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How Saudi entrepreneurs are navigating the shift to public markets

How Saudi entrepreneurs are navigating the shift to public markets
This shift often requires a fundamental change in mindset — particularly in areas such as governance, financial discipline, and regulatory compliance. Shutterstock
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Updated 18 April 2025

How Saudi entrepreneurs are navigating the shift to public markets

How Saudi entrepreneurs are navigating the shift to public markets

RIYADH: As startups approach the critical stage of an initial public offering, one of their biggest challenges is the transition from a fast-paced, founder-driven company to one that must meet the rigorous demands of public markets.

This shift often requires a fundamental change in mindset — particularly in areas such as governance, financial discipline, and regulatory compliance.

The journey from a nimble startup to a publicly traded company is a transformative one, and it is a challenge many companies in ֱ’s rapidly evolving startup ecosystem will soon face.

Historically, strategic acquisitions were the primary exit strategy for startups seeking liquidity. However, with an increasing number of late-stage companies reaching scale, IPOs are rapidly emerging as a viable — and increasingly attractive — option.

As the Kingdom’s entrepreneurial landscape matures, the path to public markets is becoming a more prominent choice for startups looking to grow beyond their founding teams and tap into the capital needed to expand.

“Many startups struggle in this arena because what worked in their early years — fast decisions, aggressive growth, and loose structures — won’t hold up under public scrutiny,” said Mohammed Al-Meshekah, founder and general partner of Outliers, an early investor in ֱ’s Tabby, now valued at $3.3 billion and on track for an IPO.




Mohammed Al-Meshekah, founder and general partner of Outliers. Supplier

Speaking to Arab News, Al-Meshekah said that “the right investors work with founders to institutionalize their company without killing its agility.”

He added: “This means tightening financial discipline early, not as a last-minute fix, ensuring reporting is clean, unit economics are sustainable, and capital allocation is intentional.”

Mohammed Al-Zubi, managing partner and founder of Nama Ventures, which backed Saudi unicorns Salla and Tamara — both preparing for public listings — echoed this sentiment, saying that the best approach is to build with IPO-level governance long before it becomes necessary.

“This means structuring financial reporting properly, ensuring compliance frameworks are in place, and building a leadership team that can transition into a public company environment,” Al-Zubi told Arab News.

Regulatory hurdle

Regulatory compliance is another hurdle, particularly in regions where high-growth technology startups must navigate frameworks originally designed for traditional industries.

“At the same time, there’s an opportunity to evolve regulatory frameworks in the region to better support high-growth companies,” Outliers’ Al-Meshekah said.

“Many existing standards were designed with traditional industries in mind, which naturally differ from the structure and scaling needs of technology-driven businesses,” he added, noting that regulators must strike a balance between ensuring market stability and enabling companies with global potential to list locally.

“Striking this balance could position ֱ and the region more broadly as a leading destination for high-growth IPOs, attracting not just companies built in the region but those from around the world looking for a strong public market to scale.”

Investor alignment also plays a key role in a smooth IPO transition. “Startups that have investors who prioritize short-term gains over sustainable growth often face challenges when transitioning to public markets,” Al-Zubi said.




Mohammed Al-Zubi, managing partner and founder of Nama Ventures. Supplied

“Those backed by long-term partners who guide them toward disciplined execution, regulatory readiness, and scalable operations are the ones that make the leap successfully.”

IPO as the new exit strategy

Al-Zubi said that just five years ago, IPOs were not considered a viable exit path for startups in the region — with strategic acquisitions seen as the only clear exit strategy.

“While acquisitions provided liquidity, they often left a lot of money on the table because startups were being acquired before realizing their full potential,” he said.

Today, Al-Zubi noted, the dynamics are changing. “IPOs are now the dominant exit strategy, and we’re seeing more late-stage startups actively preparing for public markets. Companies like Tamara and Salla are proof that regional startups can scale to IPO readiness, and as capital markets continue to evolve, this trend will accelerate.”

However, acquisitions and secondary sales will continue to play a role, particularly in industries where global players are looking for entry points into the Saudi market.

