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Saudi airline flynas launches IPO to raise up to $1.1bn

Saudi airline flynas launches IPO to raise up to $1.1bn

Gulf Business12-05-2025

Image credit: Supplied by flynas
Saudi Arabian budget airline
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The airline, which is selling a 30 per cent stake to investors in the first IPO by a Gulf airline in almost 20 years, said the price range had been set at between SAR76 and SAR80 per share, implying a market capitalisation of up to $3.6bn.
Saudi Arabia has targeted tourism as a key pillar of its domestic economic agenda to reduce reliance on oil revenue.
The listing would be only the third by a Gulf airline after the United Arab Emirates' Air Arabia and Kuwait's Jazeera Airways.
The institutional book-building subscription period, which started on Monday, will close on May 18, flynas said, adding that 34 per cent of net the IPO's net proceeds will be used to finance the airline's growth strategy and for general corporate purposes.
Part of the remaining proceeds will be distributed to selling shareholders, which include Kingdom Holding Company, the investment company founded by Prince Al Waleed.

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Vertical farming in the UAE: Fresh, clean, and grown by code
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Image: Supplied Ports have evolved beyond their role as trade gateways. Today, they stand as critical pillars of national resilience and economic continuity. In the modern-world, where over 80 per cent of global trade moves by sea and the Gulf plays a central role in global energy and logistics, port security should not be viewed as a cost or a compliance exercise. It must be treated as a vital economic enabler. Without strong and modern security, the Gulf's ambitions to lead in manufacturing, trade, and supply chain integration will remain a challenge. At the recent 'Make it in the Emirates' forum, the UAE laid out a bold industrial vision. Officials highlighted that local manufacturers can now access a global market of 2.5 billion people. Free zones, re-export hubs, and logistics corridors powered by ports including The threat landscape is escalating Port security has moved far beyond fences and surveillance cameras. 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