Saudi Arabia has the most profitable company in the history of the world, and $3.2 trillion to invest by 2030. Who will say no to that tidal wave of cash?
Fortune · Photo Illustration by Nicolas Ortega

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For the 100,000 or so people who jammed into VivaTech, Europe’s biggest tech trade show, in Paris earlier this summer, it was hard to miss the large green exhibition stand near the main stage. “Invest Saudi” was emblazoned on one wall, while a video monitor showed desert landscapes with gleaming robotics labs, solar farms, and skyscraper cities. “It’s a whole new world,” gushed Emon Shakoor, CEO and founder of Blossom Accelerator, a startup in Riyadh that seeds female founders.

Indeed, nearly five years have passed since the brutal killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi shocked the world, leaving many U.S. and European partners concerned about risking their reputations by doing deals in a country whose leader, the CIA later concluded, was likely complicit in the murder.

“The situation was unfortunate, to be honest,” said Abdulaziz Alhouti, 33, chief investment officer of Jahez Group, a $1.7 billion food-delivery company in Riyadh that launched two years before Khashoggi’s death in 2018. But, he told Fortune, standing amid the crowds at VivaTech, those dark days have passed. “It’s something that is behind,” said the former investment banker. “And now we need to, as a culture, as a people, move away from it.”

Saudi entrepreneurs are intent on doing just that: moving on and making money. And it appears to be working; investors are back in force. “We’re in a golden age,” said Shakoor, 29, who returned home to Riyadh after four years of studying and surfing at the University of California, San Diego.

Just how golden? One clue is this year’s Fortune Global 500 ranking of the world’s biggest companies, which debuts tomorrow, Aug. 2. (Check back then for the full ranking.) Saudi Aramco is valued at over $2 trillion, and even more notable: its net profits last year topped $159 billion. That makes it the most profitable business in the world.

$2.1 trillion

To many Americans and Europeans, the dizzying wealth of a kingdom of 36 million people seems unrelated to their lives. If they think about Saudi Arabia at all, it may be for reasons the country prefers not to dwell on: Khashoggi’s killing, the jailing and torture of dissidents, the devastating war in Yemen, the vanished princesses whose plight was the subject of a recent New Yorker article, and the connection to the 9/11 attacks, in which 15 of the 19 perpetrators were Saudis.

Meanwhile, Saudi officials and business leaders paint a very different picture, portraying the country as thriving, modern, youthful. It’s a country whose 8.7% growth rate last year was the fastest of any big G20 economy, one that offers some of the most lucrative business opportunities anywhere.