Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp says it is "not helpful" that the transfer window is open nearly three weeks longer in Saudi Arabia than in Europe.
The transfer deadline in Europe's top leagues is on 1 September, while Saudi Arabia's runs until 20 September.
It means the Middle East country's clubs can still add to their high-profile signings this summer when European clubs cannot.
"It is massive, in the moment," said Klopp on Saudi Arabia's influence.
"Pretty much the worst thing I think is that the transfer window in Saudi Arabia is open three weeks longer.
"If I am right, I heard something like that, then at least in Europe that's not helpful.
"Uefa or Fifa must find solutions for that. But in the end, at this moment, I don't know exactly what will happen."
Liverpool have already been affected by players moving to Saudi Arabia, with midfielders Jordan Henderson and Fabinho joining Al-Ettifaq and Al-Ittihad respectively.
They are part of a growing group of players to make the switch to the country, with Brazil forward Roberto Firmino having signed for Al-Ahli after his Reds contract expired in the summer.
Al-Ahli have also signed Senegal keeper Edouard Mendy from Chelsea and winger Riyad Mahrez from Manchester City.
Al-Ittihad, meanwhile, have brought in former Real Madrid striker Karim Benzema, ex-Chelsea midfielder N'Golo Kante and Portuguese forward Jota from Celtic.
Al-Hilal, who made a world-record £259m bid for Paris St-Germain forward Kylian Mbappe, have signed Portugal midfielder Ruben Neves from Wolves and Senegal defender Kalidou Koulibaly from Chelsea.
Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola has said the Saudi Pro League's financial power has "changed the market" for transfers and elite clubs "need to be aware of what is happening".
Liverpool were not planning to sell Henderson and Fabinho and, having already seen James Milner, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and Naby Keita leave the club at the end of their contracts, have lost five midfielders on a permanent basis this summer.
"It is already influential, for us, for sure. We will have to learn to deal with it, and that's what we do," added Klopp.
"That's pretty much all I can say about it, time will show."
Latest Stories
-
Ghana has made significant investments in technology-driven education – Akufo-Addo
4 mins -
Mr. James Yalley Assuah Kwofie, IGP (RTD)
9 mins -
There’s no need to recall Parliament – Minority
18 mins -
Aya Institute advocates gender-responsive media as Ghana hosts 3rd African Media Convention
38 mins -
CAA II seniors to serve as Paris Olympics qualifier – Bawah Fuseini
55 mins -
Dr Bawumia’s vision will transform Ghana – Volta NPP Chair
1 hour -
Only those who decide to play the ‘fool’ stay married – Real Warri Pikin
1 hour -
Cedi can only stabilse temporarily but will keep on depreciating – Prof Bokpin
1 hour -
Finance Ministry develops financial strategy to support SMEs
2 hours -
AfCFTA mission can’t be achieved without digital inclusion – AfCFTA Secretary General
2 hours -
Kukuom voter registration disturbance a bad signal for election 2024 – Sheikh Armiyawo Shaibu
2 hours -
3i Summit: Ghana signs $200 million MoU with EBID to support SMEs – Akufo-Addo
2 hours -
Premier League-bound Leicester City and Belgian clubs chase Ghanaian midfielder Michael Baidoo
2 hours -
BoG gives government money to chop; and then we’re burdened with high taxes – Ken Thompson
2 hours -
Is social media worth paying for?
2 hours