Connect with us

Business

Kuwaiti real estate transactions up 24% in May, hitting KD387 million

Published

on

KUWAIT CITY, June 4: Real estate transactions in May recorded a monthly growth in the value of various types of real estate by 24.3 percent or KD 94.384 million; reaching KD387.18 million with a total of 530 transactions, compared to KD292.797 million in April. Meanwhile, the value of real estate transactions decreased year-on-year by 6.24 percent or KD25.803 million, and the number of transactions increased by 19.8 percent or 105 transactions, compared to 425 transactions worth KD412.984 million in May 2024.

The newspaper obtained a copy of the monthly report on real estate transactions from the Documentation and Real Estate Registration Department in the Ministry of Justice. The report confirmed the registration of 530 real estate transactions in May — 390 private transactions, 125 investment transactions, six commercial transactions, five craft transactions, two warehouse transactions, and one transaction each for shops and the coastal strip. Private real estate transactions witnessed a 2.6 percent growth in number and a 21 percent growth in value, with a total of 390 transactions worth KD158.677 million, compared to 380 transactions worth KD125.202 million in April. On an annual basis, private real estate transactions recorded a 24.3 percent growth in number and a 15 percent growth in value compared to May 2024, which had 295 transactions worth KD134.811 million. Investment real estate transactions recorded a monthly growth of 2.5 percent in number and 28.4 percent in value, with a total of 125 transactions worth KD185.847 million, compared to 122 transactions worth KD132.982 million in April.

The value of investment real estate transactions jumped 159 percent year-on-year (to KD114.119 million) and 17.6 percent in number (22 transactions); compared to May 2024 when the number of transactions totaled 103, valued at KD71.728 million. Commercial real estate witnessed a striking contrast between monthly and annual trading activities. While the value of real estate transactions increased by 166 percent every month and 33.3 percent in number, with a total of six transactions worth KD 22.062 million compared to four transactions worth KD8.290 million previously; the volume of transactions decreased by 70 percent year-on-year and 86.6 percent in value, with a total of 20 transactions worth KD164.526 million. Despite the 44.4 percent decrease in the number of commercial real estate transactions in May (four deals) compared to the number of transactions in April, the trading value of commercial transactions jumped by 11.7 percent (KD1.276 million).

The number of commercial transactions in May reached five, worth KD10.945 million; compared to nine deals worth KD9.669 million in April. The craft real estate also witnessed a significant year-on-year increase in the number and value of transactions, increasing by 60 percent and 191 percent respectively, compared to May 2024 which had three deals worth KD3.765 million.

By Marwa Al-Bahrawi Al-Seyassah/Arab Times Staff

Business

Trump announces trade deal with Japan that lowers threatened tariff to 15%

Published

on

By

DCAB125

US President Donald Trump speaks during a dinner for Republican senators in the State Dining Room of the White House on July 18 in Washington. (AP)

WASHINGTON, July 23, (AP): US President Donald Trump announced a trade framework with Japan on Tuesday, placing a 15% tax on goods imported from that nation.

“This Deal will create Hundreds of Thousands of Jobs — There has never been anything like it,” Trump posted on Truth Social, adding that the United States “will continue to always have a great relationship with the Country of Japan.”

The president said Japan would invest “at my direction” $550 billion into the U.S. and would “open” its economy to American autos and rice. The 15% tax on imported Japanese goods is a meaningful drop from the 25% rate that Trump, in a recent letter to Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, said would be levied starting Aug. 1.

Early Wednesday, Ishiba acknowledged the new trade agreement, saying it would benefit both sides and help them work together.

With the announcement, Trump is seeking to tout his ability as a dealmaker — even as his tariffs, when initially announced in early April led to a market panic and fears of slower growth that for the moment appear to have subsided. Key details remained unclear from his post, such as whether Japanese-built autos would face a higher 25% tariff that Trump imposed on the sector.

The wave of tariffs continues to be a source of uncertainty about whether it could lead to higher prices for consumers and businesses if companies simply pass along the costs. The problem was seen sharply Tuesday after General Motors reported a 35% drop in its net income during the second quarter as it warned that tariffs would hit its business in the months ahead, causing its stock to tumble.

Continue Reading

Business

OpenAI’s CEO warns of AI voice fraud crisis in banking

Published

on

By

CAMH408

OpenAI’s Sam Altman sounds alarm on AI voice fraud at Fed conference.

WASHINGTON, July 23, (AP): OpenAI CEO Sam Altman warned the financial industry of a “significant impending fraud crisis” because of the ability of artificial intelligence tools to impersonate a person’s voice to bypass security checks and move money.

Altman spoke at a Federal Reserve conference Tuesday in Washington.

“A thing that terrifies me is apparently there are still some financial institutions that will accept the voiceprint as authentication,” Altman said. “That is a crazy thing to still be doing. AI has fully defeated that.”

Voiceprinting as an identification for wealthy bank clients grew popular more than a decade ago, with customers typically asked to utter a challenge phrase into the phone to access their accounts.

But now AI voice clones, and eventually video clones, can impersonate people in a way that Altman said is increasingly “indistinguishable from reality” and will require new methods for verification.

“That might be something we can think about partnering on,” said Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman, the central bank’s top financial regulator, who was hosting the discussion with Altman.

Continue Reading

Business

Trump says US will impose 19% tariff on imports from Philippines

Published

on

By

DCAB221

US President Donald Trump meets with Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr, in the Oval Office of the White House, Tuesday on July 22 in Washington. (AP)

WASHINGTON, July 23, (AP): US President Donald Trump said he has reached a trade agreement with Philippine leader Ferdinand Marcos Jr, following a meeting Tuesday at the White House, that will see the US slightly drop its tariff rate for the Philippines without paying import taxes for what it sells there.

Trump revealed the broad terms of the agreement on his social media network and said the US and the Philippines would work together militarily. The announcement of a loose framework of a deal comes as the two countries are seeking closer security and economic ties in the face of shifting geopolitics in the Indo-Pacific region.

Marcos’ government indicated ahead of the meeting that he was prepared to offer zero tariffs on some US goods to strike a deal with Trump. The Philippine Embassy did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment. Marcos’ three-day visit to Washington shows the importance of the alliance between the treaty partners as China is increasingly assertive in the South China Sea, where Manila and Beijing have clashed over the hotly contested Scarborough Shoal.

Trump said on Truth Social that the US would impose a 19% tariff rate on the Philippines, down from a 20% tariff he threatened starting Aug. 1. In return, he said, the Philippines would have an open market and the US would not pay tariffs. Marcos described the lower 19% tariff rate to reporters in Washington as a “significant achievement” in real terms. He said his country was considering options such as having an open market without tariffs for US automobiles, but emphasized details were still left to be worked out. When asked whether the Philippines got the shorter end of the stick, Marcos said, “that’s how negotiations go.”

Without further details on the agreement, it’s unclear how it will impact their countries’ economies. Trump wrote that Marcos’ visit was “beautiful,” and it was a “Great Honor” to host such a “very good, and tough, negotiator.” Appearing before reporters in the Oval Office ahead of their private meeting, Marcos spoke warmly of the ties between the two nations.

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025 SKUWAIT.COM .