There is a useful discipline in reading three apparently unrelated GCC market stories in the same week. The first concerns the Saudi equity market, where a cohort of listed companies carries accumulated losses even as their share prices have climbed. The second is a radar contract awarded by Oman's Civil Aviation Authority to upgrade the country's air traffic surveillance infrastructure. The third is the Oman Chamber of Commerce and Industry's franchise programme, which is pushing Omani consumer brands into Egypt and beyond. Taken separately, each is a minor data point. Taken together, they sketch a picture of a region where the physical economy is being rebuilt while the financial layer above it remains uneven and, in places, disconnected from underlying fundamentals.

When the Share Price Runs Ahead of the Balance Sheet

Start with the Saudi market, because the tension there is the sharpest.

The Saudi Tadawul All-Share Index recorded losses of around 1,546 points, or 12.8%, in 2025, closing at 10,491 points compared with 12,037 points at the end of 2024.

That headline number, however, conceals a more interesting phenomenon at the company level. Within a market under broad pressure, a subset of firms carrying significant accumulated losses on their balance sheets has nonetheless seen their share prices rise sharply, driven by speculative positioning and the search for low-priced optionality in a compressed market.

Aggregate profits of Saudi-listed companies declined by 5% during the first nine months of 2025 to SAR 404.0 billion, compared with SAR 426.4 billion in the same period of the previous year.

The drag came overwhelmingly from the energy sector.

Saudi Aramco dropped 15% year on year, while Saudi Basic Industries Corporation fell 23%.

These are not peripheral names. They are the feedstock and energy backbone of the entire petrochemical supply chain, and their margin compression reflects the same oil price weakness that has squeezed GCC fiscal arithmetic throughout the year.

Analysts pointed to heightened geopolitical tensions in the region, ongoing trade disputes and tariffs between the United States, China, and Europe, oil price volatility, and persistently high interest rates

as the structural forces bearing down on the market. Against that backdrop, a company like Rabigh Refining and Petrochemical, which has been working to reduce its accumulated losses,

cut those losses to 14.77% of share capital

— a meaningful reduction, but one that still leaves the balance sheet carrying a legacy burden that the share price, in some periods, has chosen to ignore. This is the pattern worth watching: when speculative flows lift the equity of a loss-carrying company, the physical reality of that company's cost structure, feedstock access, and product margin eventually reasserts itself. The share price and the income statement cannot diverge indefinitely.

Oman Builds the Physical Infrastructure for a Busier Sky

Move from the financial layer to the physical, and the picture in Oman is more straightforwardly constructive.

Oman's Civil Aviation Authority has awarded a contract to Thales and Omani company Ankaa Space and Technologies to deploy next-generation radar systems aimed at upgrading the country's air traffic surveillance infrastructure, covering the design, supply, installation, and commissioning of Thales' TRACSIGMA Primary Surveillance Radar and two RSM NG Secondary Surveillance Radars.

💡 Insight

Move from the financial layer to the physical, and the picture in Oman is more straightforwardly constructive..

The physical specification of the equipment matters here.

The radar detects all types of aircraft, from drones to commercial planes, and offers a range of up to 300 km, delivering a more accurate, high-resolution 3D air picture with greater resilience to interference.

Both systems comply with International Civil Aviation Organization and EUROCONTROL standards and incorporate cybersecurity features.

The first system is scheduled for delivery in 2027, which places this firmly in the execution phase rather than the announcement phase.

The demand rationale for this investment is grounded in traffic data.

Oman's airspace handled 585,000 overflying aircraft in 2025, while airports in Oman handled over 15 million passengers last year.

The post-COVID recovery has seen an increase in the number of flights using Oman's airspace, and geopolitical situations in the region play a significant role in the growth of traffic because Oman is one of the safest corridors between east and west.

That last point is not incidental. Oman's geographic position, combined with its consistent neutrality in regional disputes, has made its airspace a preferred routing option when conflicts elsewhere force carriers to reroute. Upgrading the surveillance infrastructure that manages that traffic is therefore both a safety investment and a commercial one.

The collaboration with Ankaa is expected to generate around 40% in-country value through localization of maintenance and support services, alongside training and knowledge transfer programmes.

The agreement will support the training of seven young Omanis in radar installation and maintenance.

These numbers are modest in absolute terms but they are the right kind of numbers: they describe a transfer of technical capability rather than a simple procurement. The long-term value of aviation infrastructure investment is not the hardware itself but the institutional capacity to operate and maintain it.

Omani Brands Follow the Consumer Into Egypt

The third signal is the most granular and in some ways the most instructive about the direction of Omani economic diversification.

The Oman Chamber of Commerce and Industry, represented by the Commercial Franchise Centre, showcased commercial franchise opportunities for 12 Omani brands during its participation in the Egyptian-Saudi International Franchise Exhibition in Cairo.

This is not an isolated event. It sits within a structured programme that has been building momentum across multiple editions.

The launch ceremony for the fifth edition of the OCCI Franchise Programme saw the signing of 62 franchise agreements for several Omani brands across seven countries: Oman, the United States, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Pakistan, and Ecuador.

The chamber aims to support 300 Omani brands and build a franchise ecosystem valued at RO1 billion.

The fifth edition of the programme is scheduled to commence in September 2026 and will run for eight months, focusing on developing 26 Omani brands through lectures, workshops, and specialized consulting sessions.

Master franchise agreements covering Saudi Arabia and Egypt were signed for the Omani brands Shawarma and Musahab and Joaan.

Egypt is the logical first large market for Omani consumer brands attempting to scale. Its population provides the volume that Oman's domestic market cannot. The franchise model is the right vehicle for this expansion precisely because it transfers operational risk to the local franchisee while the Omani brand owner retains the system and the intellectual property.

The programme aligns with the objectives of Oman Vision 2040 to expand the economic diversification base and increase the private sector's contribution to economic development.

The Common Thread

What connects a Saudi petrochemical balance sheet, an Omani radar contract, and a franchise exhibition in Cairo is the question of where real value is being created versus where it is being priced. In Saudi Arabia, the market is sorting through which companies can generate earnings from the physical economy and which are being carried by sentiment. In Oman, the state is making deliberate investments in the physical infrastructure that underpins aviation and consumer commerce. The franchise push into Egypt is an early-stage attempt to build brand equity that travels across borders without requiring the capital intensity of direct investment. Each of these stories is, at its core, about the gap between what is announced and what is built. The GCC's diversification ambitions are serious. The execution, as always, is in the physical details.