6 Saudi firms on Forbes MENA list of top fintech companies

Egypt led the list of the top 30 fintech companies in the Middle East and North Africa region with eight companies in the list, followed by Saudi Arabia and the UAE with six and five firms respectively. (AFP)
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Updated 15 April 2023
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6 Saudi firms on Forbes MENA list of top fintech companies

  • Egypt and Saudi Arabia together comprised over 46 percent of the list

RIYADH: Six Saudi firms have been included by Forbes on its list of top 30 fintech companies in the Middle East and North Africa region.

According to a press release, Egypt led the list with eight companies in the list, followed by Saudi Arabia and the UAE with six and five firms respectively.

Interestingly, Egypt and Saudi Arabia together comprised over 46 percent of the list, while the remaining seven countries contributed to the remaining 54 percent.

Five fintech companies from Kuwait were included on the list while two companies from Jordan too found their place on the list.

The press release noted that Forbes curated this list by considering the amount of money executed by these companies through digital channels in 2022.

Some of the other factors considered by Forbes while preparing this list includes the number of app downloads and active users, geographical presence, annual growth, innovation, impact, valuation and funding from venture capitalists.

Egypt’s Fawry for banking technology and electronic payments topped the 2023 ranking, followed by Jordan’s MadfooatCom for e-payments and UAE’s Optasia.

Fawry is the third-oldest company on this list, and as of March 21, 2023, its market value was worth $542 million. In 2022, the company’s revenues grew by 37.5 percent to $75 million.

Shopping and financial services application Tabby which is headquartered in the UAE and Saudi Arabia bagged the fifth place on the list.

The longest-serving fintech firm in this list by Forbes is Morocco-based HPS, founded in 1995. On the other hand, the youngest listee on this list is UAE-based YAP.

YAP had raised $45 million in funding and onboarded about 200,000 customers and over 10,000 small and medium-sized enterprises since its launch.

Earlier in March, Saudi Venture Capital Co. launched the “Investment in Fintech VC Fund” to boost the sector with investments worth $80 million.

SVC aims to stimulate and sustain financing for startups and small and medium enterprises from early stage to initial public offering by backing venture capital and private equity firms all around the region.


PIF’s Humain invests $3bn in Elon Musk’s xAI prior to SpaceX acquisition

Updated 18 February 2026
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PIF’s Humain invests $3bn in Elon Musk’s xAI prior to SpaceX acquisition

JEDDAH: Humain, an artificial intelligence company owned by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, invested $3 billion in Elon Musk’s xAI shortly before the startup was acquired by SpaceX.

As part of xAI’s Series E round, Humain acquired a significant minority stake in the company, which was subsequently converted into shares of SpaceX, according to a press release.

The transaction reflects PIF’s broader push to position Saudi Arabia as a central hub in the global AI ecosystem, as part of its Vision 2030 diversification strategy.

Through Humain, the fund is seeking to combine capital deployment with infrastructure buildout, partnerships with leading technology firms, and domestic capacity development to reduce reliance on oil revenues and expand into advanced industries.

The $3 billion commitment offers potential for long-term capital gains while reinforcing the company’s role as a strategic, scaled investor in transformative technologies.

CEO Tareq Amin said: “This investment reflects Humain’s conviction in transformational AI and our ability to deploy meaningful capital behind exceptional opportunities where long-term vision, technical excellence, and execution converge, xAI’s trajectory, further strengthened by its acquisition by SpaceX, one of the largest technology mergers on record, represents the kind of high-impact platform we seek to support with significant capital.” 

The deal builds on a large-scale collaboration announced in November at the US-Saudi Investment Forum, where Humain and xAI committed to developing over 500 megawatts of next-generation AI data center and computing infrastructure, alongside deploying xAI’s “Grok” models in the Kingdom.

In a post on his X handle, Amin said: “I’m proud to share that Humain has invested $3 billion into xAI’s Series E round, just prior to its historic acquisition by SpaceX. Through this transaction, Humain became a significant minority shareholder in xAI.”

He added: “The investment builds on our previously announced 500MW AI infrastructure partnership with xAI in Saudi Arabia, reinforcing Humain’s role as both a strategic development partner and a scaled global investor in frontier AI.”

He noted that xAI’s trajectory, further strengthened by SpaceX’s acquisition, exemplifies the high-impact platforms Humain aims to support through strategic investments.

Earlier in February, SpaceX completed the acquisition of xAI, reflecting Elon Musk’s strategy to integrate AI with space exploration.

The combined entity, valued at $1.25 trillion, aims to build a vertically integrated innovation ecosystem spanning AI, space launch technology, and satellite internet, as well as direct-to-device communications and real-time information platforms, according to Bloomberg.

Humain, founded in August, consolidates Saudi Arabia’s AI initiatives under a single entity. From the outset, its vision has extended beyond domestic markets, participating across the global AI value chain from infrastructure to applications.

The company represents a strategic initiative by PIF to diversify the Kingdom’s economy and reduce oil dependence by investing in knowledge-based and advanced technologies.