Wrapping up the Milken Middle East and Africa Summit

☀️ Hello from Abu Dhabi,

Over the course of two days of policy discussions, dinner parties, and dealmaking, the Milken Institute Middle East and Africa Summit addressed issues ranging from the multibillion-dollar challenges of harnessing artificial intelligence in the Gulf to fostering innovation in developing countries across the African continent.

Laying out the agenda when the conference opened at the St. Regis Sadiyaat Island Resort on Thursday, Dec. 4, founder Michael Milken said his key interests were in exploring the opportunities presented by AI in the Middle East and Africa, as well as the importance of improving health care and education to make the region attractive to foreign investment.

“For 100 years, the most millionaires and entrepreneurs moved to the United States,” Milken said. “Today, the UAE is the No. 1 location for millionaires and entrepreneurs moving.” He added: “So many people have opinions who have never been here and so part of the reason for these sessions is to let people see the world with their own eyes.”

Among the investors, corporate executives and policymakers who took part in the Milken Summit were Mubadala CEO Khaldoon Al Mubarak and Deputy CEO Waleed Al Mokarrab Al Muhairi, Emaar’s Mohamed Alabbar, former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Steven Mnuchin, GCC Secretary-General Jasem Al Budaiwi, 2pointZero’s Mariam AlMheiri, UAE Minister of State for AI, Digital Economy and Remote Work Applications Omar Al Olama, Saudi Culture House founder Princess Noura bint Faisal, Greycroft’s Dana Settle and Maaden’s Bob Wilt.

Around the Summit

At a session titled “Vision, Velocity, Victory: The Sports Investment Playbook,” Dhani Jones, Chairman, QEY Capital; Susie Wolff, Managing Director, F1 Academy; Danny Townsend; CEO, SURJ Sports Investments; Jamie Salter, Founder, Authentic Brands; and Ben Harburg, Managing Partner, Novo Capital and MSA Capital. (Milken Institute)

Artificial intelligence dominated opening discussions at the conference. Milken noted the biggest capital expenditures globally are now flowing into AI data centers, warning that “the world has changed and we can see it.” UAE AI Minister Omar Al Olama emphasized the dangers of fake information eroding trust. “If trust is being eroded, it will mean a tsunami of change that is going to be negative,” he said.

Mubadala Deputy CEO Waleed Al Mokarrab Al Muhairi offered a cautious view on private credit during a markets panel. “We’ve had four fantastic years in private credit, and we know that’s likely to perform cyclically,” he said. He predicted continued resilience despite a slowdown.

Kimbal Musk stepped in for his more famous brother at the summit’s “Visionaries of Tomorrow” program. Musk, a co-founder of Nova Sky Stories, spoke about using fleets of light-emitting drones to “turn the night sky into a canvas for storytelling.” He also noted his roles at Tesla, The Kitchen restaurant group and the education nonprofit Big Green. His message centered on innovation that inspires younger generations.

Sports executives said Saudi Arabia’s investment strategy must target the next generation of fans to pay off. SURJ Sports Investments CEO Danny Townsend said he cares more about engaging “a 10-year-old in a sport we invest in than engaging someone my age.” He argued that long-term value comes from delivering “the right product” to young audiences. U.S. investor Ben Harburg noted Saudi supporters’ passion, recalling young fans presenting him printed pages with tactical advice for his Al-Kholood soccer club.

Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed, Abu Dhabi’s Crown Prince and Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Executive Council, met with Michael Milken on the sidelines of the conference. Also attending were Mubadala CEO Khaldoon Al Mubarak, Chairman of Abu Dhabi’s Executive Affairs Authority,  and former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Steven Mnuchin, founder of Liberty Strategic Capital.

Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed, Abu Dhabi’s Crown Prince and Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Executive Council, met with Michael Milken on the sidelines of the summit on Thursday. (Abu Dhabi Media Office)

Why do Milken Summit participants pay more than $15,000 to register for the gathering in the UAE’s capital city? It’s largely for the shoulder-rubbing opportunities in the plush lobbies of the St. Regis. Martin Edelman, for instance, the American real estate lawyer and board member of G42, who is known as the Abu Dhabi royal family’s “Man in Manhattan,” chatted with other attendees  while nibbling appetizers outside the main plenary hall. Investment banker Lawrence Golub was also buttonholed numerous times as he strode to meetings elsewhere in the hotel.

U.S. Ambassador to Turkey Tom Barrack said regional stability in the Middle East will depend on economic development rather than political mandates, calling prosperity “the only thing that works.” He argued the U.S. should “let the region be the region” and end Western attempts to impose solutions that have repeatedly failed. Highlighting energy corridors and reconstruction in Syria and Lebanon, Barrack said American investment can “help everything” once sanctions and other barriers are lifted. “You kill one terrorist, you create ten – that can’t be the answer,” he said, urging regional governments to pursue business-driven integration instead of military confrontation.

U.S. Ambassador to NATO Matthew Whitaker said America can no longer “provide the defense for the entire globe” and urged European and Asian allies to boost military spending to match surging threats from Russia and China. He warned that peace requires strength, saying “if we are weak… that will be exploited by our adversaries.” Whitaker argued that innovation and lower-cost weapons systems must replace “exquisite, fancy, million-dollar missiles” as warfare evolves with drones and autonomous technology. He said reducing regulation and protectionist trade barriers would drive global growth and help fund defense modernization.

Susie Wolff, managing director of Formula One’s all-female F1 Academy program, said investors are pouring into the sport as it transforms into a global cultural brand with soaring demand and sold-out races. She noted that “so many brands [want] to turn up,” pointing to how empty grandstands just six years ago have become packed venues that are driving new commercial momentum. Wolff said the sport must ensure its rapidly growing, younger fan base – now 42% female –  “feel connected to the sport.”

Fanta Conde, Partner at CrossBoundary Advisory based in Conakry, Guinea, told The Circuit’s Omnia Al Desoukie her perspective on the summit: “The Middle East and Africa have a very close and rapidly growing relationship. As a partner focusing on Africa, it’s important for me to be here and engage in these key dialogues with partners in the Middle East, and to understand how we can strengthen collaboration, attract more investment from the Middle East into Africa, and vice versa.”

Michael Milken closed the summit by returning to the theme of AI’s sweeping impact on business and finance. He spotlighted Mubadala as an example and asked CEO Khaldoon Al Mubarak to grade its integration of advanced technology. Al Mubarak cited G42, MGX and a U.S.–UAE partnership to build an AI campus in Abu Dhabi, calling the shift “like going from a speed of 5 kilometers an hour to about 250 kilometers an hour.” 

The Daily Circuit: ADFW draws global investors + Binance gets Abu Dhabi OK

In The Daily Circuit today, we’re reporting on Abu Dhabi’s $16 billion expansion of its ADGM free zone, PIF-backed Lucid expanding its electric car network in Saudi Arabia, ADIA joining a group of investors that bought out British American Tobacco’s $776 million stake in India’s ITC Hotels and DP World’s agreement to modernize Afghanistan’s ports. But first, investors pour into Abu Dhabi for ADFW and Bitcoin MENA.

Abu Dhabi this week is hosting both the sprawling Abu Dhabi Finance Week event and the Bitcoin MENA conference, drawing crypto, finance and institutional investors to the UAE’s capital from around the world.

Headlining the Bitcoin event is Changpeng Zhao, the founder of Binance better known as CZ, who was pardoned by U.S. President Donald Trump in October after pleading guilty to violating money laundering laws. Also appearing are Ahmed Bin Sulayem, Executive Chairman & CEO of the Dubai Multi-Commodity Centre; Abdulla Al Dhaheri, CEO of The Blockchain Center; Faisal Al Hammadi, Managing Partner at Further Ventures; and Ali Alnuaimi, Founder at Shafra.

Amid the gatherings, Binance received formal approval from Abu Dhabi Global Market’s regulatory authority to provide global platform services from Abu Dhabi via three licensed entities – an exchange, a clearing house, and a broker-dealer. Under the arrangement, Binance’s regulated operations are set to begin January 5, 2026.

Missing this year is Eric Trump, who spoke to a packed hall last year before Donald Trump took office and promised that his father would be the most pro-crypto President ever. Excitement over crypto appeared not to be dampened much by the 30% slide in Bitcoin’s value.

“This year has certainly been an interesting one where we started well, went sideways, came a little bit lower and leveraged positions,” Sam North, a market analyst at eToro, told The Circuit’s Omnia Al Desoukie at the conference. “But overall, I think it has been a good year.”

Editor’s Note: Kindly let us know your thoughts and feedback by replying to this newsletter or emailing us at [email protected].

📰 Developing Stories

Abu Dhabi is planning a $16 billion expansion of its ADGM free zone, as the hedge funds, banks and fintech companies that have been flocking to one of the region’s fastest growing financial hubs demand more space to expand. The emirate’s Mubadala sovereign fund and its biggest developer, Aldar Properties, are partnering on the mixed-use development, which will double the Grade A office space available on Al Maryah Island and add another 3,000 luxury residences, Bloomberg reports. The number of operational entities within ADGM rose to 3,227 in the third quarter, up 43% year-on-year. Billionaire Alan Howard told Abu Dhabi Finance Week that his hedge fund, Brevan Howard Asset Management, which is Abu Dhabi’s largest, has run out of office space and is looking for more. Balyasny Asset Management, a $29 billion multi-strategy hedge fund, is the latest newcomer, with plans to open an office early next year.

Saudi Arabia has quietly eased its strict alcohol rules this week, allowing non-Muslim foreign residents who earn at least 50,000 riyals ($13,300) per month to purchase liquor from the country’s only licensed store in Riyadh if they show proof of income, Bloomberg reports. Previously, only foreign diplomats had access to alcohol sales – and more recently, residents with so-called premium visas. The store operates under a system where buyers’ income is checked via a Saudi platform before purchases are allowed. Loosening the restrictions is part of broader efforts to make the kingdom more attractive to expats, investors and international businesses.

💲 Sovereign Circuit

Public Investment Fund: PIF-backed U.S. electric vehicle maker Lucid has expanded its network in Saudi Arabia.

ADQ: AD Ports Group’s Karachi Gateway Terminal Multipurpose Limited and Louis Dreyfus Company have signed a long-term agreement to develop and operate a modern clean-bulk agricultural handling and storage facility at Karachi Port.

Abu Dhabi Investment Authority: ADIA is among investors who bought out British American Tobacco’s $776 million stake in India’s ITC Hotels.

Oman Investment Authority: OQ Gas Networks, part of OIA, has invited bids to build Oman’s first 800km carbon-waste pipeline, linking major industrial free zones in Sohar, Duqm, and Salalah.

↪↩ Closing Circuit

🤝 Afghan Alliance: DP World signed an agreement with the Afghan Ministry of Finance to modernize the country’s ports.

🌐 Fintech Milestone: Turkey’s Paribu has acquired a majority stake in Bahrain- and Dubai-based CoinMENA in a deal valuing the firm at up to $240 million.

💰 Funding Found: U.K.-based Wood Group secured access to $450 million in new funding from Dubai-based suitor Sidara after meeting key conditions, marking a major milestone in the year-long takeover bid.

🗣 Circuit Chatter

💼 New Bureau: U.K.-based hedge fund Man Group has applied for a license to open an Abu Dhabi office next year. 

🏗️ Big Bucks: Egypt’s Palm Hills Developments aims to generate more than $7 billion in sales from its first UAE project and expects to begin construction next spring, chairman Yassin Mansour told Reuters.

📈 Debt Market: GCC debt issuance soared to a decade high of $226 billion by November 2025, far outpacing last year’s record and contrasting sharply with the region’s weakest IPO activity since 2020, S&P Global Market Intelligence reported.

🌍 Power Circuit

Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Executive Council, and Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed, UAE National Security Advisor, met with Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella in Abu Dhabi on Sunday. Sheikh Khaled also met with Daniel Noboa, President of Ecuador, on the sidelines of the Abu Dhabi Formula One Grand Prix on Sunday.

