Startups across MENA secure fresh funding to scale chips, AI, mobility and proptech platforms

By maintaining Saudi ownership, Rimal aims to supply its chip designs to markets worldwide regardless of manufacturing location. (Supplied)
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Updated 07 March 2026
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Startups across MENA secure fresh funding to scale chips, AI, mobility and proptech platforms

  • Rimal Semiconductors, a Saudi chip design startup, aims to supply its chip designs to markets worldwide regardless of manufacturing location

RIYADH: Startups across the Middle East and North Africa continue to attract investor backing, with companies spanning semiconductors, artificial intelligence infrastructure, and health technology all benefitting.

Rimal Semiconductors, a Saudi chip design startup, secured a bridge funding round from Keheilan Asset Management and an undisclosed regional investor as the company works to strengthen its position within the global semiconductor supply chain. 

The funding will support Rimal’s strategy of building a fabless semiconductor business that designs chips while outsourcing manufacturing to international foundries, enabling the company to distribute production across multiple jurisdictions while retaining ownership of its intellectual property. 

Rimal currently maintains manufacturing partnerships across Taiwan, Korea, and China, and is in discussions with US-based foundries as it seeks to diversify its production network. 

The company positions its approach as a way to navigate the increasingly fragmented semiconductor industry, where geopolitical tensions between the US and China are reshaping global supply chains and restricting market access for many companies. 

By maintaining Saudi ownership of its intellectual property while distributing manufacturing across multiple partners, Rimal aims to supply its chip designs to markets worldwide regardless of manufacturing location. 

The startup is also finalizing a distribution agreement with a regional distributor operating across Turkiye, Egypt, and Morocco, as well as Tunisia and the UAE, supported by local engineering teams providing technical support in each market. 

Rimal currently has six contracts in the pipeline, including one with a major Egyptian corporation, with projects spanning defense systems, power grid infrastructure, and data center technologies. 

iQtech raises first investment round 

iQtech LLC, a Qatar-based startup specializing in advanced medical simulation and cross-reality technologies, has closed its first investment round with backing from European assessment technology company Selexi and deep-tech collaborator Yuniro. 

The funding marks a milestone for the startup, founded in 2025, as it transitions from its founding phase into a structured growth stage while accelerating development of its AI-powered medical training platform. 

The investment will support the development of EsculapioVR, iQtech’s flagship platform that combines immersive virtual reality simulations with artificial intelligence-driven performance evaluation designed to enhance medical education and professional training outcomes. 

Operating from Doha within the Qatar Science & Technology Park ecosystem, the startup positions itself at the intersection of healthtech and edutech. 




Weego operates a mobility-as-a-service application that integrates multiple transportation options into a single platform. (Supplied)

The company aims to modernize professional training through high-fidelity simulation environments for health care professionals, as well as civil and military training programs. 

With the new funding, iQtech plans to strengthen its technical infrastructure, accelerate platform development, and expand deployments across Qatar and the wider Middle East and North Africa region. 

Weego raises $1.1m

Weego, a Moroccan–Senegalese mobility startup, has raised $1.1 million in a funding round led by early-stage venture capital firm Azur Innovation Fund as the company seeks to expand its mobility-as-a-service platform across African markets. 

Founded in 2020 by Saad Jittou and Mor Niane, the company operates a mobility-as-a-service application that integrates multiple transportation options into a single platform, allowing users to access and book public transit, ride-hailing services, and other transportation modes through one interface. 

The company also provides enterprise mobility solutions through its WeegoLines service, which enables companies to organize and manage employee transportation. The service is designed to improve reliability and efficiency in staff mobility for corporate clients. 

“Transportation remains one of the primary barriers to economic activity in many cities,” said Jittou, co-founder and CEO of Weego. “We are building the technological layer that helps make existing mobility infrastructure more efficient and accessible.” 

With the new funding, Weego plans to expand into additional cities across Morocco, strengthen its enterprise mobility services, and further develop its multimodal platform. 

The company is also preparing for broader regional expansion into other African markets, with longer-term ambitions to explore opportunities in Europe and the Middle East. 

Skipr raises $2m seed round 

Skipr, a startup developing infrastructure designed to enable trusted interaction between autonomous artificial intelligence systems, has closed a $2 million seed funding round at a $10 million valuation. 

The funding will support the company’s expansion from Hub71, Abu Dhabi’s global technology ecosystem, as it works to scale sovereign artificial intelligence infrastructure for national and enterprise deployments. 

Skipr focuses on enabling secure communication, coordination, and value exchange between AI systems operating across organizations, cloud environments, and geographic jurisdictions. 

The company’s platform is designed to allow governments and enterprises to maintain sovereign control over their data and decision-making processes while deploying AI-powered services. 

We are building the trust infrastructure nations and enterprises need to deploy AI safely, confidently, and at scale.