“With IPOs now a real option, founders are no longer forced to sell prematurely,” Al-Zubi added. “Instead, they can scale further, capture more value, and exit at a much higher valuation through public markets.”

Al-Meshekah agreed that IPOs will become an increasingly important part of the exit landscape but noted that they will complement acquisitions or secondary sales, not fully replace them.

“As more Saudi startups mature, we’ll see a broader mix of exit strategies, with IPOs becoming a key path for companies that can sustain independent growth. But the best companies aren’t built for a single outcome; they create lasting value with optionality, whether through an IPO, acquisition, or secondaries,” he added, pointing to historical trends in the US to illustrate how dynamics evolve in maturing ecosystems.

“If we look to the US as a reference point, IPOs once dominated venture-backed exits, accounting for over 80 percent in the 1980s, before dropping to 50 percent in the 1990s and falling below 10 percent in the past 25 years,” he said.

“It’s natural for IPOs to lead in a developing ecosystem, with M&A following as incumbents acquire innovation to stay competitive.”

Role of investors post-IPO

While going public is a significant milestone for any startup, it marks the beginning of a new phase rather than the end of the journey.

The transition from a venture-backed private company to a publicly traded entity brings new challenges, requiring founders to shift their focus from high-growth execution to long-term financial discipline and shareholder management.

“Going public isn’t the finish line. It’s just another phase of a company’s evolution,” Al-Meshekah said.

“The role of investors at this point shifts to long-term stewards, helping ensure a successful transition into the public markets without losing what made them great in the first place.”

He warned that one of the biggest risks post-IPO is “short-termism” — the pressure to prioritize quarterly performance over long-term value creation.

“Early-stage VCs who’ve been with the company since its inception play a key role in keeping the leadership grounded in its original vision while adapting to the new expectations of public shareholders,” Al-Meshekah said.

He added that the best companies “balance financial discipline with the agility to innovate, resisting the urge to optimize for near-term stock price movements at the expense of long-term market leadership.”

Al-Zubi highlighted how the investor base also changes once a company reaches public markets.

“Every stage of a startup’s journey requires a different set of investors with specialized expertise,” he said.

“Early-stage VCs play a critical role in getting a company from idea to scale, but once a startup reaches the public markets, the baton must be passed to public equity investors and institutional funds that are better suited for this phase.”

At this stage, a startup is no longer judged solely on its growth potential but also on its ability to deliver sustainable profitability, shareholder value and robust governance.

“Early-stage VCs, whose expertise lies in navigating uncertainty and scaling startups, must step back and allow the company to be guided by those with deep public market experience,” said Al-Zubi.

That doesn’t mean early investors disappear entirely. “Some remain involved through board positions, but their influence naturally diminishes as new stakeholders, financial structures, and operational expectations take priority,” he explained.

Al-Zubi emphasized that founders must embrace this transition and surround themselves with the right advisers.

“IPOs are not just exits — they’re a shift to a new way of operating, and founders who understand this transition will be the ones who thrive in the public markets.”

Al-Meshekah echoed this sentiment, noting that successful tech IPOs share common traits.

“They don’t just scale their existing product; they expand into new markets, deepen customer relationships, and build sustainable competitive moats,” he said.

“Early investors who stay engaged can provide continuity, supporting founders as they navigate this shift while maintaining the principles that drove their early success.”


Building Arabic AI from the ground up

Building Arabic AI from the ground up
Updated 25 September 2025

Building Arabic AI from the ground up

Building Arabic AI from the ground up
  • From language depth to data security, regional AI must reflect local values, priorities

ALKHOBAR: When ֱ unveiled Allam, its homegrown Arabic large language model, it sent a clear signal: the Kingdom is no longer content to simply consume global AI technologies. 

It intends to build its own. For many, this was a moment of pride — a proof that the Arab world can produce tools designed to understand its own languages, cultures, and contexts.

But experts caution that Allam is only the first step in a much longer journey. Success will not be determined by the models alone, but by the invisible foundations that support them: data, infrastructure, governance, and trust.

