate for citizens fell to 7.2% in 4Q 2025, a 0.3 percentage point drop from 3Q, according to figures from Gastat. The unemployment rate for the total population (Saudis and non-Saudis) edged up slightly to 3.5%, representing a 0.1 percentage point increase over 3Q 2025, but remained stable y-o-y.
Female participation is the engine: The bright spot in the data is the Saudi female unemployment rate, which dropped by 1.8 percentage points to 10.3%, its lowest level on record. Their labor force participation rate also reached 34.5%, up 0.8 percentage points from the previous quarter. The employment-to-population ratio of Saudi women went up by 1.3 percentage points to 31.0%.
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The big story abroad
Apart from Trump’s address (which we dive into in the news well, above), space is a big theme on the front pages this morning. Elon Musk’s SpaceX has confidentially filed for an IPO, which could value the firm at above USD 1.75 tn, sources close to the matter told Bloomberg. A confidential filing allows the satellite and AI company to seek feedback from the Securities and Exchange Commission and make changes before any information goes public.
To infinity and beyond: NASA’s first crewed mission to the moon in more than 50 years tookoff yesterday. The Artemis II launched from Florida and will take four astronauts around the side of the moon — the furthest humans have ever traveled from Earth. The move signals that Washington aims to cement its leadership in space exploration amid tough competition from China.


