Silicon Valley’s Plug and Play hopes to accelerate 100 Saudi startups in 2022

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Updated 31 March 2022
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Silicon Valley’s Plug and Play hopes to accelerate 100 Saudi startups in 2022

RIYADH: CEO and co-founder of Silicon Valley investment firm Plug and Play Tech Center plans to establish a venture capital fund in Saudi Arabia and hopes to boost 100 start-ups.

Saeed Amidi, one of the early investors in PayPal and Google, described the qualities of Saudi startups as “fantastic” during an interview on the sidelines of Global Entrepreneurship Congress in Riyadh.

He said: “If all goes well, we would accelerate a hundred startups in 2022 in Saudi Arabia and invest in about 20 of them.”

“We have discussed that we will have a small fund here, which is about $25 million and from the fund we would do about $5 to $7 million a year for three years, for a total of around $25 million,” Amidi said.

He revealed that of the 20 startups appearing at an earlier event hosted by the Misk Foundation, his firm would be investing in four of them.

Plug and Play Tech Center also recently had an event with the Saudi Authority for Data and Artificial Intelligence that hosted 12 startups.

“We accelerated 12 startups. Six from Saudi Arabia and six from the wider region. So out of the 12, we are expected to invest in three of them. And that is actually better than the ratio that we do in California or internationally,” Amidi stated.

The firm is seeking to support the rising startup ecosystem in Saudi Arabia, and is hiring 20 people for its office in the Kingdom.

“But we hope that the success we have had in Silicon Valley for the last 16 years and in Europe for the last 10 years to bring it to Saudi Arabia this year,” Amidi said.

Amidi also said that Plug and Play has been working with Aramco, Riyadh Bank, and SABIC for three to four years, to improve their digital transformation.

Previous investments by Plug and Play Tech Center include Dropbox when it was just a team of two people, seeing financial rewards up to $35 million from just investing $150,000 in the startup.


Middle East war economic impact to depend on duration, damage, energy costs, IMF official says

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Middle East war economic impact to depend on duration, damage, energy costs, IMF official says

  • Katz: Prolonged increase in energy prices could unanchor inflation expectations
  • IMF: 2026 global GDP outlook was solid, too early to judge war’s impact on growth
WASHINGTON: The Middle East war’s impact on the global economy will depend on its duration and damage to infrastructure and industries in the region, particularly whether energy price increases are short-lived or persistent, the International Monetary Fund’s number two official said on Tuesday. IMF First Deputy Managing Director Dan Katz told the Milken Institute Future of Finance conference in Washington that if there is prolonged uncertainty from the conflict and a prolonged impact on energy prices, “I would expect central banks to be cautious and ‌respond to the ‌situation as it materializes.”
He said the conflict could ​be “very ‌impactful ⁠on ​the global economy ⁠across a range of across a range of metrics, whether it’s inflation, growth and so on” but it was still early to have a firm conviction.
Prior to the US and Israeli air strikes on Iran and counterattacks across the region, the IMF had forecast solid global GDP growth of 3.3 percent in 2026, powering through tariff disruptions due in part to the continued AI investment boom and expectations of productivity gains.
Katz said ⁠that the economic impact from the Middle East conflict would ‌be influenced by its duration and further geopolitical ‌developments.
Earlier, the IMF said it was monitoring the ​conflict’s disruptions to trade and economic activity, ‌surging energy prices and increased financial market volatility.
“The situation remains highly fluid and ‌adds to an already uncertain global economic environment,” the Fund said in a statement issued from Washington. Katz said the IMF will look at the conflict’s direct impacts on the region, including damage to infrastructure, and disruptions to key sectors.
“Tourism is an important one. Air travel. Is ‌there physical damage to infrastructure, production facilities, and the big industry in particular that everyone will be focused on is, ⁠of course, the energy ⁠industry,” he said.
Oil rose further on Tuesday as Iran vowed to attack ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz. Brent crude oil , the global benchmark, surged to $83 per barrel, up 15 percent from its level on Friday.
Katz said he expected central banks to “look through” a temporary rise in energy prices, given their focus on core inflation. But central banks could respond if a more persistent energy shock results in “a destabilizing of inflation expectations.”
He said the post-COVID inflation spike of 2022 was influenced by energy impacts from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, with more pass-through from headline inflation to core inflation.
“And so I’m sure central banks, as they are thinking about how the ​geopolitical situation is translating into ​energy markets, will be looking at the lessons of the pandemic and seeing if they can apply any of those lessons in setting monetary policy,” Katz said.