Sheikh Theyab bin Mohamed, Deputy Chairman of the Presidential Court for Development and Fallen Heroes’ Affairs, met with Bill Gates, Chairman of the Gates Foundation, on the sidelines of Abu Dhabi Formula One Grand Prix on Sunday.

Sheikha Latifa bint Mohammed, Chairperson of Dubai Culture and Arts Authority, met with a delegation of Africa’s leading business and philanthropic figures to discuss opportunities for collaboration. 

➿ On the Circuit

Noura Al Kaabi, UAE Minister of State, was among the figures who paid tribute to famed architect Frank Gehry, after he died on Friday aged 96. Gehry designed the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, which is due to open next year.

Jihad Azour, International Monetary Fund Regional Director, told The National that the U.S.’s November decision to allow advanced chip exports to the UAE’s G42 and Saudi Arabia’s Humain marked a major boost to both countries’ AI ambitions, signalling their emergence as serious players in the sector.

Saad Sherida Al Kaabi, Qatar’s Energy Minister, said at the Doha Forum on Saturday that he’s “really worried” that a lack of investment and a surge in energy use from AI will create a shortage of LNG and natural gas supplies beyond 2035, Bloomberg reports.

Yasir Al Rumayyan, Governor of the Public Investment Fund, took part in a mini-hackathon where he personally built a “fantastic” stock trading assistant with Replit, Amjad Masad, CEO of Replit tweeted on Sunday.

Hamad Ali Al Khater was named Qatar Airways Group CEO, succeeding Badr Mohammed Al-Meer after just two years in the post. 

Maryam AlBalooshi, Senior Manager of the Environmental Affairs Office at the UAE’s General Civil Aviation Authority, has been elected as Chair of the Committee on Aviation Environmental Protection of the International Civil Aviation Organization.

🎶 Culture Circuit

🌷 Art Roulette: A 66 million-year-old triceratops skull fossil, Jeff Koons’ large-scale “Tulips” sculpture and a 17th century tapestry are among the eclectic pieces to be displayed at Wynn’s Al Marjan Island casino resort when it opens in 2027, The National reports. Wynn has shared a preview of the extensive collection of art and artifacts it has curated for an “immersive living gallery” experience at the Ras Al Khaimah resort, which will be the first gaming facility to open in the Gulf region.

📷 Photo of the Day

British racecar driver Lando Norris, the new F1 World Drivers Champion, celebrates with McLaren teammates after placing third in the Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi Grand Prix 2025 at Yas Marina Circuit on Sunday. (Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

📅 Circuit Calendar

Dec. 8-9, Riyadh. Hydrogen Arabia Summit & Exhibition. The inaugural event is aimed at positioning the Kingdom as a hub for hydrogen and clean energy collaboration. Crowne Plaza Riyadh RDC.

Dec. 8-9, Abu Dhabi. Bitcoin MENA 2025. An event dedicated to advancing Bitcoin and blockchain understanding and adoption. ADNEC Center.

Dec. 8-9, Kuwait City. Kuwait Risk Management Summit. Equipping leaders in enterprise risk, audit, and compliance with the latest insights and actionable strategies to tackle the evolving risk landscape. Kuwait Four Seasons Hotel.

Dec. 8-9, Abu Dhabi. Global AI Show. A leading forum examining investment opportunities in artificial intelligence. Space42 Arena.

Dec. 8-10, Abu Dhabi. BRIDGE Summit. Bringing together media executives, innovators, academia and NGOs, policymakers, and thought leaders to redefine the media landscape. ADNEC Center.

Dec. 8-11, Abu Dhabi. Abu Dhabi Finance Week. The largest financial event in the region, brings together the world’s top minds to redefine and shape the future of global markets. The Grand Steps, Al Maryah Island.

Dec. 18-23, Abu Dhabi. Games of the Future. A forum to discuss trends and investment opportunities in digital gaming. ADNEC. 

Dec. 29-30, Dubai. World Sports Summit. Athletes, investors and decision makers discuss how sports can change the face of humanity. Madinat Jumeirah Arena.

The Daily Circuit: Milken quizzes Mubadala chief + Abu Dhabi F1 Grand Prix

In The Daily Circuit today, we’re at the Milken Institute’s Middle East and Africa Summit, where Mubadala’s Khaldoon Al Mubarak and Michael Milken concluded proceedings with an on-stage chat. We’re also reporting on Netflix buying Warner Bros. for $72 billion, sidestepping a Gulf-backed bid from Paramount; Emirates NBD mulling the purchase of a $7 billion Indian bank stake, and the three-way showdown brewing at Abu Dhabi’s Formula One Grand Prix. But first, to the conference.

Michael Milken wrapped up his annual Middle East and Africa Summit today the same way he started it a day earlier, hailing the integration of artificial intelligence into all aspects of business and finance.

As he did in 2024, Milken used Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala sovereign wealth fund as a use case, asking CEO Khaldoon Al Mubarak for a report card on its campaign to incorporate AI into all decision making.

Al Mubarak talked about turning the fund’s G42 technology firm into a cauldron for AI development, about establishing MGX as a key vehicle for investing in AI companies and the establishment of the UAE’s Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence. Then he cited U.S. President Donald Trump’s visit in May when the two countries agreed to build a 19-kilometer campus in Abu Dhabi for the development of AI technology and the U.S. administration’s decision to allow export of the most advanced AI chips to the UAE.

“This is like going from a speed of 5 kilometers an hour to about 250 kilometers an hour,” Al Mubarak said.

Al Mubarak also credited Milken for inspiring him to establish Mubadala Capital as the first sovereign investor to manage third-party money. “This is a process you helped seed. You give advice, you drop hints – but the responsibility is on us to act,” Al Mubarak said. “Mike not only gave advice – he backed it with his own money as one of our first investors. Over time, we’ve been very successful.

Editor’s Note: Kindly let us know your thoughts and feedback by replying to this newsletter or emailing us at [email protected].

📰 Developing Stories

Saudi Arabia is working to engage its sports fans from the bottom up. As Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman pours billions of dollars into international golf, tennis and football, Danny Townsend, CEO of Saudi Arabia’s SURJ Sports Investments, says it’s vital to get the young generation hooked when they’re young. “Frankly, I care far more about engaging a 10-year-old in a sport we invest in than engaging someone my age,” Townsend said in a panel discussion about sports at the Milken Summit. “If we get the product right and deliver it the right way for that young fan, the long-term value follows.” Ben Harburg, the American investor who bought Saudi Arabia’s Al-Kholood pro soccer club in July, said he’s constantly amazed by the dedication of local fans. “I’ve had fans come up to me at matches with printed A4 pages – line-by-line recommendations on how we should compete in the league, which players to pursue, what style of play to adopt, even preferred formations.”

Netflix agreed to buy Warner Bros. Discovery in a $72 billion deal that pairs the world’s dominant paid streaming service with one of Hollywood’s oldest studios. Under the deal announced today, Warner Bros. shareholders will receive $27.75 a share in cash and stock in Netflix, Bloomberg reports. Netflix beat out a competing bid by David Ellison’s Paramount Skydance, which had backing from the Gulf’s three biggest sovereign wealth funds: Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, the Qatar Investment Authority and the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority. The sale will reshape the media and entertainment landscape globally, including in the Gulf, where Warner Bros. Discovery has interests ranging from content streaming and theme park branding deals to a CNN bureau. Earlier this year it paid $57 million for a 30% share in Dubai-based streamer OSN, which hosts HBO content in the region. 

💲 Sovereign Circuit

Investment Corp. of Dubai: Emirates NBD, majority owned by the Dubai Government’s investment arm, is among the potential bidders for India’s $7 billion majority stake in IDBI Bank, in what could become the largest state-backed bank divestment in decades.

Public Investment Fund: The Saudi Bahraini Investment Co., owned by the PIF, signed an agreement with Mumtalakat, Bahrain’s sovereign wealth fund, to enhance cooperation and investment in strategic sectors.

Oman Investment Authority: OQ Alternative Energy, the OIA backed renewable energy company, is reportedly preparing to approve final investment decisions on 2 gigawatts of projects before year-end, the Oman Daily Observer reports.

↪↩ Closing Circuit

⚽ Star Power: Saudi Arabia-based billionaire footballer Cristiano Ronaldo has taken a stake in Perplexity AI and signed up for a global sponsorship agreement with the California-based startup. 

💵 Building Blocks: Abu Dhabi-listed Investcorp Capital has acquired a $400 million diversified portfolio of industrial assets including properties across coastal markets in the eastern and western U.S.

🚢 Strategic Powerhouse: Morocco’s $4.2 billion Nador West Med port, located in the country’s northeast, is likely to become operational by the end of 2026, CEO Mohamed Jamal Benjelloun told Asharq Business.

🚙 Fancy Drops: Saudi Arabia is now the world’s laregst importer of classic cars, with investments exceeding $26.7 million, amid increased interest in classing car rallies.

🗣 Circuit Chatter

💼 ETF Bonanza: U.S. financial services firm State Street is expanding further in Saudi Arabia, with plans to add a dozen staff and launch a range of new Saudi exchange-traded funds, Bloomberg reports.

🎲 Winning Hand: Las Vegas casino operator Wynn Resorts has told investors that it expects almost 90% of revenue from its UAE project to come from gambling, Arabian Gulf Business Insights reports.

🤝 Good Job: The IMF welcomed Saudi Arabia’s recalibration of Vision 2030 spending as the kingdom moves to narrow its fiscal deficit.

🌱 Solid Growth: The UAE’s economy will grow by 4.8% in 2025, according to the World Bank’s Fall 2025 Gulf Economic Update, as the country continues to achieve strong and broad-based growth.

🛢️ Oil Pricing: Saudi Arabia cut the price of its Arab Light crude to a five-year low, amid signs of a growing surplus, Bloomberg reports.

📈 Kuwait Market: Infracorp, a Bahrain- and Gulf-focused infrastructure and real estate investor, is considering a Kuwait Stock Exchange listing.

🌍 Power Circuit

Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Executive Council, met with Michael Milken and former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Steven Mnuchin on the sidelines of the Milken Summit.

Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed, UAE Minister of Foreign Affairs and Deputy Prime Minister, held a phone call with Antonio Tajani, Italy’s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs on Thursday.

Prince Faisal bin Farhan, Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, and his Qatari counterpart, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman, co-chaired the executive committee meeting of the Saudi-Qatari Coordination Council on Thursday in Riyadh.

Sheikh Ammar bin Humaid, Crown Prince of the northern UAE emirate of Ajman and Chairman of Ajman Executive Council, met with Fares Akkad, Regional Director for the Middle East and Africa at Meta, Mariam Obaid Al Mheiri, Public Policy Manager at Meta, and Ahmad Shehada, Head of Government, Politics and Nonprofits for the Middle East and North Africa at Meta.

➿ On the Circuit

Omar Al Olama, UAE Minister of State for AI, Digital Economy and Remote Work Applications, told attendees at the Milken Summit that his country plans to produce 60 trillions AI tokens, which is equivalent to about 60% of global production and is a key part of the Emirates’ ambitions to be the world’s factory of intelligence.

AbdulKader Husrieh, Syria’s Central Bank Governor, appearing via video link, told the Reuters NEXT conference in New York on Thursday that the country’s economy is growing much faster than the World Bank’s 1% estimate for 2025 as refugees flow back after the end of a 14-year civil war.

Richard Teng, Binance Co-CEO, told The National that the rising convergence of AI, blockchain and rising stablecoin adoption is propelling a major five-to-ten-year transformation in financial services.

🎶 Culture Circuit

🏎️ Broom Broom: Excitement is building for this weekend’s Etihad Airways Formula One Grand Prix, the first time in 15 years that more than two drivers are in contention for the world championship title at the last race of the season. McLaren driver Lando Norris, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen and second McLaren driver Oscar Piastri, are all in the running. Adding to the already high stakes, McLaren’s resurgence comes just three months after Abu Dhabi’s CYVN Holdings and Bahrain’s sovereign fund, Mumtalakat, became full owners of the team in a $5 billion deal. 

