Dubai investor close to $600m deal with Saudi's largest dental clinics

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Updated 19 November 2021
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Dubai investor close to $600m deal with Saudi's largest dental clinics

RIYADH: A Dubai-based investment company is nearing a $600 million deal to buy a majority stake in Saudi Arabia’s largest provider of dental and dermatology care, Bloomberg reported citing people familiar with the matter.

Gulf Islamic Investments (GII) is set to purchase the 70 percent stake owned by private equity firm Jadwa Investment Co. in Almeswak Dental Clinics, the people said, asking not to be identified for information privacy.

Emirati health-care company United Eastern Medical Services owns the rest of the shares. 

Almeswak operates about 85 centers across 25 cities in Saudi Arabia. Its purchase confirms the growing appeal of health-care assets in the Gulf region.

Investor interest in medical care has also been rising as the world population ages, and as the industry has emerged as something of a safe haven for deal-makers during the coronavirus outbreak, Bloomberg said.

Almeswak shareholders hired investment bank EFG-Hermes Holding Co. to explore options including a sale or IPO, people familiar told Bloomberg in February.

GII said earlier in 2021, it is looking to expand in India and Saudi Arabia, where it intends to invest about $1 billion over the next 18 months in sectors ranging from health-care to cloud kitchens. 

GII is a privately held Shariah-compliant company that oversees more than $2 billion in assets. More than half of its shareholders are Saudi.

The dentistry sector has been targeted by the Saudi government as an area for increased ‘Saudization’ of the workforce.

Last month it was announced dentists and pharmacists in Saudi Arabia will get a minimum wage of SR7,000 from April 11, 2022 and will be applied to all private sector establishments operating in the Kingdom.

Both professions have witnessed a 30 percent localization rate following the Saudization program, with over 3,900 Saudis working in dentistry and over 8,150 Saudis in pharmacy.

This move is part of the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development's goal to provide stimulating, productive and stable job opportunities for citizens of both genders, and to raise their participation in the labor market. 


Sustainability Forum Middle East spotlights Saudi role in driving climate finance deployment

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Sustainability Forum Middle East spotlights Saudi role in driving climate finance deployment

MANAMA: Saudi Arabia’s growing influence over sustainable finance and climate-aligned investment was a central theme at the Sustainability Forum Middle East, as regional banks, investors, and policymakers signaled a shift from climate pledges to market execution.

The fourth edition of the forum, held in Bahrain under the theme “Advancing Alignment, Innovation, and Implementation for Energy and Climate Transformation,” brought together more than 500 participants and over 50 speakers from government, finance, energy, and industry. 

While the agenda covered climate diplomacy and national strategies, the dominant conversations this year centered on capital deployment, bankability, technology, and the commercial realities of the energy transition.

Saudi Arabia’s role in shaping that transition was repeatedly highlighted, particularly through its efforts to structure green finance instruments, integrate sustainability into Vision 2030 programs, and scale renewable energy ambitions. Global banks at the forum pointed to the kingdom as a key driver of demand for credible sustainable finance frameworks in the Gulf.

“Saudi Arabia has demonstrated clear leadership through Vision 2030 and its green financing frameworks,” Lina Osman, managing director and head of sustainable finance for the Middle East, Africa and Pakistan at Standard Chartered, told Arab News.

“The Public Investment Fund’s green bond issuance is a clear demonstration of the value of the opportunity that is available in Saudi Arabia and how Saudi Arabia is seizing that opportunity,” she added.

Osman also noted that Saudi Arabia’s target of sourcing 50 percent of its electricity from renewables represents a “true demonstration of leadership in sustainability,” adding that financing instruments will need to evolve to serve those ambitions. 

She said the bank has been customizing sustainable finance structures for Gulf Cooperation Council clients as the market becomes more sophisticated and sector-specific.

Organizations at the forum said the region has moved beyond ESG signaling and into discussions about return profiles, risk pricing, and revenue impact. 

“Financial institutions are now focused on how sustainability generates value — reducing costs, building resilience, and boosting revenue. Previously, it was mostly window dressing,” said Ian McCallum, chief sustainability officer at Bank ABC. 

Speaking to Arab News, he added that Saudi Arabia is playing a “significant role in shaping the direction of sustainable finance by continuing to strengthen ESG regulatory and disclosure requirements.”

Speakers from private markets and venture capital also pointed to Saudi Arabia as an emerging market for climate technologies that are moving from pilot phase to commercialization. 

Investors highlighted carbon removal, energy optimization, and AI-enabled climate solutions as areas where the Kingdom’s scaling capacity and demand for industrial decarbonization make deployment feasible.

Beyond finance, the forum examined how the GCC can accelerate industrial decarbonization through AI integration, carbon capture, supply chain reform, and the expansion of renewables. 

Panels explored how sovereign strategies and industrial policy are aligning across the region, with Saudi Arabia’s energy transition goals seen as an anchor for cross-border capital flows.

The event saw memorandums of understanding and multi-sector partnerships intended to translate national ambitions into deployable projects. 

Organizers said the agreements reflect a shift toward implementation, positioning the Gulf as a market where climate action is increasingly tied to competitiveness, industrial growth, and long-term economic resilience.