POS transactions drop 8% to SAR 8 bln in week ending Aug. 21: SAMA

25/08/2021 Argaam Special

POS device


The point-of-sale (POS) transactions declined by 8% to SAR 8 billion in the week ending Aug. 21, from SAR 8.17 billion in the previous week, data issued by the Saudi Central Bank (SAMA) showed.

 

Data showed that a total of 96.9 million transactions were processed in the week ending Aug. 21.

 

POS transactions represent what is spent by consumers using ATM cards and credit cards in shopping malls, retail stores, pharmacies, etc.

 

Weekly POS Transactions

Week

Number of Transactions (’000)

Transactions’ Value
(SAR mln)

Variation in Value

Jan. 3- 9

81579

8516.5

(21%)

Jan. 10- 16

81146

8184.2

(4%)

Jan. 17- 23

72492

7509.7

(8%)

Jan. 24- 30

85085

9302.2

+24%

Jan. 31- Feb. 6

83184

8555.9

(8%)

Feb. 7-13

78653

7631.0

(11%)

Feb. 14- 20

75594

7188.2

(6%)

Feb. 21- 27

74531

7341.8

+2%

Feb. 28- March 6

91204

9879.4

+35%

March 7- 13

87814

8548.6

(13%)

March 14- 20

86005

8458.2

(1%)

March 21- 27

86553

8820.9

+4%

March 28- April 3

101622

11375.0

+29%

April 4- 10

96104

10043.1

(12%)

April 11- 17

81624

8196.8

(18%)

April 18- 24

72190

7315.1

(11%)

April 25- May 1

91781

10731.1

+47%

May 2- 8

94300

10877.5

+1%

May 9- 15

90900

8621.7

(21%)

May 16- 22

82211

7054.1

(18%)

May 23- 29

96535

9168.3

+30%

May 30- June 5

102397

9499.1

+4%

June 6- 12

100417

8876.8

(7%)

June 13- 19

94783

8289.6

(7%)

June 20- 26

94112

8357.9

+1%

June 27- July 3

111340

10749.8

+29%

July 4 – 10

104460

9352.1

(13%)

July 11 – 17

106481

9528.0

+2%

July 18 – 24

84706

6123.8

(36%)

July 25 – 31

106791

9713.3

+59%

Aug. 1- 7

105714

9020.7

(7%)

Aug. 8-14

104697

8714.5

(3%)

Aug. 15-21

96937

8002.2

(8%)

 
 
All sectors witnessed a decline in POS during the week ending Aug. 21, except for education sector, which increased by 53%.

 

Jewelry sector led the decline, falling 24% in the week. It was followed by miscellaneous goods & services and restaurants & cafes sectors with a 12% and 11% decline, respectively.

 

Consumer spending focused on the food and beverages sector in the week ending Aug. 21, with nearly SAR 1.21 billion, representing 15% of POS transactions, followed by restaurants and cafes sector with SAR 1.11 billion.

 

POS Transactions by Sector (SAR mln)

Segment

Transactions’ Value Week Ending Aug. 14

Transactions’ Value Week Ending Aug. 7

Weekly Variation

Jewelry

231.9

177.3

(24%)

Miscellaneous Goods & Services

828.7

733.4

(12%)

Restaurants & Cafes

1,250.0

1,118.5

(11%)

Telecommunications

87.8

78.9

(10%)

Public Utilities

83.0

74.7

(10%)

Food & Beverages

1,337.9

1,208.5

(10%)

Hotels

195.8

178.1

(9%)

Healthcare

677.3

616.3

(9%)

Fuel Stations

576.2

528.4

(8%)

Transport

501.7

462.8

(8%)

Furniture

279.7

260.7

(7%)

Electronics & Electric Appliances

253.5

237.9

(6%)

Construction Materials

335.1

315.2

(6%)

Recreation & Culture

230.2

217.2

(6%)

Clothes & Footwear

539.6

514.6

(5%)

Education

149.1

227.8

+ 53%

Other

1,157.0

1,051.9

(9%)

Total

8,714.5

8,002.2

(8%)

 
 

Riyadh topped the POS transactions by cities in terms of value with nearly SAR 2.52 billion, representing 31% of the total sales. Jeddah came second with SAR 1.31 billion.

 

POS Transactions by City (SAR mln)

City

Transactions’ Value Week Ending Aug. 14

Transactions’ Value Week Ending Aug. 21

Weekly Variation

Riyadh

2627.5

2516.4

(4%)

Jeddah

1410.2

1314.4

(7%)

Dammam

438.5

408.4

(7%)

Madinah

322.2

285.1

(12%)

Al Khobar

277.7

272.3

(2%)

Makkah

288.1

265.3

(8%)

Buraydah

214.3

199.7

(7%)

Abha

179.1

153.5

(14%)

Tabuk

153.4

138.6

(10%)

Hail

139.5

123.5

(11%)

Other Cities

2664.1

2325.1

(13%)

Total

8714.5

8002.2

(8%)

 

 

For more data, visit Argaam Tools

Comments {{getCommentCount()}}

Be the first to comment

{{Comments.indexOf(comment)+1}}
{{comment.FollowersCount}}
{{comment.CommenterComments}}
loader Train
Sorry: the validity period has ended to comment on this news
Opinions expressed in the comments section do not reflect the views of Argaam. Abusive comments of any kind will be removed. Political or religious commentary will not be tolerated.

Most Read