“You can’t capture the intent, emotion, and cultural depth of Arabic through translation,” said David Barber, director of the UCL Centre for Artificial Intelligence and Distinguished Scientist at UiPath. “You need systems that think in Arabic from the ground up.”

David Barber, director, UCL Centre for Artificial Intelligence; distinguished scientist at UiPath. (Supplied)

Barber highlights a stark reality: only about 15 percent of Arabic text online is clean enough for training a large language model, compared with over 50 percent for English — a huge head start for models like GPT or Claude. Complicating matters further are Arabic’s complex grammar, diverse dialects, and the common mixing of English and Arabic in a single sentence.

“When you train on noisy or shallow data, the system learns shortcuts,” Barber explained. “It can mimic fluency, but it misses the depth, the idioms, the cultural nuances, the rhythm of thought that makes Arabic distinct.”

For Barber, this underscores the importance of ֱ’s push for locally sourced, high-quality datasets. Without them, any Arabic LLM risks becoming a shallow copy of English-language AI: competent at generic tasks but unable to capture the soul of the language it claims to represent.

Even the best data is ineffective if it cannot be properly organized, secured, and delivered to the model. Seema Alidily, regional director at Denodo, said Gulf enterprises still face major challenges here.

“Without localized infrastructure, AI systems risk misunderstanding user intent or producing irrelevant outputs,” she said. “Data virtualization is one of the few ways to unify governance and access across cloud and on-site systems without moving sensitive information.”

Seema Alidily, regional director, Denodo. (Supplied)

Practically, this means investing in platforms that can pull data from dozens of scattered sources — from ERP systems to IoT sensors— and present it in a unified view for AI to use. In ֱ, where Vision 2030 projects depend on massive, real-time datasets, this approach is critical, especially given strict regulations on handling citizen data.

Alidily warned that merely replicating Western infrastructure may not suffice. “In the Gulf, centralized visibility and compliance must come first,” she noted. “It is not just a technical issue, it is about aligning with the legal, cultural, and regulatory expectations of the region.”

For Bader AlBahaian, country manager for ֱ at VAST Data, the stakes go beyond efficiency — they touch on independence and security.

“If we depend exclusively on external platforms, we risk importing their policies and their priorities, often at the expense of regional needs,” he said.

Bader AlBahaian, country manager, ֱ, VAST Data. (Supplied)

AlBahaian advocates for “sovereign-by-design” systems: storage and compute architectures that keep sensitive data within national borders, encryption and access controls that satisfy local regulators, and AI models trained under rules set by the Kingdom rather than a foreign vendor.

“It is not just about where the data sits,” he added. “It is about who gets to define how it is used, who takes responsibility when something goes wrong, and who has the power to switch the system off if necessary.”

This question of sovereignty is becoming urgent as AI begins to shape decisions in finance, healthcare, education, and public policy. A misaligned model trained on foreign data could issue recommendations that contradict local priorities — or worse, expose the region to economic or political risks.

But building perfect infrastructure is only half the challenge. Success ultimately depends on how AI is deployed.

“Digital labor will allow businesses to have much deeper relationships with their customers,” said Ibrahim Alseghayr, managing director of Salesforce ֱ. “And by taking on so much of the routine work, AI frees humans to focus on collaboration, creativity, and critical thinking.”

Ibrahim Alseghayr, managing director of Salesforce ֱ. (Supplied)

Alseghayr points to Agentic AI — systems that can act on a company’s behalf — as already transforming service centers, financial operations, and citizen engagement platforms. In ֱ, he sees huge potential for digital labor in scaling mega-projects like Neom, automating logistics networks, and delivering smarter healthcare services.

He cautioned that this transformation must be carefully managed. “We need strong governance, testing environments, and continuous oversight,” he said. “Otherwise, we risk building tools we do not fully understand, and that could erode trust instead of building it.”

Across all four experts, one theme is clear: global rules and imported frameworks will not suffice. The Arab world must craft its own AI governance models, rooted in its cultural and legal realities.