📷 Photo of the Day

Michael Milken in conversation with Khaldoon Al Mubarak, Group CEO and Managing Director of the Mubadala sovereign wealth fund and Chairman of Abu Dhabi’s Executive Affairs Authority at the Milken Summit in Abu Dhabi. (Omnia Al Desoukie / The Circuit)

📅 Circuit Calendar

Dec. 4-5, Abu Dhabi. Milken Institute Middle East and Africa Summit. Investors, corporate executives and policymakers gather to discuss prospects for investment in the region. St. Regis Saadiyat Island. The Circuit is an official media partner for Milken Summit and is publishing special editions covering the conference. Make sure you are receiving updates from the Circuit Team!

Dec. 6-7, Doha. Doha Forum. Bringing together leaders in policy to discuss critical challenges facing our world. Sheraton Grand Doha Resort and Convention Hotel.

Dec. 7, Abu Dhabi. F1 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix 2025. The F1 season finale and one of the most hotly anticipated races in motorsport. Yas Marina Circuit. 

Dec. 8-9, Riyadh. Hydrogen Arabia Summit & Exhibition. The inaugural event is aimed at positioning the Kingdom as a hub for hydrogen and clean energy collaboration. Crowne Plaza Riyadh RDC.

Dec. 8-9, Abu Dhabi. Bitcoin MENA 2025. An event dedicated to advancing Bitcoin and blockchain understanding and adoption. ADNEC Center.

Dec. 8-9, Kuwait City. Kuwait Risk Management Summit. Equipping leaders in enterprise risk, audit, and compliance with the latest insights and actionable strategies to tackle the evolving risk landscape. Kuwait Four Seasons Hotel.

Dec. 8-9, Abu Dhabi. Global AI Show. A leading forum examining investment opportunities in artificial intelligence. Space42 Arena.

Dec. 8-10, Abu Dhabi. BRIDGE Summit. Bringing together media executives, innovators, academia and NGOs, policymakers, and thought leaders to redefine the media landscape. ADNEC Center.

Dec. 8-11, Abu Dhabi. Abu Dhabi Finance Week. The largest financial event in the region, brings together the world’s top minds to redefine and shape the future of global markets. The Grand Steps, Al Maryah Island.

Dec. 18-23, Abu Dhabi. Games of the Future. A forum to discuss trends and investment opportunities in digital gaming. ADNEC. 

Dec. 29-30, Dubai. World Sports Summit. Athletes, investors and decision makers discuss how sports can change the face of humanity. Madinat Jumeirah Arena.

What’s on tap at the Milken Middle East and Africa Summit today – Day 2

☀️ Good morning and welcome to The Circuit’s special coverage of the Milken Institute Middle East and Africa Summit. I’m Jonathan Ferziger, here with Omnia Al Desoukie and Louise Burke at the St. Regis Saadiyat Island Resort, to help steer you through the swirl of personalities, dealmaking and dinner parties.

After the opening day’s focus on artificial intelligence and finance, the Milken crowd turns its attention to the business of sports. Out front at noon will be Ben Harburg, Founder of MSA Capital and Novo Capital; Danny Townsend, CEO of Saudi Arabia’s SURJ Sports Investments, and Jamie Salter, Founder and CEO of Authentic Brands Co.

Harburg, a major investor in Palantir, Uber and AirBnB, rocked the Mideast sports world in July when he bought Saudi Arabia’s Al-Kholood pro soccer club. At SURJ, which is owned by the kingdom’s Public Investment Fund, Townsend leads efforts by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, to make Saudi Arabia a major force in international sports.

Adding experience from track and field will be Scotland’s former racing car driver Suzie Wolff, Managing Director of the F1 Academy, and Dhani Jones, Chairman of QEY Capital and a former NFL linebacker who played for the New York Giants and Philadelphia Eagles.

Other headliners on today’s Milken Summit schedule are Tom Barrack, U.S. Ambassador to Turkey and Founder of Los Angeles-based private equity firm Colony Capital; Mansoor Al Mansoori, Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Ministry of Health; Yaseen Mansour, Chairman of Palm Hills Developments; Altérra CEO Majid Al Suwaidi; EU Ambassador to the UAE Lucie Berger; and Pablo Casado, Founder of Hyperion Defense.

Also appearing today will be finalists for the $1 million annual Milken-Motsepe Fintech Prize, which aims to expand access to capital and financial services for small businesses in emerging and frontier markets. Nominees have been making pitches this week in hopes of competing in the final round taking place at the Milken Institute’s flagship Beverly Hills conference in May, where the prize is presented.

Winding up the two-day gathering at 2 p.m. will be what has become an annual tradition of Michael Milken sitting down with Khaldoon Al Mubarak, Group CEO of the Mubadala sovereign wealth fund, to prognosticate together on what’s next in the world of Middle East finance. 

Milken Events

Kimbal Musk, the Founder and CEO of Nova Sky Stories – and brother of Elon – spoke with the Milken Institute’s Curtis Chin on Day 1 of the Summit. (Milken Institute)

Heard Around Milken

Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed, Abu Dhabi’s Crown Prince and Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Executive Council, met with Michael Milken on the sidelines of the summit yesterday. Mubadala’s Khaldoon Al Mubarak, Chairman of Abu Dhabi’s Executive Affairs Authority, and Saif Saeed Ghobash, Secretary-General of the Abu Dhabi Executive Council and Chairman of the Office of the Crown Prince, also attended.

Why do Milken Summit participants pay more than $15,000 to register for the gathering in the UAE’s capital city? It’s largely for the shoulder-rubbing opportunities in the plush lobbies of the St. Regis. Martin Edelman, for instance, the American real estate lawyer and board member of G42, who is known as the Abu Dhabi royal family’s “Man in Manhattan,” was open to chat while nibbling appetizers outside the main plenary hall. Investment banker Lawrence Golub was also buttonholed numerous times as he strode to meetings elsewhere in the hotel.

As the Milken Summit winds down, delegates might notice some telltale signs that the biggest event in Abu Dhabi’s social calendar is almost upon us. Fresh from last weekend’s race in Doha, thousands of team members have been flocking into the capital this week for the Etihad Airways Formula One Grand Prix. If you listen carefully, you might even hear the screech of wheels warming up echoing across the water from Yas Island, where the world championship will be decided on Sunday. The final event in the international Formula One season will this year see a fierce three-way battle between McLaren driver Lando Norris, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen and  second McLaren driver Oscar Piastri, the first time more than two drivers are in contention for the title at the final race in 15 years. Adding to the excitement, McLaren’s resurgence comes just three months after Abu Dhabi’s CYVN Holdings and Bahrain’s sovereign fund, Mumtalakat, became full owners of the team in a $5 billion deal.

On Tap Today

9 a.m. – A Conversation with U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Turkey Tom Barrack. Moderator: Paul Wallace, Managing Editor, Middle East Economic, Political News, Bloomberg.

Opening remarks: British Robinson, Chair, Africa, Milken Institute International

9 a.m. – Private and Alternative Markets: Growth, Liquidity, and Innovation

James Clarke, Senior Managing Director and Global Head, Institutional Capital, Blue Owl; Matthew Gibson, Head, Client Solutions Group, Goldman Sachs Asset Management; Martin Horne, Co-Head, Global Investments and Head, EMEA, Barings; Ekta Tolani, Chief Investment Officer, KBW Ventures; Andrew Weinberg, Founder, CEO, and Co-Chair, Brightstar Capital Partners. Moderator: Alex Dooler, Money and Power Reporter, Bloomberg. 

10 a.m. – Digital Assets at the Crossroads: From Promise to Permanence

Adeeb Ahamed, Founder and Managing Director, Lulu Financial Holdings; Yoni Assia, Co-Founder and CEO, eToro; Yuval Rooz, Co-Founder and CEO, Digital Asset; Joanne Strain, Partner, UAE, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan. Moderator: Michael Piwowar, Executive Vice President, Milken Institute Finance.

10 a.m. – Precision for Better Health Outcomes

Part 1: A Conversation with Department of Health Abu Dhabi Chairman Mansoor Ibrahim Al Mansoori

Part 2: Advancing Precision Oncology: Prevention, Early Detection, and Treatment

Georges Pascal Haber, CEO, Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi; Majed Mohammed, Head, Community Engagement and Advocacy, Friends of Cancer Patients, United Arab Emirates; Simranjit Singh, CEO, Guardant Health AMEA; Nicole Sirotin, CEO, Institute for Healthier Living Abu Dhabi. Moderator: Alan Tisch, CEO and Founder, Atria Health and Research Institute.

11 a.m. – Real Estate in a Repriced World

Ian Livingstone, Executive Chairman, London & Regional Properties; Yasseen Mansour, Chairman, Palm Hills Developments; Sue Nickason, Vice President, Dart Family Office. Moderator: Caitlin MacLean, Managing Director, Milken Institute. 

12 p.m. – Vision, Velocity, Victory: The Sports Investment Playbook

Ben Harburg, Managing Partner, Novo Capital; Jamie Salter, Founder, Chairman, and CEO, Authentic Brands Group; Danny Townsend, CEO, SURJ Sports Investments; Susie Wolff, Entrepreneur; Managing Director, F1 Academy. Moderator: Dhani Jones, Chairman, QEY Capital; Former NFL Athlete.

12 p.m. – Innovation in Artificial Intelligence and Manufacturing – Milken-Motsepe Prize Pitches

1 p.m. – A Conversation with Altérra CEO Majid Al Suwaidi. Moderator: Joseph McMonigle, President and CEO, Global Center for Energy Analysis.

1 p.m. – Back to the Future: How Investing in Europe’s Competitiveness Can Spur a New European Renaissance

Lucie Berger, Ambassador of the EU to the UAE; Pablo Casado, Founder, Hyperion Defense; Jean-Baptiste Fantun, Co-Founder and CEO, NukkAI; Vincent Levita, Founder and CEO, InfraVia Capital Partners; Andrea Rossi, Group CEO, M&G. Moderator: Petra Freddi, Managing Director, Europe and Middle East, Milken Institute. 

2 p.m. – Closing Plenary – Michael Milken in Conversation with Khaldoon Al Mubarak, Group CEO and Managing Director of the Mubadala sovereign wealth fund and Chairman of Abu Dhabi’s Executive Affairs Authority.

2.30 p.m. – MEA Summit Closing Reception

Milken conference wrestles with AI’s impact on Mideast, Africa

It didn’t take long today for discussions at the Milken Institute Middle East and Africa Summit to focus on artificial intelligence – the promise, the costs and the threats of the technology that is permeating all levels of business and daily life.

Michael Milken, the billionaire financier who sponsors the annual two-day conference in Abu Dhabi, raised the issue in his opening remarks, pointing out that the largest amount of capital expenditures in the world are going into data centers for AI. “The world has changed and we can see it,” he said.

The UAE has, in fact, created a cabinet position to ensure that everyone in government embraces AI technology. Still, Omar Al Olama, the Minister of State for AI, Digital Economy and Remote Work Applications, warned about the dangers of artificial intelligence, especially the proliferation of fake information and images.

“The fact that I can give you a piece of paper and you think that is value, that is trust,” Al Olama said. “Money is built on trust. If trust is being eroded, it will mean a tsunami of change that is going to be negative.”

Meanwhile, Mubadala Deputy CEO Waleed Al Mokarrab Al Muhairi gave a measured forecast for the Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund’s performance in credit markets. “We’ve had four fantastic years in private credit, and we know that’s likely to perform cyclically,” he said. “I don’t think it’s going to implode in any shape, way or form.”

Other headliners at the conference today included Emaar’s Mohamed Alabbar, Liberty Strategic Capital’s Steven Mnuchin, Saudi Culture House founder Princess Noura bint Faisal Al Saud, Greycroft’s Dana Settle, and Maaden’s Bob Wilt.

