The already tense relationship between neighboring Gulf powers Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates has escalated into what insiders describe as an economic war of attrition, pushing global business leaders and financial institutions to draw up emergency contingency plans to mitigate potential fallout.
Multiple major international publications have documented the growing rift, which stretches across both geopolitical and economic spheres. The two oil-rich nations already hold opposing positions on several high-stakes regional issues, from the ongoing conflict in Yemen to power struggles in Sudan and diplomatic engagements with Israel. Beyond geopolitics, however, the rivalry has deepened into direct economic competition that threatens the operations of foreign companies operating across both markets.
One of the most visible flashpoints is competition to become the Gulf region’s leading business hub. Saudi Arabia has invested heavily in transforming Riyadh into a top global commercial center, a strategy that directly challenges the long-standing dominance of the UAE’s Dubai. The pair also clashed openly on energy policy earlier this year, when the UAE withdrew from the Saudi-led OPEC production alliance and rapidly scaled up its own crude output.
Tangible disruptions to cross-border trade and finance have already emerged, according to recent on-the-ground reporting. Semafor documented that border crossing wait times for commercial trucks moving from the UAE into Saudi Arabia have stretched to several days in recent months, with some drivers reporting waits as long as a week, forcing many to sleep in their vehicles while waiting for entry approval. The Financial Times additionally revealed that Saudi banks have repeatedly held up or returned payments sent to UAE-based accounts belonging to Dubai-based companies and individuals since May, in most cases without providing any formal explanation for the disruptions.
Against this backdrop, Bloomberg reported Monday that leading global investment banks are bracing for an unprecedented ultimatum: they may soon be forced to choose between maintaining major operations in Abu Dhabi or expanding their presence in Riyadh, as both sides pressure international firms to pick sides in the deepening rivalry.
Businesses across sectors have already begun taking proactive steps to prepare for further escalation. Some firms have developed separate logistics networks operating independently in each country to avoid disruptions if the border closure worsens. Other organizations are conducting full reviews of existing commercial contracts, with a particular focus on identifying force majeure clauses that could protect them if existing agreements collapse. Many are also auditing their local partnerships to identify any connections that could prompt retaliation from either government.
The Gulf region has long been a high-priority market for Western businesses, drawn by vast state capital pools, booming infrastructure projects, and growing investment opportunities in emerging sectors like artificial intelligence. For decades, Western law firms, consulting practices, and financial institutions have generated substantial profits from working with Gulf governments. Even so, Saudi Arabia has in recent years begun reducing spending on foreign advisors as part of a push to create more jobs for local citizens and cut unnecessary costs.
Despite the lack of an open, formal break between the two nations, business leaders are refusing to take risks amid the creeping escalation. One anonymous international law firm told Bloomberg it has begun turning down certain client engagements specifically to avoid alienating either Saudi or Emirati officials. In another high-profile case, a global investment firm raising capital for a new regional fund was informed by Saudi stakeholders that it was prohibited from allocating any capital to UAE-based projects, and could only invest in assets focused exclusively on the Saudi market.









