
ASAS Makeen IPO on Nomu 1949% covered
A total of 19.49 million shares were requested, representing a subscription value of SAR 1.56 billion during the offering period from May 19 to 25, the brokerage said in a statement to Tadawul on May 28.
Yaqeen Capital will finalize the required procedures with Tadawul before determining ASAS Makeen's debut date.
According to Argaam 's data, ASAS Makeen earlier announced floating 1 million shares on Nomu at a nominal value of SAR 80 each.
These shares represent 10% of the company's SAR 100 million capital, divided into 10 million shares at a par value of SAR 10 each.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Arab News
an hour ago
- Arab News
Surj and Leejam partner to drive growth across Saudi's sports sector
RIYADH: Two of the Kingdom's leading sports and fitness businesses have signed a Memorandum of Understanding to accelerate growth and innovation across the sports ecosystem, particularly in fitness and community engagement. For the latest updates, follow us @ArabNewsSport SURJ Sports Investment has partnered with Leejam Sports Company, owner-operator of the Fitness Time network of sports and fitness centers and a publicly listed company on the Saudi Exchange (Tadawul). The MoU was signed by Danny Townsend, CEO of SURJ Sports Investment, and Abdulelah bin Mohammed Al-Nemr, CEO of Leejam Sports Company. It reflects a shared ambition to increase sports participation, scale innovation and expand access to world-class fitness experiences, as well activate new models of community engagement and wellness innovation. The agreement outlines a broad framework for collaboration across six key areas: stadia and fitness facility operations; co-investment in sports properties; sponsorship and brand engagement; community activation and mass participation; data and technology integration; and co-creation of content and media production. 'Leejam's scale and expertise in fitness and wellness make them a natural partner as we continue to grow Saudi Arabia's sports ecosystem,' said Townsend. 'This MoU reflects our shared commitment to participation, performance and innovation, and to unlocking opportunities that go beyond traditional investment models. From stadiums to digital assets, and from community challenges to elite content, we're excited to explore how we can bring the power of sport closer to more people across the country.' Al-Nemr added: 'This MoU marks a pivotal step in Leejam's journey to further solidify our role as a catalyst for Saudi's wellness transformation. Partnering with SURJ aligns with our strategic vision to foster active lifestyles, deliver value for shareholders, and contribute meaningfully to the Kingdom's socioeconomic goals. We look forward to harnessing our national footprint and digital platforms to scale this collaboration across communities and sports disciplines.' The MoU also covers exploratory co-investment models in sports IP, as well as leveraging Leejam's national footprint to scale SURJ-led activations and co-host fitness initiatives to promote grassroots participation in SURJ priority sports. A core pillar of the partnership includes data and technology collaboration, enabling both sides to share insights on performance metrics, gym technologies and digital engagement tools, as well as co-development of short-form and live fitness content across platforms. This announcement comes at a time of rapid progress for Saudi Arabia's sports sector. Almost 50 percent of Saudis are now engaged in weekly physical activity, up from just 13 percent in 2015, while the number of multi-sport clubs has surged from 9 to 126. Sports federations have tripled to 98. Women's participation in sport in Saudi Arabia has also seen extraordinary growth, with a 149 percent increase since 2015 and more than 330,000 registered female athletes.


Al Arabiya
3 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
Israel's 12-day war sparks gold demand in Iran: Report
Gold purchases surged in Iran during the second quarter of the year, marked by the country's 12-day conflict with Israel, the World Gold Council said in a report released Thursday. Despite high prices, the overall volume of gold sales rose 20 percent compared to the same period last year, the council said, adding that demand for gold coins and bars is now at its highest level in six years. Worldwide demand for gold coins and bars fell six percent in the second quarter over the previous three months, the report said. 'Iran was the outlier -- consumers bought gold jewelry as a proxy investment, pushing demand in the quarter up 12 percent year on year,' said council analyst Louise Street. Worldwide demand for jewelry fell 14 percent over the same period though the value of the purchases rose 21 percent. Street said consumers were 'pushing their budgets' as they seek a safe investment in the global economic uncertainty. The showdown over US tariff demands and geopolitical tensions that maintained gold prices, especially for gold-backed investment funds, in the first quarter kept up the metal's value as an investment into the April-June quarter, Street said.


Arab News
13 hours ago
- Arab News
Saudi CAIOs now control 67% of AI budgets, outpacing global average
ALKHOBAR: Saudi Arabia's artificial intelligence leadership is gaining international attention, with Chief AI Officers in the Kingdom now overseeing 67 percent of their organizations' AI budgets, a figure that outpaces the global average of 61 percent, according to a new joint study by IBM and the Dubai Future Foundation. The report, based on surveys from more than 600 CAIOs across 22 countries, reveals how Saudi Arabia is aligning with global best practices while carving out its own AI roadmap tied to Vision 2030. One of the clearest signs of Saudi Arabia's AI momentum is the strong executive backing CAIOs receive. A remarkable 83 percent of respondents in the Kingdom said they have broad C-suite support, while 67 percent enjoy direct support from their CEOs. The study highlights that such backing is a key driver of success for AI initiatives, and in Saudi Arabia, it appears to be translating into action. The data also shows that 22 percent of organizations in the Kingdom have formally adopted the CAIO role, close to the global average of 26 percent. But what sets Saudi Arabia apart is its AI governance structure. Half of the surveyed companies in the Kingdom use a centralized or hub-and-spoke AI operating model, an approach shown to deliver up to 36 percent higher return on AI investments. Saudi CAIOs also tend to come from data-rich backgrounds, with 75 percent saying their careers have been focused on data, compared to 73 percent globally. This suggests a strong national emphasis on technical capability and analytics. However, the report also flagged a gap in internal talent development. Only 38 percent of CAIOs in Saudi Arabia were promoted from within their organizations, significantly below the global average of 57 percent. Addressing this could help foster long-term leadership pipelines in the Kingdom's rapidly growing AI sector.