Egypt sells $121.6m stake in state-controlled Telecom Egypt 

Egypt desperately needs proceeds from these deals to meet a series of foreign debt obligations over the coming few months. (Shutterstock)
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Updated 15 May 2023
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Egypt sells $121.6m stake in state-controlled Telecom Egypt 

RIYADH: Egypt’s government has sold a 9.5 percent stake in state-controlled Telecom Egypt for 3.75 billion Egyptian pounds ($121.6 million), the finance ministry has revealed, breathing life into a privatization program that had seemingly stalled. 
Egypt desperately needs proceeds from these deals to meet a series of foreign debt obligations over the coming few months. 
Telecom Egypt’s is the second sale of state assets since Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly promised on April 29 to sell assets worth $2 billion by the end of June. 
Under a $3-billion, 46-month financial support package signed in December, Egypt promised the International Monetary Fund it would roll back the state’s involvement in the economy and allow private companies a much greater role. 
The stock exchange said on Sunday the sale of 162.2 million shares of Telecom Egypt had been executed for a total of 3.75 billion pounds. 
The Finance Ministry said the shares were sold at 23.11 pounds each in a subscription that was 3.11 times oversubscribed. Another 0.5 percent of the shares are now being offered to Telecom Egypt employees until May 25. 
Telecom Egypt is the first telecom operator in Egypt to provide all telecom services to its customers including fixed and mobile voice and data services. The company also owns a 45 percent stake in Vodafone Egypt. 
The two-part sale will reduce the government’s stake in Telecom Egypt to 70 percent from the previous 80 percent, with the other 20 percent floating on the Egyptian Exchange.
Two local investment banks, CI Capital and Ahly Pharos, were managing the sale, according to market sources. 
The ministry statement did not say what portion of the shares were sold to local buyers as opposed to non-Egyptians. 
Al Mal newspaper said on Thursday that Moon Capital, based in New York, was among the bidders. 
Egypt has been looking to raise foreign currency through its asset sales. 
In March, Egypt said it will start procedures to list two of its national army companies, Wataniya and Safi, on its stock exchange in an attempt to further develop its private sector. 
According to an official cabinet statement, the move to offer these two companies reflects the government’s first step towards enforcing its announced plans of selling stakes in over 32 state-owned companies by March 2024. 
Wataniya, the national company for selling and distributing petroleum products, and Safi, the national company for bottling natural water are both currently owned by the Armed Forces’ National Service Projects Agency. 
Around 32 state companies will either be listed on the Egyptian stock exchange or sold to strategic investors over the coming year, Prime Minister Moustafa Madbouly revealed in February earlier this year. 
The government aims to exit from seven sectors, including pharmaceutical, chemical, and construction, besides reducing its investments in other areas such as power plants. 
First announced more than five years ago, the Egyptian government’s plan to sell stakes in public companies has gained new urgency since the Russian invasion of Ukraine. 
The war triggered heavy foreign investment outflows from the Egyptian financial markets and threw the African country’s economy into crisis. 
(With input from Reuters)


Capital concentrates as MENA startups close deals

Updated 20 December 2025
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Capital concentrates as MENA startups close deals

  • Fresh funding flows in even as broader market data points to a slowdown

RIYADH: Startup funding activity across the Middle East and North Africa delivered a mixed picture over the past week, with fresh capital flowing into gaming, fintech, deep tech, and travel, even as broader market data pointed to a slowdown in overall investment momentum. 

Saudi Arabia’s Impact46 led a $1 million investment round in Hypemasters, an international game development studio focused on competitive strategy experiences for mobile. The round included participation from GEM Capital. 

Hypemasters develops strategy titles designed for competitive depth and precise game mechanics and has attracted more than 7 million players globally. 

The studio is currently advancing several new projects, including a title in soft launch, as it looks to expand its reach in markets with sustained demand for strategy games. 

“Strategy is one of the most demanding categories in game development, and Hypemasters approaches it with uncommon discipline. Their work shows a clear understanding of what committed players expect from this genre, and we believe their upcoming titles can serve a global audience with genuine depth,” said Basmah Al-Sinaidi, managing partner at Impact46. 

“We are pleased to support a team that builds with intention and long-term ambition,” she added. 

Boris Kalmykov, CEO and co-founder of Hypemasters, said: “We’re focused on deepening our presence across the region and pushing forward with the next generation of strategy games, including a major new title already in soft launch. Partnering with Impact46 marks an important step for Hypemasters.” 

The CEO added that Impact46 shares his company’s long-term vision for building “world-class strategy games” from the MENA region, and the support reinforces his firm’s commitment to expanding its portfolio with high-quality releases.

The investment reflects Impact46’s continued interest in game development and interactive entertainment and aligns with its broader strategy of backing studios building globally oriented titles. 

Premialab raises $220m

UAE-headquartered Premialab, a provider of data, analytics, and risk management solutions for quantitative investing, has raised $220 million in a growth investment led by KKR, with participation from existing investor Balderton. 

Founded in Hong Kong in 2016 by Adrien Geliot and Pierre Trecourt, Premialab operates a global platform serving the $800 billion quantitative investment strategies market. 