For Barber, Allam is a test case. “This is the Kingdom’s chance to prove that it can build systems that are not only technically powerful but also aligned with its values,” he added.

DID YOU KNOW?

• Arabic’s complex grammar, dialect diversity, and frequent English–Arabic mixing make it one of the hardest languages for AI to master. 

• ֱ’s Allam is the first homegrown Arabic large language model, designed to think in Arabic rather than translate from English. 

• Vision 2030 projects depend on real-time data, but regulations require strict handling of citizen information.

“Agentic AI can create personalized treatment plans, autonomously monitor patients, and detect early signs of health deterioration before a doctor ever enters the room,” he said.Alidily agrees, emphasizing that governance frameworks must reflect the Gulf’s unique data protection requirements, with regulators working closely with technology providers to define shared standards.

AlBahaian is even more direct. “Trust is earned through systems, not slogans. People need to know where their data is, who is using it, and for what purpose. That is the only way to build confidence at scale.”

The message is clear: Arabic AI’s future will not be decided by model size alone. It will depend on investments in infrastructure, sovereignty, and governance.

ֱ has taken the first step with Allam. What comes next — the data pipelines, virtualized infrastructure, sovereign controls, and digital labor deployments — will determine whether the Kingdom becomes a true AI creator or remains a buyer of foreign-built intelligence.

 


ֱ, China seal $1.74bn investment deals at Beijing forum

ֱ, China seal $1.74bn investment deals at Beijing forum
Updated 25 September 2025

ֱ, China seal $1.74bn investment deals at Beijing forum

ֱ, China seal $1.74bn investment deals at Beijing forum

JEDDAH: ֱ and China signed 42 investment agreements worth over $1.74 billion across advanced industries, smart vehicles, and energy.

The deals, which also covered medical devices, equipment, and mineral resources, were inked at the Saudi-Chinese Business Forum in Beijing, attended by Saudi Minister of Industry and Mineral Resources Bandar Alkhorayef, as part of his official visit.

Organized by the Federation of Saudi Chambers, the forum gathered around 200 companies and public and private sector representatives from both countries, the Saudi Press Agency reported. 

This follows growing bilateral trade between ֱ and China, which surpassed SR403 billion ($107.5 billion) in 2024 — more than doubling in less than a decade — driven by shared goals such as Saudi Vision 2030 and China’s Belt and Road Initiative. 

In a post on his X handle, Alkhorayef said: “During my participation in the Saudi-Chinese Business Forum in the capital, Beijing, I affirmed the strength of the partnership between our two friendly nations, and the Kingdom’s keenness to expand this partnership to support our goals in industry and mining, strengthen international supply chains, and enhance our presence as an economic force contributing to the growth of the global economy.” 

He noted ֱ remains a key supplier of fuel, petrochemicals, and advanced materials, while China is the largest source of machinery, electronics, transport equipment, and consumer goods, with trade increasingly diversifying into high-value industries. 

The minister highlighted that Chinese investment in ֱ grew about 30 percent in 2024, surpassing SR31 billion, with growth in mining, automotive manufacturing, and petrochemicals. More than 750 Chinese companies operate in the Kingdom, including investors in NEOM, Jubail Industrial City, and Jazan City for Primary and Downstream Industries.  

Conversely, Saudi investments in China exceed SR8 billion, alongside memorandums of understanding with Chinese financial institutions valued at $50 billion. 

Alkhorayef emphasized the alignment of Vision 2030 with the Belt and Road Initiative to enhance connectivity, expand trade, and build resilient industrial systems.  

He added that efforts are underway to establish new supply chain corridors linking Asia with the Middle East, Africa, and Europe, reinforcing ֱ’s role as a global industrial and logistics hub. 


ֱ freezes rents in Riyadh for 5 years

ֱ freezes rents in Riyadh for 5 years
Updated 25 September 2025

ֱ freezes rents in Riyadh for 5 years

ֱ freezes rents in Riyadh for 5 years
  • Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman directed that the measures be enforced as part of broader efforts to safeguard tenant and landlord rights
  • Freeze could be extended to other cities and regions

RIYADH: ֱ has enacted sweeping new regulations to stabilize rental prices in Riyadh, including a five-year freeze on increases for residential and commercial properties. 

