Dresscode rolls up its sleeves to widen its Gen Z footprint

E-commerce fashion brand Dresscode is planning to raise series A funding to get $5 million and establish an office in the Kingdom. (Supplied)
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Updated 20 August 2022
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Dresscode rolls up its sleeves to widen its Gen Z footprint

  • Egyptian startup is focusing on empowering KSA’s youth through its brand: CEO

CAIRO: Egypt-based e-commerce fashion brand Dresscode is now operating in Saudi Arabia as it plans to become a global brand.

During an exclusive interview with Arab News, Mohammed Abdeldayem, CEO and founder of Dresscode, said that the company is focusing on empowering the Kingdom’s youth through its brand.

“We’re very focused on Generation Z or 18- to 25-year-olds; this is our core market. We came to Saudi Arabia because more than 50 percent of the population is within this age bracket. So there is a huge youth population,” Abdeldayem said.

Dresscode is not your typical fast-fashion brand as it focuses its business operations on sustainability, data, technology and affordability.

“Before Dresscode, we had on-ground stores; then we decided to build an online store that focuses on data analytics,” Abdeldayem said.

Abdeldayem explains that his staff focuses mostly on designs as they want to provide customers with at least 200 new styles a month.

Sustainability in fashion

Fashion is an ever-changing and fast-paced industry; when it comes to keeping up with what the customer wants and focusing on sustainability, Dresscode has balanced it perfectly.

Abdeldayem said that the brand has been able to move its model to a sustainable one by focusing on pre-orders with a considerable number of monthly designs.

“Why would I go buy this item in thousands? This is not what the young generation wants; the generation wants to be unique and special,” he added.

Partnering with about 50 factories, the company dramatically shrunk its batch size and focused on pre-orders using its unique technology.

“We had done more than 100,000 orders that were pre-ordered, which means that we had not produced it before it was ordered. We also use recycled yarns and fabrics in 50 percent of our production,” he stated.

Founded in 2019, the company now has over 15 in-house designers keeping up with the trend and from 500 to 700 orders per day.

“We’re doing between 500 and 700 orders a day. And it could reach 1,000 within the next two or three months. So, this is why we have been given the appetite to look into other markets,” he said.

Why Saudi’s youth?

Abdeldayem explained that the Kingdom’s youth is now the main target for the company, stating that 10 percent of its current orders are coming from the Kingdom.

“Part of our research was that the average Saudi national buys around 70 to 80 new items a year. So, this is a big market for us, compared to the Egyptians, who buy 30 to 40 items per year,” he stated. 

We came to Saudi Arabia because more than 50 percent of the population is within this age bracket.

Mohammed Abdeldayem, CEO and founder of Dresscode.

Abdeldayem is also very intrigued with the change in the Kingdom as the population is absorbing new cultures with open arms.

“We’re working closely with influencers now in Saudi Arabia and creating influencer brands to be sold on our platform. We could do so many things to localize the fashion industry,” he added.

Moreover, the company received its first funding back in 2021 from Egypt Ventures, a collaboration between Saudi Fund for Development and the Egyptian Government. It received $500,000 and massive support from Saudi investors.

“We’re going to Saudi because the Saudi Fund for Development invested in our company. So we’re paying back as well, and we have huge support there in Saudi Arabia,” Abdeldayem added.

The company is planning to become a global brand with other expansion plans in Africa and Gulf Cooperation Council countries.

“After Saudi Arabia, Dubai will come, followed by Bahrain and other neighboring countries. We also plan to enter Africa. Our sister company already has an on-ground operation in Kenya. So, it’s easy for us to establish all the logistics and all the needs,” Abdeldayem added.

The company is also planning to raise series A funding to get $5 million and establish an office in the Kingdom.


UAE raises $150m in first 7-year Islamic treasury sukuk amid strong demand 

Updated 13 sec ago
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UAE raises $150m in first 7-year Islamic treasury sukuk amid strong demand 

JEDDAH: The UAE raised 550 million dirhams ($150 million) from its first 7-year Islamic treasury sukuk, part of a dual-tranche auction that drew strong investor demand and underscored growing appetite for dirham-denominated Islamic debt. 

The February auction, conducted by the Ministry of Finance in coordination with the Central Bank of the UAE, attracted total bids of 5.88 billion dirhams for securities worth 1.1 billion dirhams, an oversubscription ratio of 5.3 times, according to the Emirates News Agency, also known as WAM. 

The issuance comes amid rapid expansion in Gulf debt markets. Fitch Ratings said last month that the Gulf Cooperation Council’s debt capital market is expected to exceed $1.25 trillion in 2026, driven by project financing needs, economic diversification programs and government funding initiatives. 

The ratings agency added that the region remains one of the largest sources of US dollar debt and sukuk issuance among emerging markets, with Islamic instruments accounting for more than 40 percent of outstanding GCC debt. 

The newly introduced 7-year tranche alone generated demand of about 3.1 billion dirhams — nearly six times the issuance size — highlighting investor confidence in the UAE’s credit profile and the continued growth of its Islamic finance sector. 

“The issuance forms part of the Islamic Treasury Sukuk Program for 2026, as published on the Ministry’s official website,” WAM reported. 

Participation was strong across the eight primary dealers, covering both tranches maturing in May 2030 and February 2033. 

The auction achieved competitive, market-driven pricing, with a yield to maturity of 3.53 percent for the May 2030 tranche and 3.779 percent for the February 2033 tranche, priced below comparable US Treasury yields at the time of issuance. 

The sukuk are listed under the UAE Treasury Islamic Sukuk Program on Nasdaq Dubai, improving investor access in the secondary market, according to WAM. 

The UAE’s Islamic finance and debt capital markets have continued to strengthen, with Nasdaq Dubai reporting a record year in 2025 as outstanding sukuk listings exceeded $100 billion. The growth was driven by sustained issuance from sovereign, financial, and corporate entities, alongside strong global demand for Shariah-compliant instruments. 

The milestone underscores the UAE’s growing role as a regional hub for Islamic fixed-income products and reflects robust investor confidence in the country’s financial system.