While Elon Musk didn’t turn up at the Milken Summit, his brother Kimbal appeared under the “Visionaries of Tomorrow” program. Kimbal Musk is Co-Founder of Nova Sky Stories, which flies clusters of light-emitting drones to “turn the night sky into a canvas for storytelling.” He is also a major shareholder in Tesla and Co-Founder of both the restaurant group The Kitchen and the non-profit Big Green, which builds school gardens.

The Daily Circuit: Milken summit ponders AI + Aldar-Mubadala $1B fund

In The Daily Circuit today, we’re at the Milken Institute’s Middle East and Africa Summit, where a line-up of investors and government ministers are pondering the fate of the earth. (Sign up here for our exclusive Milken conference briefing). We’re also looking at a plan for Abu Dhabi’s biggest developer to launch a $1 billion investment platform, Jeff Bezos dropping by the UAE, Saudi Arabia’s PIF revealing its share of Electronic Arts following its record $55 billion buyout. But first, to the conference.

It didn’t take long today for discussions at the Milken Institute Middle East and Africa Summit to focus on artificial intelligence – the promise, the costs and the threats of the technology that is permeating all levels of business and daily life.

Michael Milken, the billionaire financier who sponsors the annual two-day conference in Abu Dhabi, raised the issue in his opening remarks, pointing out that the largest amount of capital expenditures in the world are going into data centers for AI. “The world has changed and we can see it,” he said.

The UAE has, in fact, created a cabinet position to ensure that everyone in government embraces AI technology. Still, Omar Al Olama, the Minister of State for AI, Digital Economy and Remote Work Applications, warned about the dangers of artificial intelligence, especially the proliferation of fake information and images.

“The fact that I can give you a piece of paper and you think that is of value, that is trust,” Al Olama said. “Money is built on trust. If trust is being eroded, it will mean a tsunami of change that is going to be negative.” 

Meanwhile, Mubadala Deputy CEO Waleed Al Mokarrab Al Muhairi gave a measured forecast for the Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund’s performance in credit markets. “We’ve had four fantastic years in private credit, and we know that’s likely to perform cyclically,” he said. “I don’t think it’s going to implode in any shape, way or form.”

Other headliners at the conference today included Emaar’s Mohamed Alabbar, Liberty Strategic Capital’s Steven Mnuchin, Saudi Culture House founder Princess Noura bint Faisal Al Saud, Greycroft’s Dana Settle and Maaden’s Bob Wilt.

While Elon Musk didn’t turn up at the Milken Summit, his brother Kimbal appeared under the “Visionaries of Tomorrow” program. Kimbal Musk is Co-Founder of Nova Sky Stories, which flies clusters of light-emitting drones to “turn the night sky into a canvas for storytelling.” He is also a major shareholder in Tesla and Co-Founder of both the restaurant group The Kitchen and the non-profit Big Green, which builds school gardens.

Editor’s Note: Kindly let us know your thoughts and feedback by replying to this newsletter or emailing us at [email protected].

📰 Developing Stories

Mubadala Capital, the asset management arm of Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala sovereign fund, and developer Aldar are pairing up to launch a platform that aims to connect global investors with real estate projects in the UAE and wider Gulf. The new venture, to be called Aldar Capital and based out of Abu Dhabi’s ADGM free zone, is planning to raise $1 billion for its first fund next year. “We have received significant inbound interest from a number of our existing investors who want exposure to the region,” Mubadala Capital CEO Hani Barhoush told Bloomberg. The fund will invest across office buildings, residential real estate and logistics, transforming one of the UAE’s biggest developers into a manager of global capital. The biggest shareholder in Abu Dhabi-listed Aldar is Alpha Dhabi, which is controlled by International Holding Co., the vast conglomerate overseen by UAE National Security Advisor Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed. 

Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon and one of the five richest people in the world, paid a visit to UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed on Wednesday, praising the Emirates’ approach to embracing future technology during a meeting at Qasr Al Shati palace in Abu Dhabi. The meeting, which covered innovation, advanced technology and AI, was also attended by Sheikh Tahnoon, and Khaldoon Al Mubarak, Group CEO and Managing Director of the Mubadala sovereign wealth fund and Chairman of Abu Dhabi’s Executive Affairs Authority. Sheikh Tahnoon previously met Bezos along with Elon Musk to discuss AI collaboration on the sidelines of Sheikh Mohamed’s official visit to the U.S.  last year.

💲 Sovereign Circuit

ADNOC: Germany has begun preliminary talks with potential investors including the UAE’s Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. about selling the trading unit of nationalized energy company SEFE, formerly Gazprom’s European arm, as it weighs options for the business’s future structure, Bloomberg reports. 

International Holding Co.: The Financial Times traces how Abu Dhabi’s International Holding Co. expanded from a small firm into a sprawling conglomerate spanning multiple sectors that now accounts for a mammoth share of the emirate’s stock-market value. 

International Holding Co.: Abu Dhabi-based fintech Zelo, formerly known as eFunder, has received $715 million from parent company IHC to expand its financing services for small and medium-sized enterprises. 

Mubadala: The Abu Dhabi Investment Council, part of Mubadala sovereign wealth fund, is suing U.S. private equity firm Energy & Minerals Group to try to block its sale of Ascent Resources, one of America’s largest private gas drillers, to one of the firm’s sister funds. ADIC alleges that Energy & Minerals Group coerced investors to support the deal by concealing alternatives and undervaluing the company.

Public Investment Fund: Saudi Arabia’s PIF will own 93.4% of Electronic Arts after its $55 billion buyout backed by Jared Kushner’s investment firm Affinity Partners and Silver Lake, filings have revealed. Silver Lake will own 5.5% and Affinity 1.1%. The PIF will need to find about $29 billion in cash to fund its share of the leveraged deal, The Wall Street Journal reports.

Public Investment Fund: National Grid, a subsidiary of PIF-owned Saudi Electricity Co., will design and construct a $346 million power network for luxury tourism destination Soudah Peaks in the southwest of Saudi Arabia.

↪↩ Closing Circuit

🔥 Fired Up: Bahrain-based asset manager Investcorp has acquired U.S.-based safety company Guardian Fire Services from private equity firm Northern Lakes Capital. 

🛢️ Drill Down: Omani company Abraj Energy Services has won a $280 million oil drilling contract from state-run Petroleum Development Oman.

🌳 Tree Change: Sharjah-based deleloper Arada has awarded $735 million worth of contracts to deliver its forested megaproject Masaar 2, including 1,997 homes.

🗣 Circuit Chatter

🌱 Startup Surge: Abu Dhabi-based investor Plus VC plans to fund more than three dozen startups in 2026, focusing on Saudi Arabia as a growing venture hub while increasing annual capital deployment to about $10 million from $4.5 million this year, Bloomberg reports.

⚓ Finally Free: Yemen’s Houthis have released nine Filipino mariners held since a July attack on the ship Eternity C in the Red Sea, during which at least four people were killed, Arab News reports.

🦂 Attack Drones: The U.S. is launching a new task force, named Scorpion Strike, for its military’s first one-way attack drone squadron based in the Middle East. 

🏢 Desk Rents: Saudi Arabia is driving a surge in prime office rents across the Gulf, with Grade-A rents in Riyadh climbing 15.1% year-on-year in the third quarter, according to a new report by U.K.-based consultancy Knight Frank.

🐪 Desert Retreat: KKR’s decision to set up its third Middle East office in Abu Dhabi came as the buyout giant deployed about $2 billion in the Gulf over the past year, including buying a stake in one of the largest data center firms in the region, Bloomberg reports

🌍 Power Circuit

King Hamad of Bahrain, chaired the 46th GCC Summit on Wednesday and gave a closing speech stressing the importance of advancing paths related to food and water security and the digital economy, and of continuing to support political efforts aimed at achieving regional stability. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, the guest of honor, also delivered a speech in which she said that Italy could serve as a gateway for Gulf states into the European market. GCC Secretary-General Jasem Albudaiwi noted that trade exchange with Italy surpassed $35 billion in 2024.

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Bahrain’s Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa, co-chaired the fourth meeting of the Saudi-Bahraini Coordination Council in Manama on Wednesday. The Saudi Crown Prince also met with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni on the sidelines of the GCC Summit.

Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, met today with Zac Brown, CEO of McLaren Racing, in advance of this weekend’s F1 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.

➿ On the Circuit

Mohammed Al-Jadaan, the Saudi Finance Minister, said the kingdom is open to canceling some projects under its Vision 2030 program if needed, in some of the strongest public remarks yet on scaling back costly developments.

Shivani Pandya, Red Sea International Film Festival Managing Director, told Arab News that the organization had to choose from more than 2,000 film submissions from 71 countries for this year’s festival, which opens in Jeddah today with the Middle East premiere of Rowan Athale’s boxing biopic “Giant.”

Michael Saylor, CEO of Strategy, the world’s biggest corporate Bitcoin holder, urged investors to avoid getting caught up by news of volatility in the crypto sector, speaking at Binance Blockchain Week in Dubai on Wednesday.

Zach Witkoff, co-founder and CEO of Trump family-backed World Liberty Financial, told Binance Blockchain Week that the U.S. is still playing catch-up with the UAE on crypto regulation. 

Will Ahmed, the Egyptian-American founder of wearable fitness tracker Whoop, told The National that he credits his father’s decision to move to the U.S. with fuelling his entrepreneurial journey.

Fawaz bin Mohammed Al-Jasser has been named CEO of Saudi Arabian dairy giant Almarai.

🎶 Culture Circuit

👻 Good Spirits: Beloved Japanese animation house Studio Ghibli will take over Abu Dhabi’s Manarat Al Saadiyat next year for an exhibition exploring almost four decades of storytelling. Tickets go on sale on Dec. 8 for The World of Studio Ghibli, which will open on May 30. The show has toured South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Bangkok and Singapore since it was first presented in Japan more than 10 years ago. Visitors will be able to meet characters including Chihiro from “Spirited Away” and San from “Princess Mononoke,” The National reports

📷 Photo of the Day

Michael Milken on stage today at the Milken Institute Middle East and Africa Summit 2025 in Abu Dhabi. (Milken Institute)

📅 Circuit Calendar

Dec. 3-5, Jeddah. AgroFood Jeddah. Bringing together developing businesses in the agricultural and food products field in Saudi Arabia. Jeddah Center for Exhibitions and Events.

Dec. 4-5, Abu Dhabi. Milken Institute Middle East and Africa Summit. Investors, corporate executives and policymakers gather to discuss prospects for investment in the region. St. Regis Saadiyat Island. The Circuit is an official media partner for Milken Summit and is publishing special editions covering the conference. Make sure you are receiving updates from the Circuit Team!

Dec. 6-7, Doha. Doha Forum. Bringing together leaders in policy to discuss critical challenges facing our world. Sheraton Grand Doha Resort and Convention Hotel.

Dec. 7, Abu Dhabi. F1 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix 2025. The F1 season finale and one of the most hotly anticipated races in motorsport. Yas Marina Circuit. 

Dec. 8-9, Riyadh. Hydrogen Arabia Summit & Exhibition. The inaugural event is aimed at positioning the Kingdom as a hub for hydrogen and clean energy collaboration. Crowne Plaza Riyadh RDC.

Dec. 8-9, Abu Dhabi. Bitcoin MENA 2025. An event dedicated to advancing Bitcoin and blockchain understanding and adoption. ADNEC Center.

Dec. 8-9, Kuwait City. Kuwait Risk Management Summit. Equipping leaders in enterprise risk, audit, and compliance with the latest insights and actionable strategies to tackle the evolving risk landscape. Kuwait Four Seasons Hotel.

Dec. 8-9, Abu Dhabi. Global AI Show. A leading forum examining investment opportunities in artificial intelligence. Space42 Arena.

Dec. 8-10, Abu Dhabi. BRIDGE Summit. Bringing together media executives, innovators, academia and NGOs, policymakers, and thought leaders to redefine the media landscape. ADNEC Center.