The measures, approved by the Cabinet and enacted by a royal decree, are designed to address surging rents in the capital and restore balance to the property market. 

Effective Sept. 25, landlords will no longer be permitted to increase rental values in existing or new contracts within Riyadh’s urban boundaries for a period of five years, according to a report by the Saudi Press Agency. 

The General Real Estate Authority will also have the authority to extend the freeze to other cities or regions with the approval of the Council of Economic and Development Affairs. 

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman directed that the measures be enforced as part of broader efforts to safeguard tenant and landlord rights, strengthen transparency, and ensure fair competition in the rental market, while supporting sustainable urban development in Riyadh, according to SPA.

The news agency’s report stated: “The General Authority for Real Estate has studied the procedures in accordance with the best international practices and experiences to regulate the relationship between the landlord and the tenant.”

Under the new framework, rents for vacant units that were previously leased will be fixed at the value of the last registered contract, while rents for properties that have never been leased will continue to be determined by agreement between landlord and tenant. 

All lease agreements must be registered on the government’s Ejar digital platform, with both landlords and tenants entitled to submit contracts for registration. The other party will have 60 days to object before the contract is considered legally valid. 

The regulations also establish automatic renewal for leases across the Kingdom unless one party gives at least 60 days’ notice before expiration. 

Contracts with less than 90 days remaining at the time of implementation are exempt, as are leases terminated by mutual agreement after the notice period. 

In Riyadh, landlords cannot refuse to renew a contract if the tenant wishes to continue occupancy, except in three cases: non-payment of rent, structural safety issues verified by an official technical report, or the landlord’s personal need for the unit or that of an immediate family member. 

The authority may also define additional exceptions in the future. 

Landlords may challenge fixed rental values in specific circumstances, including when substantial renovations have increased property value, when the last lease contract predates 2024, or in other cases approved by the authority. The body will establish mechanisms to review and decide on such objections. 

Violations of the new system will carry fines of up to 12 months’ rent for the affected unit, alongside requirements to correct the violation and compensate the injured party. 

Penalties will be determined by committees established under Article 20 of the Real Estate Mediation Law. Landlords and tenants found in violation may appeal decisions within 30 days to the competent judicial authority. 

Whistleblowers who are not directly involved in enforcement may also receive up to 20 percent of the collected fine if their information results in a confirmed violation, with distribution rules set by the authority. 

Where the new regulations do not provide explicit guidance, provisions of the Civil Transactions Law will apply. 

The Cabinet also retains the right to amend the rules based on recommendations from the Council of Economic and Development Affairs and future reports from the General Real Estate Authority. 

The authority has been tasked with monitoring compliance, publishing clarifications, and providing public education on the new rules. 

It will also deliver periodic reports on rental prices and market performance.


ֱ pitches mining opportunities to French firms

ֱ pitches mining opportunities to French firms
Updated 25 September 2025

ֱ pitches mining opportunities to French firms

ֱ pitches mining opportunities to French firms

JEDDAH: French companies were pitched investment opportunites in ֱ’s mining sector as the Kingdom prepares to launch a competitive tender on Sept. 28 for 162 new mining exploration sites. 

Some 15 firms took part in a virtual seminar, where they heard about projects located in the Al-Naqrah and Sukhaybarah Al-Safra belts in the Madinah region, according to a press release from the Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources. 

The plan is part of a broader effort to open more than 50,000 sq. km of mineralized belts to investors by 2025. 

The initiative reflects ֱ’s drive to accelerate mineral exploration and attract diverse investment, leveraging the Kingdom’s mineral wealth — estimated at SR9.4 trillion ($2.5 trillion) — to boost non‑oil revenue alongside the oil and petrochemical sectors. It also aligns with Vision 2030 goals to develop the mining sector, maximize economic benefits, and establish mining as a third pillar of industry. 

