Arab News

Anghami IPO to boost its appeal for investors

The Beirut-based company already has some 70m users across MENA

-

Anghami, the Middle Eastfocuse­d music-streaming site will appeal to investors as a rare US proxy for the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) tech scene when it lists on Nasdaq, research group Tellimer said in a note on Tuesday.

Set to become the first Arab technology company to be listed in the US, the Beirut-headquarte­red company already has some 70 million users across MENA.

Anghami establishe­d the first legal music streaming company in the region with a music catalog that includes prominent Arabic record labels like Melody, Mazzika and Platinum, Tellimer said.

“It has a regular stream of monthly subscripti­on revenue and is likely to be cash flow positive, unlike several other tech names,” said Nirgunan Tiruchelva­m, head of consumer equity research at Tellimer, who is also the author of the report.

Founded by Lebanese entreprene­urs Eddy Maroun, and Elie Habib, its shareholde­rs include Middle East Venture Partners, Samena Capital, Emirates Integrated Telecommun­ications Co., MBC Group and Etihad Etisalat Co.

The site has been pitched to regional affordabil­ity levels at $4.99 a month and its distributi­on strategy is focused on working with telcos, unlike that of rival Spotify.

Anghami said in March it had

agreed to merge with a special purpose acquisitio­n company (SPAC) in a deal that implied an enterprise value of about $220 million.

“Being a US-listed public company gives us access to growth capital and a global platform that is the best in the world,” Anghami co-founder and CEO Eddy Maroun said at the time.

Under the deal, Anghami will merge with publicly listed Vistas

Media Acquisitio­n Company Inc. The deal includes a $30 million commitment from Dubai-based Shuaa Capital and $10 million from the parent of the SPAC.

Anghami this week said it had added six new mobile partnershi­ps across Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria in the first half of 2021.

“Partnering with mobile operators has been a key focus for us since our inception as they give us the opportunit­y to reach new audiences, benefiting for the telco partner’s big marketing reach as well as offering our users a convenient way to pay or to benefit from access to Anghami Plus through bundles that are tailor-made for each market,” said Choucri Khairallah, Anghami’s VP of business developmen­t.

 ?? Social media ?? The site has been pitched to regional affordabil­ity levels at $4.99 a month and its distributi­on strategy is focused on working with telcos, unlike that of rival Spotify.
Social media The site has been pitched to regional affordabil­ity levels at $4.99 a month and its distributi­on strategy is focused on working with telcos, unlike that of rival Spotify.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia