Display of car prices is a must for showrooms

January 10, 2015

car prices

Jeddah, Jan 10: The Ministry of Commerce and Industry has started implementing a recent Cabinet decision to compel car agencies and showrooms to display all information on each model offered for sale, including prices, aimed at ensuring consumer protection.

According to sources, the Council of Saudi Chambers received a directive from the ministry to instruct car agencies and distributors about the new conditions for vehicle sale.

It is not permissible to sell a vehicle or offer for sale at showrooms unless certain vital information is displayed on the vehicle under the new regulations, said the sources.

The regulations also stipulate that the mandatory trade data about the vehicle must be written in Arabic and English languages.

The data should include the price of the car, and all the information should be real and displayed at a prominent location in legible letters on the windshield of the car for sale. The new regulation is supposed to be in force after 60 days from the date of issue of the order.

The ministry officials will conduct inspections at the showrooms and distribution agencies to ensure that they are adhering to the new regulations and

penal measures taken against defaulters.

The ministry launched this year several regulations governing consumer-dealer relationships for post-sale services.

The regulations make it mandatory for dealers to provide a substitute car for each day of delay if the agent delayed the supply of spare parts, or if he violated the obligation to ensure the quality of manufacture.

The new instructions also considers it the obligation of a dealer to provide an alternative spare part of the same brand to the consumer for each day of the delay in the event of breach of the agent’s obligation to ensure the supply of spare parts in order to achieve the intended purpose of the spare part during the guarantee period ensuring the quality of manufacture.

The ministry also stressed that the consumer is not bound to conduct periodic maintenance of his car at the dealer. The guarantee remains valid even if the maintenance is done at another place other than the dealer, the source said.

The move is part of the ministry’s efforts to ensure consumer protection especially from exploitation or fraud and the ministry’s decision to regulate the car market by improving the dealers’ services, including the commitment to guarantees, maintenance, repairs and spare parts, consumers receive from car distributors, the source added.

In a related development, Ahmed Al-Ghamdi, director of Public Relations at the Jeddah Chamber of Commerce and Industry, demanded that the new regulations governing the sale of new cars be extended to the showrooms of used cars as well.

He pointed out that if the used car showrooms are compelled to publish prices of the cars offered for sale, customers could be saved from the clutches of speculators and unscrupulous brokers in the market, which is considerably larger than the market for new cars.

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News Network
May 7,2020

Dubai, May 7: Saudi Arabia will emerge as the victor of the oil price war that sent global crude markets into a spin last month, according to two experts in the energy industry.

Jason Bordoff, professor and founding director of the Center for Global Energy policy at New York’s Columbia University, said: “While 2020 will be remembered as a year of carnage for oil nations, at least one will most likely emerge from the pandemic stronger, both economically and geopolitically: Saudi Arabia.”

Writing in the American publication Foreign Policy, Bordoff said that the Kingdom’s finances can weather the storm from lower oil prices as a result of the drastically reduced demand for oil in economies under pandemic lockdowns, and that it will end up with higher oil revenues and a bigger share of the global market once it stabilizes.

Bordoff’s view was reinforced by Sir Mark Moody-Stuart, former chairman of Royal Dutch Shell and one of the longest-standing directors of Saudi Aramco. In an interview with the Gulf Intelligence energy consultancy, he said that low-cost oil producers such as Saudi Arabia would emerge from the pandemic with increased market share.

“Oil is the only commodity where the lowest-cost producers have contained their production and allowed high-cost producers to benefit. When demand recovers this year or next, we will emerge from it with the lowest-cost producers having increased their market share,” Moody-Stuart said.

Bordfoff said that it would take years for the high-cost American shale industry to recover to pre-pandemic levels of output. “Depending on how long oil demand remains depressed, US oil production is projected to decline from its pre-coronavirus peak of around 13 million barrels per day.

“Shale's heady growth in recent years (with production growing by about 1 million to 1.5 million barrels per day each year) also reflected irrational exuberance in financial markets. Many US companies struggling with uneconomical production only managed to stay afloat with infusions of cheap debt. One quarter of US shale oil production may have been uneconomic even before prices crashed,” he said.

Moody-Stuart said that recent statements about cuts to the Saudi Arabian budget as a result of falling oil revenues were “an important step to wean the population of the Kingdom off an entitlement feeling. It means that everybody is joining in it.”

The former Shell boss said that other big oil companies would follow Shell’s recent decision to cut its dividend for the first time in more than 70 years. But he added that Aramco would stick by its commitment to pay $75 billion of dividends this year.

“When a company looks at its forecasts it looks ahead for one year, so for this year it (the dividend) is fine,” he said.

Bordoff added that Saudi Arabia’s action in cutting oil production in response to the pandemic would improve its global position.

“Saudi Arabia has improved its standing in Washington. Following intense pressure from the White House and powerful senators, the Kingdom’s willingness to oblige by cutting production will reverse some of the damage done when it was blamed for the oil crash after it surged production in March,” he said.

“Only a few weeks ago, the outlook for Saudi Arabia seemed bleak. But looking out a few years, it’s difficult to see the Kingdom in anything other than a strengthened position,” Bordoff said.

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Agencies
July 22,2020

Riyadh, Jul 22: Saudi King Salman held a cabinet meeting via video call from hospital in the capital Riyadh on Tuesday, a day after the 84-year-old monarch was admitted with inflammation of the gall bladder.

Three Saudi sources said the king was in stable condition.

A video of the king chairing the meeting was broadcast on Saudi state TV on Tuesday evening. In the video, which has no sound, King Salman can be seen behind a desk, wordlessly reading and leafing through documents.

The king, who has ruled the world’s largest oil exporter and close US ally since 2015, was undergoing medical checks, state media on Monday cited a Royal Court statement as saying.

Three well-connnected Saudi sources who declined to be identified, two of whom were speaking late on Monday and one on Tuesday, said the king was “fine”.

An official in the region, who requested anonymity, said he spoke to one of King Salman’s sons on Monday who seemed “calm” and that there was no sense of panic about the monarch’s health.

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News Network
January 7,2020

Tehran, Jan 7: Iranian state television says 35 people have been killed and 50 others injured in a stampede that erupted at a funeral procession for a general slain in a US airstrike.

The TV says the stampede erupted in Kerman, the hometown of Gen. Qassem Soleimani where the procession was underway on Tuesday.

A procession in Tehran on Monday drew over 1 million people in the Iranian capital, crowding both main thoroughfares and side streets in Tehran.

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