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MIDDLE EAST FUNDING FOR START-UPS SURGES DURING FIRST HALF OF YEAR

Some 87 deals worth $140m were sealed during opening six months compared to 75 in the first half of 2016

- MAHMOUD KASSEM MASSOUD A DERHALLY

The number of start-up funding deals in the UAE surged in the first half of the year following Amazon’s high-profile acquisitio­n of local online retailer Souq.com and a US$150 million investment in the ride-hailing service Careem.

The rise in the number of investment­s also comes amid intensifyi­ng efforts by government­s in the region to help small businesses get off the ground as they seek to diversify economies away from oil revenues, cultivate talent and promote entreprene­urship.

According to the start-up online community platform Magnitt, $140m was invested in 87 transactio­ns, excluding money invested in Souq and Careem, during the first half of the year compared to 75 deals valued at $193m in the first half of 2016.

Although it may be premature to determine if there is an immediate impact of Amazon’s purchase of Ronaldo Mouchawar’s Souq.com, the biggest buyout of a start up in the UAE and Arab world to date, industry players and investors say it has been a boon to entreprene­urs and the local start-up ecosystem.

“I don’t think we have seen necessaril­y an immediate pickup in investment because of that deal,” said Philip Bahoshy, founder and chief executive of the start-up online community platform Magnitt.

“However, that deal did generate a huge amount of media attention on the Middle East and given that investment cycles usually take up six to nine months I wouldn’t be surprised if we see increased investment in national players, in local start-ups nearer the end of the year. It was definitely positive by raising awareness.”

Amazon purchased Souq. com in a $650m deal in March. The e-commerce sector has been rapidly growing in the UAE thanks to the country’s affluent and digitally savvy population as well as the rapid adoption of technology. Mergers and acquisitio­ns in the industry have picked up pace over the past year.

There is also a notable push by a number of home-grown brands to go beyond brick and mortar operations that have traditiona­lly defined the retail landscape, with a pivot to develop the online shopping industry and directly challenge Amazon.

The expected launch of Noon. com, a $1 billion venture between Mohamed Alabbar, the chairman of Emaar Properties, and the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia is one such platform. Emaar Malls’ 51 per cent stake in fashion site Namshi and Majid Al Futtaim

The acquisitio­n of Souq ‘shook traditiona­l families and businesses in the region to wake up faster’

Holding’s investment in delivery app Fetchr are also examples of emerging home-grown success stories.

The acquisitio­n of Souq “shook traditiona­l families and businesses in the region to wake up faster and realise that digital disruption and the retail industry is under serious threat,” said Fadi Ghandour, founder of the courier service Aramex and head of the regional venture capital firm Wamda Capital.

“It’s not only a western nor an American phenomenon. This created an acute awareness that this digital disruption has arrived in the region and Amazon is the ultimate mall disruptor.”

“My bet is in the coming year you’re going to see a lot of money coming into the early growth stage of digital companies in the region.”

That rapid growth is already reflected in the investment­s made in start-ups. According to Magnitt, e-commerce took the lion’s share of deals in the first half at 16 per cent, followed by technology at 13 per cent and Fintech at 10 per cent.

The flourishin­g of start-ups in the UAE comes amid intensifyi­ng efforts by government­s to boost small and medium-sized industries through mentorship initiative­s such as the one undertaken by the Abu Dhabi Global Market, the Emirate’s nascent financial hub.

Funding is still often the biggest obstacle to start-ups and small businesses. Abdul Aziz Al Ghurair, the chairman of the UAE Banks Federation and chief executive of Mashreq, said in March that SMEs continue to suffer from lack of financing from banks and urged lenders to extend more money to fledgling businesses.

Samih Toukan, the founder of Maktoob, the earliest successful exit in the Arab world that was sold to Yahoo, believes the best is yet to come.

“Start-ups will certainly benefit as investment accelerate­s... we are now looking at several investment­s and we have many other investors looking at the same deals and willing to participat­e,” said Mr Toukan, who now chairs Jabbar Internet Group.

“Today good start-ups with strong teams and showing good growth are finding investment more readily,” said Mr Toukan.

 ?? Mona Al Marzooqi / The National ?? Ronaldo Mouchawar, the CEO of Souq.com, now sold to Amazon
Mona Al Marzooqi / The National Ronaldo Mouchawar, the CEO of Souq.com, now sold to Amazon
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