Counterfeits don’t just impact economies; they erase identity, creativity and truth. Along with our investors, we’re building a movement to make the world’s stories verifiable again.

Walid Tarabih, founder and CEO of Relik

The company provides benchmarking, performance analysis, and risk analytics tools for institutional investors. 

 The funding will be used to support global expansion, strengthen core operational systems, and scale Premialab’s execution product, which was developed in partnership with Eurex, to broaden access to quantitative investment strategies. 

“Quantitative investment strategies have grown rapidly in scale and importance, yet the market has lacked a truly independent standard for data, analytics and risk. Premialab was built to fill that gap,” said Adrien Geliot, CEO of Premialab. 

Relik closes seed round

UAE-based Relik has closed a seed funding round with participation from KBW Ventures, Naatt Holding, Fort Holding, and Ayman Sejiny. 

Founded in 2023 by Walid Tarabih and later joined by John Tsioris, Relik is an artificial intelligence-powered authentication platform designed to help collectors, brands, and marketplaces.

The company plans to use the funding to roll out additional products and expand across sectors including sports, luxury, and heritage markets. 

 “We are ensuring authenticity in a fakeable world,” said Walid Tarabih, founder and CEO of Relik, adding: “Counterfeits don’t just impact economies; they erase identity, creativity and truth. Along with our investors, we’re building a movement to make the world’s stories verifiable again.” 

Prince Khaled bin Alwaleed bin Talal Al-Saud, founder and CEO of KBW Ventures, said: “Relik is creating a new global standard for truth and trust. At a time when counterfeiting and AI-generated content are rising, Relik’s mission to protect authenticity carries both cultural and commercial value.”  

Nawah raises $23m

Egypt-based deep tech startup Nawah Scientific has raised $23 million in a series A round comprising a mix of equity and debt, marking a decade since the company’s founding. 

The round was led by Life Ventures Holding, with participation from Den Ventures, Empire M, AfricInvest, Elsewedy, as well as banks and angel investors. 

Founded in 2015 by Omar Saqr, Nawah operates a cloud laboratory model that enables remote access to advanced testing services. (Supplied)

Founded in 2015 by Omar Saqr, Nawah operates a cloud laboratory model that enables remote access to advanced testing services. Its operations span four business units covering life sciences, food and agriculture, pharmaceuticals, and certified reference materials. 

The company plans to use the funding to build a global research and development center in Rwanda, double laboratory capacity in Egypt and Saudi Arabia, and expand into North Africa and Europe. 

Algeria’s VOLZ raises $5m

Algeria-based travel tech startup VOLZ has raised $5 million in a series A funding round led by a consortium of private investors under Tell Group, with participation from Groupe GIBA.  

Founded in 2023 by Mohamed Abdelhadi and Hacene Seghier, VOLZ enables travelers to book flights in Algerian dinars using online payments or cash on delivery, while comparing multiple airlines through a single platform. 

Announced at the African Startup Conference in December, the transaction is Algeria’s largest startup funding round in local currency and marks the first exit of the Algerian Startup Fund. 

The capital will be used to launch new consumer and corporate travel products, strengthen VOLZ’s position in Algeria, and support expansion across North and West Africa. 

MENA startup funding slows in November

Investment activity across the MENA startup ecosystem slowed sharply in November 2025, with 35 startups raising a combined $227.8 million, according to Wamda’s monthly report. 

This marked a steep decline from the $784.9 million recorded in the previous month and a 12 percent drop compared to November 2024, pointing to a period of consolidation as investors moderated deployment toward the end of the year. 

More than half of the capital raised during the month was driven by a single debt-backed transaction by erad, which propelled Saudi Arabia to the top of the regional rankings. Across 14 deals, the Kingdom attracted $176.3 million, accounting for more than three-quarters of all capital deployed in November. 

Despite funding activity spanning 35 startups, capital was concentrated in just 5 markets. After Saudi Arabia’s dominant lead, the UAE followed with $49 million across 14 transactions. 

Egypt recorded $1.12 million across 4 deals, while Morocco raised $1.1 million through 2 transactions. Oman saw 1 deal with an undisclosed value, with limited activity reported outside these markets. 

Fintech emerged as the most funded sector in November, raising $142.9 million across 9 deals, largely influenced by the same debt-driven transaction. 

E-commerce followed with $24.5 million across 6 rounds, while property tech, which topped the charts in October, slipped to 3rd with $18.9 million raised by 3 startups. 

Debt financing dominated the month, accounting for more than $125 million through a single transaction. 

The remaining capital was largely channelled into early-stage startups, with no later-stage funding rounds recorded in November, underscoring continued investor caution. 

From a business model perspective, B2B startups captured the majority of capital, with 20 companies raising $197.1 million. 

B2C startups lagged, with 9 companies raising a combined $22.2 million, while the remainder was split across hybrid models. 

The gender funding gap showed no signs of narrowing, with male-led startups absorbing 97 percent of the capital raised during the month. Female-led and mixed-gender founding teams accounted for the remaining share.