In the press release, the ministry stated: “The seminar highlighted the advanced infrastructure supporting mining projects, including transportation, communications, and logistics networks. This reduces the timeframe for implementing and operating mining projects and enhances the competitiveness and attractiveness of the mining investment environment in the Kingdom. 

The seminar also served as preparation for the Saudi-French Mining Day on Oct. 8 in Riyadh, organized in partnership with the French Embassy, as the Kingdom seeks to establish mining as a third industrial pillar under Vision 2030. 

It will underscore both nations’ commitment to advancing collaboration in critical minerals, technology transfer, and sustainable mining practices. 

The meeting follows Minister of Industry and Mineral Resources Bandar Alkhorayef’s visit to France in early May, where he held discussions with senior officials from several French companies, including the CEO of Orano Mining. 

The Paris visit focused on securing a stable supply of critical minerals, such as lithium and cobalt, essential to ֱ’s green energy initiatives and the growing electric vehicle sector. 

Alkhorayef also met with France’s Interministerial Delegate for Strategic Minerals and Metals Supplies, Benjamin Gallezot, to explore ways to strengthen global supply chain resilience and promote sustainability in the mining sector. 


Saudi banks driving GCC surge in US dollar debt issuance to fuel Vision 2030 growth: Fitch

Saudi banks driving GCC surge in US dollar debt issuance to fuel Vision 2030 growth: Fitch
Updated 25 September 2025

Saudi banks driving GCC surge in US dollar debt issuance to fuel Vision 2030 growth: Fitch

Saudi banks driving GCC surge in US dollar debt issuance to fuel Vision 2030 growth: Fitch

RIYADH: ֱ’s banking sector is leading a shift in Gulf financing, driving a surge in US dollar-denominated subordinated debt to fund rapid credit growth and ambitious national projects, a new analysis showed. 

Fitch Ratings said Saudi banks are at the forefront of this regional trend, which is expected to continue into 2026 amid rising capital needs and tighter regulatory requirements. 

As the Saudi government pushes ahead with multi-trillion-dollar Vision 2030 initiatives, banks are turning to global US dollar markets to raise crucial capital, boosting issuance of complex, high-yield subordinated bonds. 

So far in 2025, Gulf Cooperation Council banks have issued over $55 billion in US dollar debt, already surpassing 2024’s total of $36 billion. “Over half ($29.3 billion) is from Saudi banks, including $11.7 billion in additional Tier 1 (AT1) and Tier 2 capital,” the agency said. 

Subordinated debt now accounts for over 70 percent of Saudi banks’ dollar issuance, up from about 50 percent in 2024, reflecting a move toward riskier instruments that strengthen banks’ capital bases. 

Fitch cited several drivers behind the surge. Saudi banks are experiencing the strongest credit growth in the GCC, projected at 12 percent in 2025. This lending boom, which finances large-scale Vision 2030 projects, is outpacing deposit growth and gradually eroding capital buffers. 

“Strong financing growth is outpacing deposit growth and has eroded capital buffers in recent years. The sector common equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio decreased by 213bp over 2020-2024,” the report noted. 

Upcoming regulatory changes — including a 1 percent countercyclical buffer from May 2026 and tighter interest-rate risk rules — are expected to add further pressure on capital ratios.

Additionally, financing major Vision 2030 projects carries higher risk weightings under Basel III rules, further straining core capital. 

While AT1 instruments continue to dominate non-core capital markets, Saudi banks are also diversifying. They have issued nearly $6 billion in Tier 2 debt in 2025, helping balance their capital structure and attract a broader base of international investors. 

Fitch expects issuance momentum to continue into 2026, supported by over $10 billion of maturing debt that needs refinancing, ongoing financing demand, and anticipated lower interest rates.

About $1.8 billion of AT1 instruments reaching their first call date next year are also expected to be redeemed under favorable market conditions. 

Fitch Ratings had predicted that GCC banks are set to exceed $60 billion of US dollar debt issuance in 2025, and $40 billion excluding certificates of deposit, surpassing the record levels of 2024. 

In a report released earlier this month, the agency said the surge is driven by heightened maturities, strong credit growth and favorable financing conditions.