Global spotlight on Riyadh as Biban Forum 2025 opens

Billions of riyals in potential agreements expected as investors and startups converge. SPA
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Updated 05 November 2025
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Global spotlight on Riyadh as Biban Forum 2025 opens

  • 40,000 participants from more than 150 countries attend the four-day forum in Riyadh.
  • Billions of riyals in potential agreements expected as investors and startups converge.
  • Entrepreneurship World Cup Global Finals hosted for the third consecutive year.

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s flagship entrepreneurship event, Biban Forum 2025, opened in Riyadh on Wednesday, drawing tens of thousands of investors, innovators, and business leaders from around the world as the Kingdom strengthens its position as a global hub for startups and small businesses.

Organized by the Small and Medium Enterprises General Authority under the theme “Global Destination for Opportunities,” the four-day event at the Riyadh Front Exhibition and Conference Center has attracted more than 140,000 participants from over 150 countries, including startup founders, venture capitalists, policymakers and CEOs.

With billions of riyals in potential deals and hundreds of international companies participating, Biban Forum has become a cornerstone of Saudi Arabia’s drive to diversify its economy and foster innovation under Vision 2030.

“Biban Forum 2025 is more than an event — it is a bridge between ideas and investment, where local and global entrepreneurs find the support they need to scale,” said Monsha’at Gov. Sami Ibrahim Al-Hussaini.

It also hosts the Global Finals of the Entrepreneurship World Cup for the third consecutive year, held in partnership with the Mohammed bin Salman Foundation and the Global Entrepreneurship Network.

The 2025 EWC finals bring together 100 global startups from a pool of over 10,300 entrepreneurs across 169 countries, competing live on stage in Riyadh for $1.5 million in cash prizes and access to international investors and mentors. Since its launch, the competition has attracted more than 420,000 entrepreneurs from 191 countries.

Coinciding with the event, Monsha’at released a report highlighting the rapid progress of the Kingdom’s startup ecosystem. It showed 1.7 million active commercial registrations by the end of the third quarter of 2025, with SMEs employing more than 8.4 million people.

The report also pointed to gains in key sectors. Women’s workforce participation rose to 43.5 percent, inbound tourism spending climbed 9.7 percent in the first quarter, and the real estate market continued to expand, with 47,286 off-plan residential units licensed in the third quarter.

The e-sports industry grew 72 percent year on year, while financing to small and medium enterprises increased 20 percent, with commercial banks accounting for 96 percent of total lending.

“As Saudi Arabia accelerates its transformation into a premier hub for entrepreneurship and opportunity, Biban Forum serves as a powerful platform to showcase talent, unlock partnerships, and contribute to the goals of Saudi Vision 2030,” Al-Hussaini said.


NDF mobilizes $16.2bn annually to power Vision 2030, fund’s governor tells Arab News

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NDF mobilizes $16.2bn annually to power Vision 2030, fund’s governor tells Arab News

RIYADH: The Momentum 2025 conference on the future of development finance underscores the National Development Fund’s role as a central enabler of Saudi Arabia’s development according to its governor.

Speaking to Arab News on the first day of the three-day conference in Riyadh, NDF’s Stephen Groff said the forum aims to enhance cooperation among local development funds, banks, and international development finance institutions, while fostering stronger partnerships with public and private sector leaders to ensure the optimal deployment of resources in support of Vision 2030.

He emphasized the NDF’s focus on stimulating investment in non-oil sectors and supporting entrepreneurs and SMEs through innovative financing and guarantee tools.

Groff said: “The purpose of this conference is to highlight the work that is being done by the NDF and its ecosystem of 12 affiliated funds and banks to support the Saudi economic diversification in line with Saudi Vision 2030, as well as to support the growth of jobs and opportunities for all Saudis.”

On the NDF’s role within the broader development ecosystem, he added: “Well, the objective of the NDF, more broadly is to support the economic objectives of Vision 2030, by helping in economic diversification, helping in the growth of new sectors, de-risk private investment into these newer sectors, so that we can ensure that there is sufficient amount of capital coming in, to support the diversification, and ensure that the kind of growth that we are seeing in the country is sustainable and resilient over time.”

The governor said the growth in Saudi Arabia’s non-oil sector in the past eight to nine years has been in part due to the kinds of investments that the NDF makes through its ecosystem of funds and banks and supporting entrepreneurs, SMEs, which has a large focus in Vision 2030.

Groff highlighted that the fund now measures its performance based on developmental impact, including the number of jobs created, the volume of financing directed to the private sector, and the growth rate of non-oil sector contributions.

“I think the kinds of job opportunities that we are seeing in the country today are significant. We are seeing massive growth in the tourism sector with terrific opportunities for investors in the sector,” he said.

Over the past seven years, the NDF has mobilized resources exceeding SR60 billion ($16.2 billion) annually to support the development ecosystem without requiring additional government funding.

Groff said that when NDF started, there were six funds that existed in the ecosystem at that point, and many of them had been around for up to 60 years and had capital allocated to them. 

“We consolidated that capital to the equivalent of about SR430 billion. And we used that capital to seed the work that was being done by those individuals, six original funds. But we also used it to set up six new funds. So the new funds that we have established are focused on the tourism sector, the import export bank, the SME bank, the Cultural Development Fund, and the Events Investment Fund,” he said.

“All of these new areas of the economy, we used that existing capital to set that up, and all of that together, in an annual disbursement amount of about SR60 billion, is being disbursed annually by this ecosystem of funds. Now, we haven’t received any additional capital from the central government to support those efforts,” he added.

“And that’s fine because we haven’t needed it. We have been able to function. But now we are embarking on a journey of eventually securitizing some of our portfolio, issuing bonds in the international markets. That will allow us to leverage that capital base and make even more efficient and effective use of that capital base to support the economic diversification,” said the governor.