Dec. 8-11, Abu Dhabi. Abu Dhabi Finance Week. The largest financial event in the region, brings together the world’s top minds to redefine and shape the future of global markets. The Grand Steps, Al Maryah Island.

Dec. 18-23, Abu Dhabi. Games of the Future. A forum to discuss trends and investment opportunities in digital gaming. ADNEC. 

Dec. 29-30, Dubai. World Sports Summit. Athletes, investors and decision makers discuss how sports can change the face of humanity. Madinat Jumeirah Arena.

What’s on tap at the Milken Middle East and Africa Summit today

☀️ Good morning and welcome to The Circuit’s special coverage of the Milken Institute’s annual Middle East and Africa Summit. I’m Jonathan Ferziger, here with Omnia Al Desoukie and Louise Burke at the St. Regis Saadiyat Island Resort to help steer you over the next two days through the swirl of personalities, dealmaking and dinner parties.

Michael Milken kicks things off at 9 a.m. today, joining a panel on the main stage titled,  “Global Overview: Innovation, Partnerships and Growth.” Moderated by TV anchor Hadley Gamble of the Abu Dhabi-based IMI Network, the session will also feature GCC Secretary-General Jasem Al Budaiwi, 2pointZero’s Mariam AlMheiri and Palm Hills Developments’ Yasseen Mansour

Among the central themes of the Milken Summit this year is, of course, artificial intelligence, and the UAE has even created a cabinet position to ensure that everyone in government embraces the technology. At 10 a.m., you’ll meet Omar Al Olama, the Minister of State for AI, Digital Economy and Remote Work Applications, interviewed by CNBC’s Dan Murphy

Other headliners include Mubadala Deputy CEO Waleed Al Mokarrab Al Muhairi, Emaar’s Mohamed Alabbar, Liberty Strategic Capital’s Steven Mnuchin, Saudi Culture House founder Princess Noura bint Faisal, Greycroft’s Dana Settle and Maaden’s Bob Wilt.

While Elon Musk won’t be turning up at the Milken Summit, his brother Kimbal is on the schedule at 3:15 p.m. under the “Visionaries of Tomorrow” program. Kimbal Musk is Co-Founder of Nova Sky Stories, which flies clusters of light-emitting drones to “turn the night sky into a canvas for storytelling.” He is also a major shareholder in Tesla and Co-Founder of both the restaurant group The Kitchen and the non-profit Big Green, which builds school gardens.

Cuban-American singer Camila Cabello will talk at 3:45 p.m. about the interplay between songwriting and activism, discussing some of the causes she champions, including mental health, climate protection and immigrant rights. She’ll be onstage with Jane Millichip, CEO of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts, or BAFTA.

Closing out today’s schedule are onstage conversations with Saudi Prince Turki Al Faisal
, Chairman of the King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies, and U.S. Ambassador to NATO Matthew Whitaker, followed by a networking reception for all conference participants.

Milken Events

Michael Milken spoke last month during the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum at the Kennedy Center on the occasion of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s visit to Washington. (Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Heard Around Milken

Before today’s formal opening to the Summit, early-arriving delegates mixed over drinks at the St. Regis’ beachside Buddha Bar last night. Later, there were a number of invitation-only receptions, including one hosted by the Milken Institute and U.S. Ambassador to the UAE Lucie Berger. The Institute’s Africa Leadership Council held a dinner reception hosted by Todd McDonald, President of Liberty Bank and Trust, and James Mwangi, Group CEO of Equity Group Holdings. British Robinson, Africa Chair of the Milken Institute International, and Samaila Zubairu, President and CEO of the African Finance Corp., delivered remarks.

Abu Dhabi’s Saadiyat Island, where the Milken Summit takes place, continues to rise to the occasion, with three major museums having opened up since last year. The Zayed National Museum, marked by its silvery 300-foot-tall tilted wings, officially opened its doors just yesterday, one day after the UAE’s 54th National Day. The museum tells the story of the country’s history through a vast collection of artifacts, ranging from Paleolithic stone tools and a reconstructed 4,000-year-old boat to family heirlooms and a replica of a Chrysler owned by the UAE’s Founding Father Sheikh Zayed. The debut comes less than two weeks after the Natural History Museum Abu Dhabi opened to the public, becoming the largest institution of its kind in the region. Among the specimens on display is the 11.7-meter tall Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton known as “Stan” and the bones of “Lucy,” one of the earliest human ancestors. Immersive digital gallery teamLab Phenomena Abu Dhabi opened in April. Next on the list is the Frank Gehry-designed Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, which is slated to open in 2026.

On Tap Today

9 a.m. – Opening Plenary – Global Overview: Innovation, Partnerships, and Growth

Opening remarks: Laura Deal Lacey, Executive Vice President, Milken Institute International.

Jasem Al Budaiwi, Secretary-General, Gulf Cooperation Council; Mariam bint Mohammed AlMheiri, Managing Director, 2pointZero; Yasseen Mansour, Chairman, Palm Hills Developments; Michael Milken, Chairman, Milken Institute. Moderator: Hadley Gamble, Chief International Anchor, IMI.

10 a.m. – The Great AI Adoption Race

Part 1: A Conversation with UAE’s Minister of State for AI, Digital Economy and Remote Work Applications, Omar Al Olama. Moderator: Dan Murphy, Anchor and Correspondent, CNBC.

Part 2: Capturing AI’s Momentum: Pathways to Growth and Productivity

Alex Israel, CEO, Metropolis; Antonoaldo Neves, CEO, Etihad Airways; Saad Toma, General Manager, Middle East and Africa, IBM. Moderator: Eleni Giokos, Anchor and Correspondent, CNN.

10 a.m. – From Capital to Catalyst: How African Sovereign Wealth Funds Are Accelerating Investment Opportunities

Badr Drissi, Chief Investment Officer, Ithmar Capital; James Mwangi, Group CEO, Equity Group Holdings; Aminu Umar-Sadiq, Managing Director and CEO, Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority; Alain Ebobissé, CEO, Africa50; Samaila Zubairu, President and CEO, African Finance Corporation (AFC) Moderator: British Robinson, Chair, Africa, Milken Institute International.

11 a.m. – Navigating the Crosscurrents: Global Macro and Investment Outlook

Waleed Al Mokarrab Al Muhairi, Deputy Group CEO, Mubadala; Tony Minella, CEO Eldridge Capital Management; Anne Walsh, Managing Partner and Chief Investment Officer, Guggenheim Partners Investment Management. Moderator: Dan Murphy, Anchor and Correspondent, CNBC.

11 a.m. – From Demographics to Digital: Seizing Africa’s AI Investment Opportunity

Guy Diedrich, Senior Vice President and Global Innovation Officer, CISCO; Hisham Halbouny, Managing Partner, P1 Ventures; John Kamara, Chair, AI Center of Excellence Africa; Irene Kiwa, Co-Founder and Chief Growth Officer, Arabian Labs; Saadi Monla, Payment Partnership Subject Matter Expert, Flutterwave. Moderator: James Irungu Mwangi, Founder and CEO, Africa Climate Ventures.

11:45 a.m. – FinTech Mega Trends: The Disruption Revolution is Here

Deemah AlYahya, Secretary-General, Digital Cooperation Organization; Robert Heyvaert, Founder and Managing Partner, Motive Partners; Rishi Khosla, Co-Founder and CEO, OakNorth Bank; Travis McGhee, Global Head, Predictions, Crypto-dot-com. Moderator: Nicole Valentine, Fintech Director, Milken Institute.

11:45 a.m. – Macro Pulse 2026: Inflation, Rates, and a Multipolar Investment Cycle

Kurt Bjorklund, Executive Chairman, Permira; Molly Duffy, Global Head, Financial Sponsors Coverage, Standard Chartered; Lawrence Golub, CEO Golub Capital; Steven T. Mnuchin, Founder and Managing Partner, Liberty Strategic Capital. Moderator: Dana Khraiche, UAE Bureau Chief, Bloomberg.

12:30 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. – Networking Break

1:30 p.m. – Lunch Plenary – The Power of Youth Culture in Shaping Brands

Sandro Baggiani, Chief Merchandising Officer, Golden Goose; Vinay Menda, Co-Founder, Blank Street Coffee; Brieane Olson, CEO Pacsun; Hayfa Sdiri, Chief Impact Officer, RIVET; Jessica Sibley, CEO, Time. Moderator: Michelle Stevenson, Executive Director, Marketing and Communications, Milken Institute.

2:45 a.m. – 3:15 p.m. – Networking Break

3:15 p.m. – 4:15 p.m. – Strategic Resources, Global Stakes: Critical Mineral Investments in a Changing World

Mateo Goldman, Senior Vice President, Investments, US International Development Finance Corporation; Marie-Chantal Kaninda, President Glencore DRC, Chairperson, Kamoto Copper Company; Oskar Lewnowski, Founder and Group CEO, Orion Resource Partners; Ayo Sopitan, CEO, Metalex Commodities; Bob Wilt, CEO, Maaden. Moderator: Eleni Giokos, Anchor and Correspondent, CNN.

3:15 p.m. – 4:15 p.m. – Visionaries, Stories, and the Future of Entertainment

Part 1: Visionaries of Tomorrow: A Conversation with Nova Sky Stories Founder and CEO Kimbal Musk. Moderator: Curtis Chin, Chair, Senior Fellows, and Senior Advisor, Milken Institute.

Part 2: The Story Economy: Hits, Talents, and the Forces that Shape Culture

Camila Cabello, Singer and Songwriter; Jane Millichip, CEO, BAFTA. Moderator: Louise Tabbing, Senior Advisor, Milken Institute.

4:15 p.m. – The Future of Global Asset Platforms: Scaling, Strategy, and Stewardship

Jonathan Goldstein, CEO, Cain; Dana Settle, Co-Founder and Managing Partner, Greycroft; David Steinbach, Global Chief Investment Officer, Hines; Guy Weldon, Group Managing Partner and Head of Investment, Bridgepoint Group. Moderator: Nour Amache, Senior Presenter, Business News, Asharq.

4:15 p.m. – Luxury in the Middle East and Beyond: Cultivating Collaboration and Creativity

Princess Noura bint Faisal Al Saud, Founder, Culture House, CEO Jay3lle; Michael Chalhoub, CEO Chalhoub Group; Thomas Khoury, Managing Director, Condé Nast Middle East; Gstaad Guy, Founder, Poubel. Moderator: Stephanie Phair, Senior Advisor, L Catterton and Chair, Invisible Dynamics.

5:30 p.m. – A Conversation with King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies Chairman Prince Turki Al Faisal Al Saud. Moderator: Hadley Gamble, Chief International Anchor, IMI

5:30 p.m. – Specialty Credit and Asset-Based Finance

Stephen Ketchum, Managing Partner, CEO and Chief Investment Officer, Sound Point Capital; Nicole Musicco, Managing Partner, Square Nine Capital; Jack Neumark, Co-CEO and Managing Partner, Fortress Investment Group; Michael B. Nierenberg, CEO Rithm Capital; Moderator: John Bowman, CEO, CAIA.

6:00 p.m. – A Conversation with U.S. Ambassador to NATO Matthew Whitaker. Moderator: Michael Milken, Chairman, Milken Institute.

6:45 p.m. MEA Summit Networking Reception.

The Daily Circuit: Saudi Arabia’s deepening deficit + Alpha Dhabi’s Aldar selloff

👋 Hello from the Middle East!

In the Daily Circuit today, we’re reporting on Saudi Arabia’s split with the IOC over staging the Olympic Esports Games, the new expansion plans for Abu Dhabi’s Zayed International Airport, Alpha Dhabi’s efforts to raise $400 million by selling part of its stake in Aldar, and Lunate’s new $1 billion investment platform. But first, third-quarter numbers show the depth of Saudi Arabia’s budget woes.

