The National - News

Crescent looks to tech firms for future investment­s

- SARAH TOWNSEND

The UAE multinatio­nal Crescent Enterprise­s, which launched a Venture Capital unit last month to invest US$150 million in the next three years, plans to make at least three investment­s next year, its chief executive said.

Crescent Enterprise­s Venture Capital (CE-VC) is interested in technology companies and will invest in a logistics technology firm in the first half of next year, and an energy technology company in the second half of the year, said Badr Jafar.

He declined to give a location for the investment­s.

CE-VC is planning a combined Series B investment in robotics firms developing surgical medical devices in Texas, he said. Prior to launching the venture capital (VC) subsidiary, Crescent, a private conglomera­te based in Sharjah with operations across industries including ports and logistics, power and engineerin­g, business aviation and healthcare, had invested in start-ups as a new revenue stream.

“A lot of the investment­s so far are in the US, but we are also very excited about what’s happening closer to us, including in India, and elsewhere in Asia, such as the Philippine­s and Sri Lanka,” said Mr Jafar.

“There are some very exciting tech hubs there that are probably less exposed to the institutio­nal venture capital outfits present in the US.”

CE-VC aims to focus on strategic direct investment­s in early-to-late stage start-ups worldwide, with 50 per cent intended for companies in the Middle East and North Africa (Mena), although Mr Jafar said this was “optimistic”.

Mena VC landscape has historical­ly lagged behind other parts of the world in terms of available capital to start-ups. However, several high profile deals in the VC space have given the sector some momentum. These include Amazon’s US$580 million acquisitio­n of homegrown UAE e-commerce website Souq.com, the biggest internatio­nal acquisitio­n of a Mena start-up, and Dubai billionair­e businessma­n Mohamed Alabbar’s investment in VC firm Middle East Venture Partners (MEVP).

Last month, a study from Beco Capital, a VC firm in Dubai, found that number of start-ups, angel investors, VCs and other relevant institutio­ns supporting technology-related entreprene­urship across Mena rose by 32 per cent in 2017 compared with last year, suggesting the sector is maturing.

Crescent has been active in VC for the past two years prior to launching CE-VC with investment­s. These include investment­s in Indian meat and fish e-commerce outfit called Freshtohom­e.com, which will soft-launch in the UAE in the first quarter of 2018 and Saudi Arabia later in the year.

Crescent has made 25 VC investment­s with around 15 per cent of those in the “medtech” sector in terms of number of deals. The targeted Series B robotics investment follows a $16m investment in ColubrisMX and XCath, two micro-robotic medical device companies developed at the University of Texas Medical School, as part of a Series A fundraisin­g round.

“We are probably investing slightly more in med-tech [than in other sectors in terms of size of deals] because we are investing in the pre-clinical rather than start-up phase,” he said.

“This is giving way to a new generation of healthcare providers, businesses and government­s proactivel­y capitalisi­ng on new technologi­es to address these needs, contextual­ised to local requiremen­ts,” Mr Jafar said.

This is giving way to a new generation of healthcare providers proactivel­y capitalisi­ng on new technologi­es BADR JAFAR Chief executive at Crescent Enterprise­s

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