buttonPrevHTML: ”,
};
function adaptBreadcrumbs() {
let breadcrumbs = document.querySelectorAll(‘#header-breadcrumbs’);
for(i = 0; i < breadcrumbs.length; i++) {
let title = breadcrumbs[i].querySelector(‘.breadcrumbs-title’);
let btns = breadcrumbs[i].querySelector(‘.btn-container:last-child’);
if(btns && btns.children && btns.children.length) {
if(parseInt(title.getBoundingClientRect().top + title.getBoundingClientRect().height / 2) == parseInt(btns.getBoundingClientRect().top + btns.getBoundingClientRect().height / 2)) {
title.style=”flex-grow:1;”;
} else {
title.style=”flex-grow:0;”;
}
} else {
title.style=”flex-grow:1;”;
}
}
}
window.addEventListener(‘resize’, adaptBreadcrumbs);
document.addEventListener(‘DOMContentLoaded’, adaptBreadcrumbs);
Saudi Arabia’s annual wholesale price inflation rose to 3.5% in February 2026, up from 2.9% in January, reaching its highest level since March 2024. Price pressures strengthened in several categories, including food products, beverages and tobacco, and textiles (0.4% vs 0.3% in January), transportable goods excluding metal products, machinery and equipment (6.5% vs 4.9%), and metal products, machinery and equipment (1.4% vs 1.2%).
By contrast, price growth moderated for agriculture and fishery products (2.5% vs 4.2%), while costs fell further for ores and minerals (-0.2% vs -0.1%). On a monthly basis, wholesale prices edged up 0.1%, slowing from a 1.5% increase recorded in January.
