30/04/2017 05:56 AST

The outlook for construction companies in the GCC will improve in 2017, according to the latest industry research report from Middle East business intelligence service MEED.

Governments have been taking important steps to develop new revenue streams as well as tapping debt markets Governments have been taking important steps to develop new revenue streams as well as tapping debt markets

In Outlook for GCC Construction 2017, MEED reports that the region still offers significant opportunities for construction companies despite the slowdown in project spending.

But the report warns however that a fall in the volume of new opportunities coupled with increased uncertainty about project timelines will see the construction marketing further hardening in response to increased competition.

Outlook for GCC Construction 2017 noted that the region’s strongest markets over the past 12 months were Dubai, Kuwait and Bahrain, which saw its second-best year for awards since 2007, thanks to the financial support of its GCC partners through the Gulf Development Fund.

The approval of the main contract award on the expansion of Kuwait airport took that market to an all-time high of $12.2bn of project contract awards in 2016, while the start of work towards Expo 2020 in Dubai enabled the UAE also to record an increase in awards in 2016.

Dubai recorded the lion’s share of the project activity in the UAE in 2016, accounting for 72 percent of all construction and transport deals in the country, while project spending fell sharply in Abu Dhabi.

Elsewhere in the region however, the fall in oil prices since mid-2014 has had a profound impact on the construction market in the GCC.

With government revenues halved, ministries and other client bodies have had strict limitations imposed on capital spending. This has resulted in projects delays and payment areas, while construction and transport contract awards have dropped in the GCC for the past three years.

Saudi Arabia saw a 62 percent drop in contract awards, followed by Qatar and Oman. Delays in payments from government clients were a huge problem, affecting the cash flow of contractors and forcing thousands of layoffs.

Outlook for GCC Construction 2017 concluded that while the regional construction market will continue to be challenging in 2017 due to continued uncertainty surrounding government spending, the outlook is brightening.

The recovery in oil prices in 2016 has eased some of the pressure on government finances, while the increased pace in the roll out of economic reforms will see an improvement in confidence as well as an increase in new forms of project model, such as public private partnerships (PPP).

All GCC governments want to increase private sector investment to ease the burden of capital spending on the treasury and this will create new opportunities in the year ahead. Governments have been taking important steps to develop new revenue streams as well as tapping debt markets, which will help clear up payment arrears.

Saudi Arabia said it plans to double infrastructure and transport spending this year. Its Vision 2030 program provides a long-term vision for economic development while the National Transformation Program has set economic strategy up to 2020 and the coming three years will be all about implementation.

Outlook for GCC Construction 2017 warned however that considerable risks remain. Capital spending will remain constrained and the success of PPP has been limited in the past, so there will be many new challenges to address.

“There is no doubt that the worst is behind us for the region’s construction market,” said MEED editorial director Richard Thompson. “The sharp cuts to spending in 2015 and 2016 across the region, but particularly in Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Abu Dhabi has been very painful for the GCC constr


Saudi Gazette

Ticker Price Volume
SABIC 114.77 5,915,941
Saudi Public Investment Fund signs agreement with Six Flags to create amusement park in Riyadh

05/04/2018

Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund (PIF) has signed an agreement with Six Flags to develop and design an amusement park in Riyadh. Six Flags, the world’s leading international amusement park compa

Arab News

Green energy drive will boost KSA employment: Saudi Arabia’s renewable energy chief

05/04/2018

In an exclusive interview with Arab News, Turki Mohammed Al-Shehri explains how an expanding renewables industry will boost employment as well as pave the way for a greener future.

A massiv

Arab News

Dubai house prices, rents drop in first quarter of 2018

05/04/2018

Dubai’s residential property market continued to soften in the first three months of this year, in line with analysts’ forecasts, with rental values recording a more pronounced fall than sales prices

The National

Saudi Arabia lifts GCC index buoyed by strong oil prices

05/04/2018

Buoyed by a strong oil price of $70 per barrel, Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul shot up by over 6 per cent in March 2018, according to Kuwait Financial Centre’s (Markaz’s) recently released Monthly Markets Re

Times of Oman

Banks’ real estate credit at QR147.7bn

05/04/2018

Qatar banks’ combined credit facilities to real estate sector rose by QR17bn to QR147.7bn in 2017. The banks’ credit to various sectors stood at QR911bn at the end of 2017, up from QR839bn recorded i

The Peninsula