After a week of navel-gazing at the FII business conference in Riyadh about the impact of falling oil prices, Saudi leaders received third-quarter data that illustrates why they need to keep making hard decisions on budget cuts.

In the three months ending Sept. 30, the Saudi Finance Ministry said its deficit widened to 88.5 billion riyals ($23.6 billion), bringing the total shortfall for the year to nearly $50 billion. Oil revenue fell to about $40 billion from just under $51 billion a year earlier, while non-oil income held steady at $31.7 billion, according to the report issued Thursday.

Now it becomes clearer why one cabinet minister after another this week took to the stage at the King Abdulaziz International Conference Center to solicit foreign investment, conceding that the government will have to shrink or defer parts of its most ambitious megaprojects like NEOM. Some 9,000 FII attendees went home digesting prospects for a new era of austerity.

Ratifying that conclusion, the kingdom’s number crunchers now project a 2025 deficit of 5.3% of GDP as oil prices have slid in the past three years to below $70 a barrel from a high of $125.

The Saudi Capital Market Authority, meanwhile, has delayed a decision on whether and how to open Riyadh’s Tadawul stock market to non-resident foreign investors until next year, Bloomberg reports. The Capital Market Authority is analyzing public and stakeholder feedback on the move.

“We will be revisiting foreign ownership limits next year,” Mohammed El-Kuwaiz, CMA Chairman, said. “Whether or not we will eliminate foreign ownership limits or more gradually increase them on multiple stages, this will really become the output of our analysis.”

Editor’s Note: Kindly let us know your thoughts and feedback by replying to this newsletter or emailing us at [email protected].

📰 Developing Stories

OLYMPICS TORCHED

Saudi Arabia and the International Olympic Committee have “mutually” ended a deal to jointly hold the Olympic Esports Games. The IOC and the kingdom will pursue their own esports ambitions separately, Bloomberg reports. The 12-year agreement, signed last year, was supposed to see Saudi Arabia host the inaugural Esports Olympics, a part of its ambition to be a global hub for gaming. The kingdom held its second Esports World Cup over the summer, attracting more than 2,000 professional players from over 100 countries, and its Public Investment Fund has since signed a blockbuster $55 billion deal to take gaming company Electronic Arts private.

Abu Dhabi is already planning a major expansion of Zayed International Airport, just two years after it doubled its capacity to 45 million passengers a year with the opening of Terminal A. Construction work will start in two years, with plans to increase capacity to 65 million, The National reports. “We opened in November 2023 and at the first board meeting, I broke the news to the board that we had to think about expansion,” Abu Dhabi Airports Managing Director and CEO Elena Sorlini told the Skift Global Forum East event in the capital. The expansion is partly needed to meet the demands of Etihad Airways, which is planning to double in size and carry 38 million passengers by 2030. The airport is also rolling out the use of biometrics to transit passengers to speed up transfers within the airport, which make up 60% of its current traffic.

💲 Sovereign Circuit

International Holding Co.: IHC Real Estate Holding and Alpha Dhabi, both subsidiaries of IHC, sold their stakes in investment and real estate company Modon for more than $7 billion to Abu Dhabi government entity L’imad Holding Co.

International Holding Co.: Alpha Dhabi is also planning to sell about 2% of its 26.5% stake in Abu Dhabi developer Aldar Properties for around $400 million, Bloomberg reports.

Lunate: Alternative investment firm HPS Investment Partners and Abu Dhabi’s Lunate are launching a new investment platform. Lunate will anchor the project with a projected commitment of at least $1 billion.

Mubadala: Pakistan is negotiating with Abu Dhabi Investment Co., a subsidiary of Mubadala, to run Islamabad airport in exchange for 60% of the revenue, Bloomberg reports.

Public Institution for Social Security: Kuwait’s pension fund is restarting private equity allocations and is in discussions with multiple leading buyout firms, Bloomberg reports.

↪↩ Closing Circuit

🏭 Mega Project: Egypt’s Ain Sokhna Industrial Zone, within the Suez Canal Economic Zone, will host three major new projects valued at $3.5 billion under an agreement between Kemet Industries Group and Emirati-Chinese company Al Qalaa Red Flag.

💰 Sharjah Sukuk: Sharjah Islamic Bank plans to issue a $500 million islamic bond, to be listed on Euronext Dublin and Nasdaq Dubai, with Emirates NBD Capital and Standard Chartered Bank appointed as joint global coordinators.

🚦 Green Light: U.K. oil services company John Wood Group has published its half-year financial results, a condition of its $292 million takeover by UAE engineering firm Sidara.

👷 Pipe Dream: A Saudi consortium has secured funding to develop a 587km water pipeline in the kingdom, with the project valued at $2.3 billion.

🗣 Circuit Chatter

🛢️ Fuel Fraud: Lebanon’s judiciary has charged six companies and four individuals and issued arrest warrants over an alleged Russian oil scam, The National reports.

🎮 Banking Games: Emirati lender Commercial Bank International has launched a venture arm to build and invest in products for gamers, starting with a credit card in partnership with Mastercard.

🛡️ Standing Together: The U.K. has signed an enhanced defense agreement with Qatar to deepen military cooperation.

₿ Virtual World: The Abu Dhabi Real Estate Center signed an agreement with five partners to advance blockchain integration in Abu Dhabi’s real estate sector.

🦘 Aussie Connection: Abu Dhabi Investment Office and the Australia Arab Chamber of Commerce and Industry have signed a strategic partnership to boost trade and investment and support Australian companies entering Abu Dhabi’s high-growth sectors.

🌎Power Circuit

Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, met with South Korean President Lee Jae Myung on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation forum in Gyeongju, South Korea, on Friday. The Crown Prince also met with Lawrence Wong, Prime Minister of Singapore, and Christopher Luxon, Prime Minister of New Zealand.

Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, UAE Vice President, Prime Minister and Ruler of Dubai, launched the Mohammed bin Rashid Endowment District.

Sheikh Sabah Al Khalid Al Sabah, Crown Prince of Kuwait, met with Yuriko Koike, Gov. of Japan, at Bayan Palace in Kuwait on Thursday.

Sheikh Maktoum bin Mohammed, First Deputy Ruler of Dubai and UAE Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance, met with Georges Elhedery, Group CEO of HSBC, at the Dubai International Financial Centre on Thursday.

Sheikh Jarrah Jaber Al Ahmad Al Sabah, Deputy Foreign Minister of Kuwait, met with Muhammad Anis Matta, his Indonesian counterpart, in Kuwait City on Thursday.

➿On The Circuit

Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, told The National that his “cockroach” comment about the health of the private credit market was “blown out of proportion.”

Ed Bastian, CEO of U.S. carrier Delta Airlines, told Arabian Gulf Business Insight that the airline hopes to capitalize on economic development in Saudi Arabia and the potential growth of passenger traffic between the two countries with its new direct flights from Atlanta to Riyadh.

Eric Schmidt, the former CEO of Google, told The National at Saudi Arabia’s FII conference in Riyadh that the rise of AI will create more jobs than it destroys.

James Reynolds, the global co-head of Goldman Sachs Asset Management, said in an interview with Asharq Business that the bank is in “productive” talks with the Public Investment Fund and other players in the region.

Rashid Saeed Al Shamsi, Non-Resident Ambassador of the UAE to Niger, met with Ali Mahamane Lamine Zeine, Prime Minister of Niger, at his headquarters in the capital, Niamey. 

🎶 Culture Circuit

🏛️ Rebuilding History: Palmyra’s archaeological museum, which was badly damaged by bombings during the Syrian civil war, will be restored with international funding, The National reports. One of Syria’s most popular sites before the war, Palmyra made headlines in 2025 when ISIS destroyed the Temple of Bel and the Arch of Victory and killed its head of antiquities. Swiss-based foundation Aliph will fund the restoration of the museum, starting with the guesthouse, which will house archaeologists working on the project. Aliph is mostly funded by nations, including the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Morocco, and private donors.

📷 Photo of the Day

Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed, UAE Vice President, Deputy Prime Minister and Chairman of the Presidential Court, inaugurated the Abu Dhabi Royal Equestrian Arts on Jubail Island in Abu Dhabi — the first global academy of its kind outside Europe dedicated to the classical art of horsemanship. The facility includes a collection of rare equestrian artifacts, an equestrian library and a saddle-making atelier. (Emirates News Agency)

📅 Circuit Calendar

Oct 29-31, Abu Dhabi. International Forum of Sovereign Wealth Funds. An annual forum hosted by Abu Dhabi Investment Authority and Mubadala, bringing together global CEOs and senior executives from sovereign wealth funds. ADGM 

Nov. 1-2, Dubai. Women’s Empowerment Convention. The 3rd Women’s Leadership Forum unites global trailblazers, headlined by fashion icon Anna Wintour and storytelling pioneer Candace Bushnell. Atlantis The Royal Conference Center.

Nov. 3-6, Abu Dhabi. ADIPEC. Bringing together professionals, companies, and government leaders to discuss and showcase the latest developments in oil, gas, and cleaner energy technologies. ADNEC Center.

Nov. 4-6, Dubai. Gulfood Manufacturing. Billed as the most influential F&B manufacturing event in the world. Dubai World Trade Center. 

Nov. 4-9, Dubai. Dubai Design Week. The Middle East’s largest creative festival, showcasing more than 200 events across architecture, product, furniture, interior and graphic design. D3.

Nov. 10-12, Abu Dhabi. DRIFTx. An international exhibition showcasing smart and autonomous mobility solutions. Yas Marina Circuit.

Nov. 10-15, Abu Dhabi. RoboCup Asia-Pacific. A regional competition and event for AI and robotics where teams compete on challenges including humanoid robot soccer matches. ADNEC Center.

Nov. 11-14, Dubai. ICOM 2025. Bringing together museum professionals and cultural experts from around the world to explore the evolving role of museums. Dubai World Trade Center.

Nov. 17-19. Doha. Qatar Entrepreneurship Conference (ROWAD). Qatar’s national entrepreneurship platform and a flagship Global Entrepreneurship Week event, connecting startups, SMEs, and ecosystem leaders. Doha Exhibition & Convention Center.

Nov. 17-21, Dubai. Dubai Airshow 2025. The biennial exhibition attracts aerospace companies from around the world to the UAE. DWC, Al Maktoum International Airport.

Nov. 25-26. Riyadh. Global Sustainability Expo. Dedicated to advancing sustainability practices across industries. The Arena Riyadh.

Nov. 26-27, Abu Dhabi. CyberQ 2025. The UAE’s flagship summit for cybersecurity and quantum technologies. ADNEC Center.

Dec. 8-9, Riyadh. Hydrogen Arabia Summit & Exhibition. The inaugural event is aimed at positioning the Kingdom as a hub for hydrogen and clean energy collaboration. Crowne Plaza Riyadh RDC.

Dec. 8-9, Abu Dhabi. Bitcoin MENA 2025. An event dedicated to advancing Bitcoin and blockchain understanding and adoption. ADNEC Center.

Dec. 8-10, Abu Dhabi. BRIDGE Summit. Bringing together media executives, innovators, academia and NGOs, policymakers, and thought leaders to redefine the media landscape. ADNEC Center.

The Daily Circuit: FII winds down in Riyadh + Mubadala in Madrid

👋 Hello from the Middle East!

In the Daily Circuit today, we report on the third and final day of Saudi Arabia’s FII business summit, which concluded with a fundraising appeal from Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa and a fleeting glance of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. We’re also looking at Saudi EV maker Lucid’s partnership with Nvidia, Mubadala’s acquisition of a majority stake in Madrid’s Universidad Alfonso X el Sabio Group, and Saudi developer Arabian Dyar’s evolving plans for an IPO. But first, “Davos in the Desert” concludes in Riyadh.

Saudi Arabia’s flagship Future Investment Initiative business conference wrapped up today after the kingdom’s financial leadership appealed for foreign investment to help bridge the budget gap left by sinking oil prices and declared its faith in AI technology.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who conceived the conference nine years ago as a Middle East answer to the annual World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, made a brief appearance on Wednesday, sitting beside Donald Trump Jr., during a keynote speech by Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa. The Prince made no public remarks.

