ass wr wb

Sekitar 1 juta TKI bekerja di Saudi Arabia dan 250.000 jamaah haji/umroh tiap 
hahun mengunjungi kota Mekkah dan Madinah namun sampai saat ini belum ada Bank 
Indonesia yg beroperasi di Saudi Arabia..mungkin kah BMI, BSM atau BNI membuka 
cabang di Saudi..secara sikologis WNI akan lebih senang menggunakan produk 
nasional ketimbang asing...

wassalam
Abdullah

SAMA Halts Licenses for Foreign Banks
Galal Fakkar, Arab News
 
JEDDAH, 30 November 2006 — The Kingdom’s banking regulator has ordered a 
temporary suspension of the plan to issue new licenses to foreign banks to 
operate in the country. 
“This temporary decision will be in force until the completion of the 
evaluation process of the licenses issued so far,” Hamad Al-Sayari, governor of 
the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA), said yesterday. Several foreign 
banks, including Deutsche Bank, PNB Paribas and Kuwait National Bank besides 
some Indian, Pakistani, European and American and Arab banks have been issued 
licenses since 2001.
Commenting on the latest decision, Ibrahim Abdullah Al-Sibaie, a founding 
member of Bank Albilad and member of the board of directors of Bank AlJazira, 
told Arab News: “This decision is essential in order to evaluate the experiment 
of permitting foreign banks in the Kingdom and know the extent of its advantage 
to the Saudi economy.” He also pointed out that the presence of large number of 
banks in the Saudi market will make an adverse impact on the profitability of 
the domestic banks as the customers will be distributed amidst a greater number 
of banks. “The banks of the countries from where large number of people are 
working in the Kingdom aim to obtain banking licenses here in order to attract 
the deposits of the workers of their respective countries,” he said.
He said there are more than 20 countries with large number of workers in the 
Kingdom. They include India, Philippines, Pakistan, Egypt, Yemen, Sudan, Syria, 
Lebanon, Jordan, Bangladesh, Morocco, and Indonesia. Banks of these countries 
want to enter the Saudi market. Around seven million expatriates are working in 
the Kingdom. They used to sent approximately more than SR80 billion through 
Saudi banks and other channels of foreign remittance as there is no restriction 
in the Kingdom in foreign workers’ remittance.
Khaled Al-Harithy, director general of the Al-Harithy for Financial Consultancy 
in Jeddah, said: “The decision to suspend the issue of new licenses temporarily 
or permanently to foreign banks intending to operate in the Kingdom will not 
affect the movement or performance of the stock market at present.” It may make 
some impact in future if the banks that have been issued with the license 
actually enter the Saudi market particularly if the foreign banks are allowed 
to enter the Saudi stock market, he said.


 
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