Saudi Arabia says it will open its financial market to all foreign investors starting Feb. 1, removing the long-standing “Qualified Foreign Investor (QFI)” framework that limited access to approved institutions.
In plain terms, this is a big shift in posture: less gatekeeping, more openness. The QFI system was designed to control who could enter the market and under what conditions. Scrapping it signals confidence in the market’s maturity—and a desire to attract broader global capital as the kingdom pushes its economic diversification agenda.
Why it matters:
- More liquidity: easier entry can increase trading activity and depth.
- Broader investor base: not just large institutions with QFI status.
- Stronger positioning: aligns with efforts to make Saudi markets more global and investable.
The real test will be what follows: whether investor access is matched by clarity on rules, custody, governance, and market infrastructure. But the direction is unmistakable—Saudi Arabia wants more of the world’s capital inside its financial system.