Summing up the three-day event, Yasir Al-Rumayyan, Governor of the kingdom’s Public Investment Fund, told the conference’s 9,000 registrants that Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund continues to grow despite the kingdom’s financial shortfall.

“Back in 2015, PIF’s assets under management were worth around $150 billion,” he said in an onstage discussion on Wednesday. “We aim to reach $1 trillion by the end of this year – we are very close.” 

Outlining the fund’s strategy through 2030, Al Rumayyan said the PIF will focus on its NEOM megaproject, along with, travel and tourism, urban development, advanced manufacturing, industrial and logistics, clean energy and renewable infrastructure.

In a standing-room-only appearance on the conference floor, Al Sharaa said that Syria has attracted some $28 billion in investments from the Gulf since the start of the year. Dressed in a well-cut business suit and purple satin tie, the former rebel leader espoused the value of investment over aid to an audience filled with bankers and executives, some of whom he held meetings with ahead of the session.

“Investments are growing well in Syria, and we will rebuild every stone that has been destroyed,” Al Sharaa said. “We chose reconstruction through investment, not aid.”

Editor’s Note: Kindly let us know your thoughts and feedback by replying to this newsletter or emailing us at [email protected].

Saudi builder Arabian Dyar faces Mecca as it eyes IPO

Arabian Dyar Vice President Anis Alhabshi

Arabian Dyar has its sights firmly planted on Mecca as the Saudi real estate developer plots a growth strategy intended to culminate in an IPO.

The Jeddah-based builder, led by the three brothers from the Alatawi family, already conducts half of its business in the holy city, busily erecting thousands of apartments in proximity to the Grand Mosque that is the ultimate destination for the 1.6 million Muslims who perform the Muslim Hajj pilgrimage each year.

Those pilgrims are the company’s target customers amid expectations of a deeper construction boom in Mecca, Arabian Dyar Vice President Anis Alhabshi told The Circuit’s Omnia Al Desoukie and Jonathan Ferziger in Riyadh. Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 national economic plan calls for increasing that number to 30 million over the next five years.

“What’s special about this is for people to have that spiritual meaning,” Alhabshi said. “They want to be there and detox and be close to God and pray at the holy mosque right there,” he said, suggesting many would buy apartments as a second home or timeshare.

To read the full interview, click here.

📰 Developing Stories

CHIP DRIVE

Electric vehicle maker Lucid is partnering with chip giant Nvidia to launch cars with near-full autonomy. The California-based company, which is backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, will use Nvidia’s Drive AV system in its mid-sized vehicles, Lucid revealed at the FII conference in Riyadh on Wednesday. The system has level 4 autonomous driving capability, which is the second-highest level. Level 5, the highest level, does not even require vehicles to have a steering wheel. “We’re taking the next step by combining cutting-edge artificial intelligence with Lucid’s engineering excellence to deliver the smartest and safest autonomous vehicles on the road,” Marc Winterhoff, interim CEO of Lucid, said. It comes after Lucid agreed in July to supply 20,000 vehicles fitted with a level 4 platform developed by U.S. robotics company Nuro to ride-hailing company Uber for its global robotaxi program.

Abu Dhabi’s Rotana hotel chain is among the global hospitality groups planning to launch in Syria as the country opens up and requires more rooms to house an expected boom in business and leisure travelers. “If Syria opens up again, as it is now, Emiratis will be going there to do business and we need to be there,” Rotana CEO Philip Barnes told The National. Among those lining up for meetings with Syrian President Ahmed Al Sharaa at the FII conference in Riyadh this week were executives from Accor and Hilton Worldwide Holdings. Accor is already in talks with developers and plans to have 10 to 15 hotels in Syria within five years, the newspaper reports.

💲 Sovereign Circuit

Mubadala: The Abu Dhabi sovereign fund, alongside private equity firm Cinven and UAX founder Jesús Núñez, will acquire a majority stake in Madrid’s Universidad Alfonso X el Sabio Group from CVC Funds.

Abu Dhabi Investment Authority: ADIA, Nordic private equity house EQT and Auba Investment have sold 8.4% of their stake, worth $3.27 billion, in Swiss skincare specialist Galderma, Zawya reports. Galderma, which makes Cetaphil, went public last year in one of Europe’s largest IPOs.

G42: The Abu Dhabi AI powerhouse has expanded its collaboration with U.S. networking and security company Cisco. Under a new agreement Cisco will power, connect, and secure a large-scale AI cluster deployed by G42, featuring AMD’s advanced MI350X GPUs. 

Public Investment Fund: PIF-backed utility Acwa Power has announced clean energy deals worth $10 billion. The biggest is a $6 billion deal signed between Acwa, Aramco and PIF unit Badeel to develop 70% of Saudi Arabia’s 2030 renewable energy targets.

Public Investment Fund: Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund and U.S. asset manager BlackRock have partnered to launch mutual funds.

ADQ: AD Ports Group, controlled by the Abu Dhabi sovereign fund, signed an initial agreement with the Indian government of Maharashtra paving the way to invest up to $2 billion in the state’s ports and shipbuilding sectors.

ADQ: Abu Dhabi National Energy Company, known as TAQA, sold its entire stake in an Indian coal power plant for $105 million as part of a pivot towards green power.

↪↩ Closing Circuit

🛒 Shopping Trip: Dubai retail conglomerate Al-Futtaim is planning to invest an additional $2.7 billion in Saudi Arabia over the next three years.

💰 Cash Zap: Emirates NBD has inked a $423 million credit facility with Egypt’s El Sewedy Electric for regional expansion across Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

📷 Tourism Boost: Oman signed 36 contracts worth $260 million for the construction of tourism projects as part of its Vision 2040 project.

🚢 Ship Shape: Dubai-based global terminal operator DP World has committed to invest an additional $5 billion in India’s maritime infrastructure.

🔍 Breaking Ground: Dubai Investments is investing $163 million to build a second production line for its subsidiary Emirates Float Glass.

🗣 Circuit Chatter

🧊 Chilling Offer: Saudi-Swiss cold-chain tech company Consolidated Grünenfelder Saady is planning an IPO on the Saudi stock exchange next month.

📈 GDP Boost: Saudi Arabia’s economy expanded at 5% year-on-year in the third quarter, the fastest pace since early 2023, helped by rising oil production and big state investments in non-oil sectors. 

🏘️ Crypto Homes: Dubai property company Idealist Real Estate entered a strategic partnership with Citi Developers to integrate crypto payments into real estate transactions.

🏦 Fed Cuts: Gulf central banks cut interest rates in tandem with the U.S. Federal Reserve’s second reduction of 25 basis points this year.

🌎Power Circuit

Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman held meetings with heads of state on the sidelines of the FII conference in Riyadh on Wednesday, including Ahmed Al Sharaa, President of Syria; Vjosa Osmani, President of Kosova; Manuel Marrero Cruz, Prime Minister of Cuba; Gustavo Petro, President of Colombia; Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, President of Equatorial Guinea; and Han Zheng, Vice President of China. The meetings were also attended by various ministers and dignitaries, including Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan.

Adel Al-Jubeir, Saudi Arabia’s Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Cabinet Member, and Climate Envoy met with former Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper on the sidelines of the FII conference on Wednesday.

Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Executive Council, met with Michel Demaré, Chair of biopharmaceutical company AstraZeneca, along with other members of AstraZeneca’s board, in Abu Dhabi on Wednesday.

António Costa, President of the European Council, visited the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque in Abu Dhabi on Wednesday, accompanied by Lucie Berger, Ambassador of the European Union to the UAE, and several senior EU officials. 

Faisal Alibrahim, Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Economy and Planning, met with Vietnam’s Deputy Prime Minister Ngugen Chi Dung in Riyadh for talks to enhance cooperation. 

Yuriko Koike, Tokyo Gov., arrived in Kuwait on Wednesday for an official visit and was greeted at the airport by Sheikh Abdullah Salem Al-Ali Al-Sabah, Gov. of the Kuwait City.

➿On The Circuit

Syrian President Ahmed Al Sharaa met with FIFA President Gianni Infantino on the sidelines of the FII conference in Riyadh on Wednesday.

Mohamed Alabbar, founder of Dubai-listed Emaar Properties, said during a panel discussion at the FII conference in Riyadh that his company is looking to enter China’s real estate market.

Belkasem Haftar, son of Libyan military strongman Khalifa Haftar, is using the FII conference in Riyadh to drum up interest in Libya as an attractive destination for investment, Bloomberg reports.

Bill Winters, Group CEO of Standard Chartered, told The National on the sidelines of the FII conference that the Middle East wealth management business is one of the fastest growing in the world for U.K.-based lenders.

Will Ahmed, Founder & CEO of wearable tech company Whoop, spent several days touring the Gulf, visiting Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. He announced the launch of an R&D center called Whoop Labs Doha in partnership with Invest Qatar and a partnership with digital health platform Lean Business Services in Saudi Arabia. 

🎶 Culture Circuit

🎤 Learning Moment: Maharat, the Arab world’s answer to the popular American subscription service MasterClass, is now offering bite-sized versions of its courses, The National reports. The platform, which launched in February, features lessons in business, fashion and music from the likes of Toufic Kreidieh, Executive Chairman of Brands for Less Group, celebrity make-up artist Bassam Fattouh and Lebanese singer Ragheb Alama. The new feature, called Playlists, condenses the courses into 2-3 minute videos and is touted as the company’s antidote to doom-scrolling.

📷 Photo of the Day

Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Donald Trump Jr. watch from the audience as Syrian President Ahmed Al Sharaa speaks at the FII conference in Riyadh. (Syrian Presidency/X)

📅 Circuit Calendar

Oct 29-31, Abu Dhabi. International Forum of Sovereign Wealth Funds. An annual forum hosted by Abu Dhabi Investment Authority and Mubadala, bringing together global CEOs and senior executives from sovereign wealth funds. ADGM 

Nov. 1-2, Dubai. Women’s Empowerment Convention. The 3rd Women’s Leadership Forum unites global trailblazers, headlined by fashion icon Anna Wintour and storytelling pioneer Candace Bushnell. Atlantis The Royal Conference Center.

Nov. 3-6, Abu Dhabi. ADIPEC. Bringing together professionals, companies, and government leaders to discuss and showcase the latest developments in oil, gas, and cleaner energy technologies. ADNEC Center.

Nov. 4-9, Dubai. Dubai Design Week. The Middle East’s largest creative festival, showcasing more than 200 events across architecture, product, furniture, interior and graphic design. D3.

Nov. 17-21, Dubai. Dubai Airshow 2025. The biennial exhibition attracts aerospace companies from around the world to the UAE. DWC, Al Maktoum International Airport.

Dec 8-9, Riyadh. Hydrogen Arabia Summit & Exhibition. The inaugural event is aimed at positioning the Kingdom as a hub for hydrogen and clean energy collaboration. Crowne Plaza Riyadh RDC.

The Daily Circuit: Where’s the oil at FII? + Financing Syria

👋 Hello from the Middle East!

In the Daily Circuit today, we’re reporting on Day 2 of Saudi Arabia’s Future Investment Initiative summit, where Blackstone announced a $3 billion investment in the PIF’s Humain AI company and Saudi officials declared their commitment to financing reconstruction of Syria. Elsewhere, we’re looking at shrinking salaries in the UAE and a revised buyout offer from Abu Dhabi’s Masdar that was accepted by India’s ReNew Energy Global. On the way into the conference, though, we were sidetracked by a model of the soon-to-arrive Saudi dream train.

Nearly a decade after Saudi Arabia burst out of its conservative cocoon and tapped its oil wealth to start a trillion-dollar parade of real estate megaprojects, the kingdom is executing a tricky public pivot in front of some of Wall Street’s biggest money managers.