Andreas Hartl, CEO at Skipr Technologies

Skipr said it is already working with telecommunications operators, AI and cybersecurity laboratories, and data center partners to deploy autonomous digital services at national and enterprise scale. 

“This funding accelerates our work on what we believe is a foundational layer for the AI era,” said Andreas Hartl, CEO at Skipr Technologies. 

“As AI systems become autonomous and interconnected, secure AI-to-AI interoperability under sovereign control is no longer optional. We are building the trust infrastructure nations and enterprises need to deploy AI safely, confidently, and at scale,” he added. 

Skipr operates as part of the Hub71+ Digital Assets specialist ecosystem, which brings together technology companies, regulators, and strategic partners focused on developing digital infrastructure. 

Rewa launches UAE rent payment and rewards platform

UAE-based proptech startup Rewa has launched its digital rent payment and rewards application across the country following the close of a strategic seed funding round backed by Qatar Development Bank, Plug and Play, and Neocity Invest, as well as Startup Wise Guys, Second Century Ventures, and several Gulf Cooperation Council real estate executives. 

Founded in 2024 by Ramzi Mneimneh and Najib Khanafer, Rewa enables tenants to pay rent through card or bank transfer while earning loyalty points that can be redeemed across more than 150 partners spanning travel, retail, and dining, as well as groceries and lifestyle services. 

The platform also allows users to apply rewards toward future rent payments and utility bills. In addition to tenant services, Rewa provides tools for landlords through its Rewa Alliance platform, which streamlines rent collection through automated tracking, digital receipts, and workflows designed to align with UAE rental regulations. 

The company plans to use the funding to scale operations across Dubai and the wider UAE before expanding into other GCC markets. 

Ayar Labs raises $500 million  

Ayar Labs, a US-based semiconductor startup focused on optical interconnect technology, has raised $500 million in a series E funding round led by Neuberger Berman. 

The round included participation from institutional investors AKR Invest, Insight Partners, Sequoia Global Equities, and 1789 Capital. 

Qatar Investment Authority joined the round as a Middle East-based institutional investor. 

Additional strategic investors included Alchip Technologies and MediaTek, joining existing backers such as Advent Global Opportunities, Boardman Bay Capital Management, and IAG Capital Partners, as well as Light Street Capital, Playground Global, AMD Ventures, and NVIDIA. 

Founded in 2015 by Mark Wade, Vladimir Stojanovic, Chen Sun, Rajeev Ram, and Milos Popovic, Ayar Labs develops optical interconnect technologies known as co-packaged optics, which replace traditional electrical connections used in chips and data centers. 

The company’s technology is designed to improve data transfer speeds and energy efficiency in high-performance computing environments, including artificial intelligence infrastructure and large-scale data centers.


Savola Group profit falls 91% to $232m, board proposes $2.66m dividend 

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Savola Group profit falls 91% to $232m, board proposes $2.66m dividend 

RIYADH: Saudi strategic investment holding firm Savola Group reported a net profit of SR874.5 million ($232 million) in 2025, down 91.23 percent from a year earlier, as the absence of one-off gains recorded in 2024 weighed on earnings. 

According to a statement on Saudi Exchange, the decrease was primarily attributed to several non-recurring items recorded in 2024, as well as segment-level performance variations. 

The decline in net profit was largely due to the absence of a one-off gain recorded in 2024 from the distribution of Savola Group’s 34.52 percent stake in Almarai Co. to eligible shareholders, valued at SR11.3 billion after a SR288 million zakat charge, the filing said.  

Earnings were also affected by a lower contribution from associates following the absence of profit from the previously distributed Almarai investment, which had added SR782 million in 2024. 

The statement said profit in the retail segment fell to SR115 million from SR154 million, mainly due to higher operating expenses linked to new store openings and continued investment in the CXR program. The decline was also attributed to the absence of a one-off SR16 million provision reversal on aged receivables recorded in 2024.  

Operating expenses also increased in 2025 due to the consolidation of United Sugar Co. of Egypt, which had been accounted for as an associate in 2024.  

Savola, which has a strong presence in the food and retail sectors across the Middle East and North Africa, also announced the board’s recommendation to distribute SR510 million in cash dividends for 2025. 

A separate filing showed that the total number of shares eligible for dividends amounted to 300 million, with a dividend of SR1.7 per share. The statement added that dividends represent 17 percent of the share’s par value. 

“These distributions are in line with the Group’s announced dividends policy, which is to distribute cash dividends of approximately 50 percent to 60 percent of the net profit generated during the fiscal year,” the Tadawul statement said. 

Savola’s share rose about 9.2 percent during the day’s trading session on the Tadawul All Share Index, reaching SR23.93, after the company reported fourth-quarter profit above average market expectations.