Tabby secures $54m in fresh funding round as CEO sees more demand from customers

The Series B round was led by Sequoia Capital India and STV, with additional funds from Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth fund Mubadala (Supplied)
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Updated 07 March 2022
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Tabby secures $54m in fresh funding round as CEO sees more demand from customers

DUBAI: Tabby, a buy-now-pay-later provider based in Dubai, has raised $54 million in its latest funding round, as more Gulf consumers adopt the new payment method.

The Series B round was led by Sequoia Capital India and STV, with additional funds from Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth fund Mubadala.

“The rapid adoption we continue to see today shows the urgency of consumer demand for flexible and honest payment experiences over predatory interest-driven credit,” Tabby Chief Executive Officer, Hosam Arab, said.

The Dubai-based fintech startup said they have over 1.1 million active users in Saudi Arabia and the UAE – two of its biggest markets where it was also named among the top shopping applications.

Today’s consumer is a lot smarter. They are a lot more aware of what’s around them and therefore they are able to better make decisions. Today’s consumer is less comfortable getting credit cards

Tabby CEO Hosam Arab

Tabby allows shoppers to split their payments without the usual requirement of a credit card. This BNPL payment method has seen unprecedented global adoption in recent years, especially in the GCC where 24 percent said they have used the option in 2021.

“Today’s consumer is a lot smarter. They are a lot more aware of what’s around them and therefore they are able to better make decisions,” the CEO told Arab News, adding “today’s consumer is less comfortable getting credit cards.

“This is where a Tabby comes in, we tell consumers that you’re able to transact flexibly and get the benefits you would normally get out of a credit card, without the negative associations of a credit card interest,” Arab explained.

Tabby claims they don’t charge the consumers throughout their transactions – instead, they get a commission from retailers on every purchase.

“We get transaction fees in the form of commission from the merchants that we work with – from the consumers we make no revenue,” he said.

Arab said they see Tabby more as a seamless payment method, than a “cash flow tool or credit replacement tool.” He added the platform is being used by those who spend SR200 to SR300 on a purchase, up to those who spend a couple of thousands for car insurance or minor medical procedures.

There are more than 3,000 brands on Tabby, he said, providing these online retailers with an additional payment method for their customers.

The new capital injection will be used to explore further market expansion, Arab said, without giving details, as well as in building its product offering.

“Saudi Arabia for us is one of our core markets, and that’s the market that we will continue to invest in very heavily. It drives the large majority of both our merchant volume, but also for our consumer volume. The plan is to continue to invest heavily in growing our team over there,” Arab said.

Tabby’s success rides on the back of wider gains in the region’s fintech ecosystem – with an active investment flow, as well as high adoption rates of users.

The Dubai-based app has since raised $180 million, with most of it flowing in 2021.


IMF raises Saudi Arabia’s 2026 growth forecast to 4.5% 

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IMF raises Saudi Arabia’s 2026 growth forecast to 4.5% 

RIYADH: The International Monetary Fund raised its 2026 growth forecast for Saudi Arabia to 4.5 percent, citing higher oil output, resilient domestic demand, and continued economic reforms across the region. 

The revised projection marks a 0.5 percentage point upgrade from the IMF’s October report, according to the fund’s latest World Economic Outlook Update. Saudi Arabia’s economy is expected to have grown 4.3 percent in 2025, with expansion set to ease to 3.6 percent in 2027. 

This comes as the World Bank said earlier this month that Saudi Arabia’s gross domestic product is expected to grow by 4.3 percent in 2026 and 4.4 percent in 2027, up from an estimated 3.8 percent in 2025. 

The IMF expects growth momentum to build across the broader Middle East and North Africa and the Gulf Cooperation Council region. 

In its latest report, the IMF stated: “In the Middle East and Central Asia, growth is projected to accelerate from 3.7 percent in 2025 to 3.9 percent in 2026 and to 4.0 percent in 2027, supported by higher oil output, resilient local demand, and ongoing reforms.” 

Similarly, the Middle East and North Africa region is forecast to see growth rise from 3.4 percent in 2025 to 3.9 percent in 2026 and 4 percent in 2027. 

The broader report underscores a global economy holding steady at 3.3 percent growth in 2026, but noted this stability rests on a “narrow base of drivers,” primarily technology investment and fiscal support, making growth vulnerable.

Key risks include a potential reevaluation of artificial intelligence productivity gains, escalating trade tensions, and geopolitical flare-ups. 

“Headwinds from shifting trade policies are offset by tailwinds from surging investment related to technology, including artificial intelligence, more so in North America and Asia than in other regions, as well as fiscal and monetary support, broadly accommodative financial conditions, and adaptability of the private sector,” the IMF stated in its report. 

For energy commodities, a factor critical to regional revenues, the IMF expects prices to fall about 7 percent in 2026 due to “tepid global demand growth and strong supply growth,” but noted a soft floor is provided by higher-cost producers and strategic stockpiling. 

On inflation, the IMF projects a continued decline worldwide. Global headline inflation is expected to fall from an estimated 4.1 percent in 2025 to 3.8 percent in 2026 and further to 3.4 percent in 2027. The report stated that “overarching trends of softening demand and lower energy prices” are expected to remain intact. 

The IMF also provided updated growth forecasts for other major economies. Among advanced economies, the US is projected to grow by 2.4 percent in 2026, while the euro area is expected to expand by 1.3 percent. Japan’s growth is forecast to moderate to 0.7 percent.

For key emerging markets, China’s growth is projected at 4.5 percent in 2026, and India is expected to grow by 6.4 percent. 

The IMF’s policy advice emphasized rebuilding fiscal buffers, maintaining central bank independence, and reducing policy uncertainty to foster sustainable medium-term growth, advice particularly relevant for commodity-exporting regions navigating energy transition and diversification.