Onstage at the ninth annual Future Investment Initiative conference in Riyadh, Cabinet Ministers, corporate executives and the head of the Gulf state’s $925 billion Public Investment Fund have sought to shift attention from colossal building ventures like NEOM’s 100-mile-long desert city to becoming a global technology leader.

Turning heads was the $3 billion investment in the PIF’s Humain artificial intelligence company announced Tuesday by private equity giant Blackstone and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board to build data centers in the kingdom.

At the same time, Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman made a 30-minute speech about Saudi Arabia’s fuel production, focusing on renewables, battery capacity and gas, without once mentioning oil. “We understand what tomorrow demands,” he said. “We are resourced to deliver it and we invite the world to invest with us.”

Investment Minister Khaled al-Falih, meanwhile, told the conference explicitly that the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund would step back, hoping the private sector will fill in some of the blanks, in an age where sinking oil prices have sapped the government’s ability to pay for its ambitious building plans.

“It is time for us to scale back on this government or PIF spend and let the private sector come in and start investing,” Al-Falih said.

Among the 9,000 attendees at the conference was Donald Trump Jr., who took the stage to tout his family’s own investments in the region, including a Trump skyscraper under construction on Dubai’s central Sheikh Zayed Road.

The presidential son, on his first visit to Saudi Arabia, described his new enthusiasm for the region, saying that until recently, “No one sane would have thought of investing in the Middle East, compared to Europe.”

Editor’s Note: Kindly let us know your thoughts and feedback by replying to this newsletter or emailing us at [email protected].

Saudi Arabia’s dream train to chug across the desert at $4,000 a night

Arsenale CEO Paolo Barletta outside model “Dream of the Desert” luxury train set up outside the FII investor conference in Riyadh

Paolo Barletta, a dapper Italian railroad impresario, is channeling the spirit of the storied Orient Express and Fellini’s La Dolce Vita to bring luxury train travel to Saudi Arabia.

Starting late next year, his “Dream of the Desert” line will take passengers on an 800-mile journey across the kingdom’s dune-filled landscapes for between $4,000 and $28,000 a night, the CEO of Rome-based Arsenale Group told The Circuit’s Jonathan Ferziger and Omnia Al Desoukie in Riyadh.

That shouldn’t be a problem for Barletta’s target clientele of wealthy Saudis and free-spending international visitors looking for thrills as the once-secluded Gulf state keeps rolling out new tourist attractions. “People here are spending crazy amounts of money to go to the Red Sea, to go to AlUla, to go to the Aseer region. So why not on a train?” he said.

Click here to read the full story.

📰 Developing Stories

DAMASCUS MOMENT

Saudi Arabia is preparing to launch a series of funds in Syria to oversee the billions of riyals it is committing to rebuilding the economy of the wartorn country, Saudi Investment Minister Khalid Al Falih told the Saudi-Syrian investment roundtable in Riyadh. Saudi Banks are also setting up operations in Damascus, with two already operating and moving funds between the two countries, as they deepen financial and banking cooperation. Syrian President Ahmad Al Sharaa is set to address investors in a keynote speech to the FII conference this afternoon, where he will set out his vision for attracting high-value investments and advancing reconstruction efforts. During his visit Al Sharaa is also expected to meet with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who was instrumental in lobbying U.S. President Donald Trump to lift sanctions on Syria.

Employees in the UAE are facing a contraction in salaries, as booming population growth means that the number of jobseekers is far outstripping the available roles in many industries, The National reports. Once considered “hardship” positions with high salaries for expats, professional jobs in Dubai and Abu Dhabi are now highly sought after as the cities mature, offering an attractive lifestyle along with tax benefits. Trefor Murphy, Founder and CEO of recruitment company Cooper Fitch, told the newspaper that new arrivals were “doing anything” just to get a job and it was making it harder for existing talent to get a justifiable wage increase. “We’ve had dentists come to the UAE to work as real estate agents,” he said. Cooper Fitch data showed hiring activity in the Emirates increased 3% in the three months to the end of September.

💲 Sovereign Circuit

Public Investment Fund: The PIF has signed a memorandum of understanding worth $6.8 billion with U.K. Export Finance, the British export credit agency, to build financial cooperation and expand trade and investment opportunities.

Public Investment Fund: The Red Sea Gateway Terminal, partly owned by the PIF, signed an $433 million agreement with French-based CMA CGM Group to develop and operate a fourth container terminal at Jeddah Islamic Port, Arab News reports.

Public Investment Fund: PIF-owned Saudi Arabian developer Red Sea Global raised a $1.7 billion credit facility through Riyad Bank to finance the development of its luxury tourism destination Amaala.

ADNOC: XRG, the low-carbon investment arm of Abu Dhabi’s state-owned oil company, is looking at investing in a liquefied natural gas project developed by Argentina’s state-owned YPF, Bloomberg reports.

Masdar: India’s Nasdaq-listed ReNew Energy Global has accepted a revised buyout offer from a consortium led by Abu Dhabi renewable energy company Masdar, Abu Dhabi Investment Authority subsidiary Platinum Hawk, the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board and Sumant Sinha, Founder, Chairman and CEO of ReNew. The revised cash offer values the deal at more than $3 billion.

Mubadala: Bahrain’s Investcorp, the alternative asset manager backed by Mubadala, aims to raise as much as $7 billion in new funding and make exits and distribution to investors of a similar amount in the current financial year, CFO and Vice Chairman Rishi Kapoor told The National on the sidelines of the FII conference.

↪↩ Closing Circuit

☁️ Cloud Deal: Qatar-based data center and IT provider Meeza signed a $205 million agreement with a global hyperscaler and cloud service provider to provide 6 megawatts of data center services. 

⚕️ New Contracts: Modon, Saudi Arabia’s authority for Industrial Cities and Technology Zones, signed five new industrial contracts in the critical medical and pharmaceutical industries worth $62.6 million.

🏭 Green Investment: The Green Climate Fund will help build a $6 billion water desalination project in Jordan, marking the fund’s largest investment in a single project, Reuters reports.

💸 Fintech Cash: Viola Credit, an Israel-based asset manager specializing in alternative credit, has raised a $2 billion fund to lend to financial technology startups, Bloomberg reports.

🗣 Circuit Chatter

📈 Taking Stock: Dubai-listed education provider Amanat Holdings has launched the IPO of its subsidiary Almasar Alshamil Education on the Saudi Tadawul Exchange.

🇵🇰 Trade Pact: Saudi Arabia and Pakistan agreed to launch an Economic Cooperation Framework to strengthen trade and investment relations.

💸 Less Impact: Dubai is not likely to raise substantial debt over the next two years as more fiscal surpluses are expected between 2025 and 2028, S&P said in a new report.

✈️ Airport Award: Iraq selected a consortium of Luxembourg-based Corporación América Airports and local company Amwaj International to develop and operate Baghdad International Airport.

💰 Dubai Bound: Dublin-based Avia Solutions Group, the world’s largest aircraft, crew, maintenance and insurance provider, will establish its new regional headquarters at Dubai South.

🌎Power Circuit

Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman met in Riyadh on Tuesday with FIFA President Gianni Infantino to review areas of sports cooperation. Also present were Minister of Sport Prince Abdulaziz bin Turki bin Faisal, Minister of Commerce Majid Al-Kassabi, PIF Gov. Yasser Al-Rumayyan, Advisor at the Royal Court Abdulaziz Tarabzouni and President of the Saudi Arabian Football Federation Yasser Al-Misehal.

UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed met with António Costa, President of the European Council, at Qasr Al Shati palace in Abu Dhabi on Tuesday. The pair discussed ongoing negotiations on a trade deal between the UAE and the EU.

Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Executive Council, met with Chuck Robbins, Chair and CEO of Cisco, in Abu Dhabi on Tuesday.

Crown Prince Hussein of Jordan and his delegation arrived in Riyadh on Tuesday to participate in the FII conference.

Ahmed Al Sharaa, President of Syria, arrived in Riyadh on Tuesday to participate in the FII conference. 

Sheikha Latifa bint Mohammed, Chairperson of Dubai Culture and Arts Authority, delivered a keynote address at the Emirati Media Forum at the Museum of the Future in Dubai on Tuesday.

Sheikha Bodour bint Sultan Al Qasimi, President of the American University of Sharjah and Chairperson of the Sharjah Book Authority, has been named UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador for Education and Book Culture.

Sheikh Mansoor bin Mohammed, President of the UAE National Olympic Committee, met with Gao Zhidan, President of the Chinese Olympic Committee, on Tuesday in Dubai.

➿On The Circuit

Abdullah Alswaha, Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Communications and Information Technology, met with global technology leaders on the sidelines of the FII conference, including Vimal Kapur, Chairman and CEO of Honeywell; Steven Mnuchin, Chairman and CEO of Liberty Strategic Capital and former U.S. Treasury Secretary; Amjad Masad, Founder and CEO of Replit; and Emirati businessman Hussain Sajwani, Founder and Chairman of Damac Properties and EDGNEX Data Centers.

Jasem Albudaiwi, GCC Secretary-General, is attending the FII conference in Riyadh, commenting that the event is a source of pride for all Gulf citizens.

Amer Ghalib, U.S. President Trump’s pick to serve as ambassador to Kuwait, is unlikely to make the cut after three key Republican senators said they would oppose the nomination, The New York Times reports.

Georges Elhedery, Group CEO of HSBC, told The National on the sidelines of the FII conference that the bank was halfway through a revamp of its global business and was betting on expanding its wealth management offering in the Middle East and Asia to boost growth.

Yie-Hsin Hung, President and CEO of State Street Investment Management, played down fears of an AI bubble in comments to Asharq Bloomberg on the sidelines of the FII conference. 

Karim Abi Nader was appointed Executive Director and Banker at JPMorgan Private Bank in the Middle East.

🎶 Culture Circuit

🎨 Art Auction: Palestinian-American artist Samia Halaby’s “Morning Honey” and Fahrelnissa Zeid’s “Carnations” were among works auctioned at Sotheby’s Modern and Contemporary Middle Eastern Art sale in London on Tuesday. The bi-annual event featured a curated selection of artworks from the Arab world, North Africa, Iran and Turkey. Halaby’s 1992 painting had one of the highest estimated sales prices, at $93,000-$133,000. The result is pending.

📷 Photo of the Day

Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Energy Prince Abdulaziz Bin Salman Al Saud speaks during the Future Investment Initiative (FII) conference in Riyadh on October 28, 2025. (Photo by Fayez Nureldine / AFP)

📅 Circuit Calendar

Oct. 27-30, Riyadh. Future Investment Initiative, 9th Edition. Investors, corporate executives, cabinet ministers and political leaders from around the world attend Saudi Arabia’s flagship business conference. King Abdulaziz International Conference Center.

Oct 29-31, Abu Dhabi. International Forum of Sovereign Wealth Funds. An annual forum hosted by Abu Dhabi Investment Authority and Mubadala, bringing together global CEOs and senior executives from sovereign wealth funds. ADGM 

Nov. 1-2, Dubai. Women’s Empowerment Convention. The 3rd Women’s Leadership Forum unites global trailblazers, headlined by fashion icon Anna Wintour and storytelling pioneer Candace Bushnell. Atlantis The Royal Conference Center.

Nov. 3-6, Abu Dhabi. ADIPEC. Bringing together professionals, companies, and government leaders to discuss and showcase the latest developments in oil, gas, and cleaner energy technologies. ADNEC Center.

Nov. 4-9, Dubai. Dubai Design Week. The Middle East’s largest creative festival, showcasing more than 200 events across architecture, product, furniture, interior and graphic design. D3.

Nov. 17-21, Dubai. Dubai Airshow 2025. The biennial exhibition attracts aerospace companies from around the world to the UAE. DWC, Al Maktoum International Airport.

Dec 8-9, Riyadh. Hydrogen Arabia Summit & Exhibition. The inaugural event is aimed at positioning the Kingdom as a hub for hydrogen and clean energy collaboration. Crowne Plaza Riyadh RDC.