Saudi industrial output slows to 8.9% as oil disruptions and Hormuz closure reshape flows
Saudi industrial output slowed to 8.9% in Feb 2026 due to oil disruptions and Hormuz closure, impacting both oil and non-oil sectors.
Riyadh | EcoPulse24
Saudi industrial slowdown signals demand shock despite bypassing Hormuz disruption
Saudi Arabia’s industrial production rose 8.9% year-on-year in February 2026, slowing from 10.8% in January, in what appears less like a cyclical pullback and more like an early signal of global demand stress under escalating geopolitical tensions.
The deceleration was led by oil activities, which eased to 11.5%, alongside weaker output in refined petroleum products - a critical indicator that downstream demand, not upstream capacity, is beginning to soften.
At the same time, non-oil sectors slowed to 2.4%, with manufacturing losing momentum and utilities contracting, pointing to a broader cooling in industrial activity beyond energy.
On a monthly basis, output declined 0.2%, extending the previous drop and reinforcing the loss of short-term momentum.
EcoPulse24 Analysis
This is not a supply story - it is a demand shock in motion.
While the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has disrupted global energy flows, Saudi Arabia retains a structural advantage through the East-West pipeline, allowing exports to bypass the chokepoint. Yet production is still slowing.
That divergence is the key signal.
The constraint is no longer logistical - it is global demand uncertainty. War-driven volatility, shifting trade flows, and unstable pricing are forcing buyers and refiners to delay commitments, directly feeding into lower industrial output.
The drop in refined product activity confirms this: end-demand is weakening, not just transport routes.
Saudi Arabia can reroute oil - but it cannot bypass a global slowdown in consumption.
This places the economy in a transitional phase, where output is no longer dictated by capacity, but by confidence, demand visibility, and the stability of global energy markets.
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