The Daily Circuit: Abu Dhabiâs AI hub rises + 2PointZero growth plans
đ Hello from the Middle East!
In the Daily Circuit today, weâre reporting on a projected surge in global Islamic finance assets to $9.7 trillion, U.S. colleges looking for money in Saudi Arabia to fund their burgeoning football programs, 2PointZeroâs plans to use its $33 billion merger for expansion in Asia, Africa and Europe, and the works by celebrated Arab artists being sold at Christieâs next month in London. But first, the breathtaking pace of construction at the UAEâs massive AI campus.
Construction of the multibillion-dollar Stargate UAE AI project is progressing at a pace that might be considered impossible outside of the Gulf region and is surprising even for the Emiratesâ warp-speed developers.
Abu Dhabiâs G42 tech company shared a time-lapse video of the construction site for the initial 1GW infrastructure cluster, which will be a cornerstone of the 5GW UAE-U.S. AI Campus. The clip shows huge concrete foundations, more than half a dozen cranes and some of the 3,500 workers who have been deployed to the site. The full build-out of the 1GW cluster, overseen by G42 subsidiary Khazna Data Centers, is expected to take three years.
Stargate UAE is being built by G42 in partnership with Nvidia, OpenAI, Cisco, Oracle and SoftBank, following a deal made during U.S. President Donald Trumpâs visit to the Emirates in May.
Just three months ago the entire site was covered in a 40-foot-high sand dune, Khazna Data Centers Vice President for Special Projects Gareth Dennison said during a panel discussion at Gitex Global 2025. âIt’s a huge achievement,â he said, âIf it could happen, it could only happen in the UAE.â
Also speaking at Gitex, Khazna CEO Hassan Al Naqbi said the company was working on the first phase of a five-phase cluster. “Just to give you a sense of size â this project spans about 10 square miles of land dedicated entirely to building not just a data centre, but an entire AI ecosystem,” he said.
Editorâs Note: Kindly let us know your thoughts and feedback by replying to this newsletter or emailing us at [email protected].
đ° Developing Stories
ISLAMIC SURGE
Global Islamic finance assets are projected to soar by more than 60% over the next four years to $9.7 trillion, driven by gains in banking, bonds and insurance markets. According to a study by the London Stock Exchange and the Islamic Corp. for the Development of the Private Sector, the sector has been growing by an average 10% annual rate, Arab News reports. The report says Iran, Saudi Arabia and Malaysia together hold roughly $4.3 trillion in Islamic finance assets, or about 72% of the total. It says the U.K. has emerged as a key hub for Islamic finance, particularly in the sale of sustainable sukuk bonds.
FOOTBALL FUNDS
With Saudi Arabia pouring billions into sports such as golf, soccer and tennis, some of the biggest U.S. colleges are looking to the kingdom as a possible funding source for their costly football programs. The general manager of the University of North Carolinaâs football team, Michael Lombardi, recently traveled to Saudi Arabia on what the school called an âexploratory fundraising trip,â The Athletic reports. UNC officials said Lombardi went on a Saudi-funded trip to meet with high-level figures interested in supporting the program, though no agreements emerged. The visit reflects broader efforts by universities to seek alternative revenue streams as college sports grow more expensive, the newspaper said.
đČ Sovereign Circuit
Qatar Investment Authority:Beta Technologies, a Vermont-based electric aviation startup backed by the QIA, will price the shares for its upcoming IPO between $27 and $33, seeking to raise as much as $825 million, TechCrunch reports.
International Holding Co.:Mariam Almheiri, CEO of 2PointZero, the $33 billion IHC-owned group being created through the merger of three Abu Dhabi companies, told The National that an expanded balance sheet and capital strength would give the new âinvestment powerhouseâ financial muscle to fund aggressive growth targets.
Abu Dhabi Investment Authority: Lenskart Solutions is planning an IPO in Mumbai next month that would value the Indian eyewear maker at about $9 billion, significantly boosting the value of ADIAâs stake in the company, Bloomberg reports.
đą Concrete Takeover:P&O Maritime Logistics, a subsidiary of Dubai-based port operator DP World, has completed the acquisition of a controlling stake in NovaAlgoma Cement Carriers.
đđ»ââ Alternative Investment:Indiaâs Dhanwantari Vidyasala Group is investing at least $27 million to open 10 centers practicing traditional Ayurvedic therapy across the UAE over the next three years, starting in Dubai, Al Khaleej reports.
đ° Helping Hand:Saudi Arabiaâs Small and Medium Enterprises Financing Guarantee Program, known as Kafalah, boosted small business funding by 8% year-on-year in the third quarter to $3.7 billion.
đ” Sales Simulation: Second Nature, an Israeli startup that trains sales teams through AI-generated, simulated conversations, raised $22 million in a Series B funding round led by Zoom.
đŁ Circuit Chatter
đ Cable to Damascus:Syria is set to award a contract to build its $500 million SilkLink national fiber optic network next month, creating a key data corridor between Asia and Europe.
đ New Market: Uzbekistanâs fintech and e-commerce startup Uzum, valued at $1.5 billion, is looking at Abu Dhabi, together with London and New York, as a possible market to trade its shares, Co-founder Nikolay Seleznev told Reuters.
đĄïž Defense Pact: Saudi Arabia is discussing a defense agreement with the Trump administration similar to the U.S.-Qatar pact concluded last month that pledged to regard any attack on the Gulf state as a threat to American âpeace and security,âThe Financial Times reports.
đ Cultural Shift: Saudi Arabiaâs recent cultural initiatives, from the Riyadh Comedy Festival to a $55 billion gaming deal with Electronic Arts, reflect an inward-focused effort to reshape domestic life in the kingdom rather than simply trying to burnish its global image, Kareem Shaheen writes in New Lines magazine.
đPower Circuit
UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayedreceived a letter from Saudi CrownPrince Mohammed bin Salman, inviting the UAE to participate in Expo 2030 Riyadh.
Prince Faisal bin Farhan, Saudi Arabiaâs Foreign Minister, held a phone call on Thursday with his Pakistani counterpart Ishaq Dar.
Sheikh Bandar bin Mohammed bin Saoud, Governor of Qatar Central Bank and Chairman of the Qatar Investment Authority, met with Citigroup Chairman John Dugan and Euroclear Chairman Francesco Vanni d’Archirafi on the sidelines of the IMF and World Bank meetings in Washington, D.C.
âżOn The Circuit
Saad al-Kaabi, Qatarâs Energy Minister, said in an interview with Reuters that a proposed European Union law targeting long-term gas contracts could discourage investment and strain business ties, warning policymakers not to undermine energy security through overregulation.
Mahmoud Khalifa, Executive Investment Director of Egyptâs CI Capital PE for Fund Management and Investment, told Zawya Arabic that the group plans to launch a fund worth $21 million to invest in troubled industrial companies, in partnership with local banks and financial institutions.
Viktoria Beromelidzewas appointed Head of Debt Capital Markets at Saudi Arabian investment bank BSF Capital.
Toon Gyssels, COO of Talabat, was named CEO of the online food delivery business on Thursday.
Razan Al Mubarak, Managing Director of the Environment Agency Abu Dhabi,was voted in for a second term as President of the International Union for Conservation of Nature on Thursday.
đ¶ Culture Circuit
đš Under the Hammer: Christieâs has published highlights from its upcoming Modern and Contemporary Middle Eastern Art sale in London, taking place on Nov. 6. Among the pieces from the regionâs most celebrated artists are âAutomne,â a masterpiece by Jerusalem-born Lebanese artist Paul Guiragossian, âGardeniaâ by New York-based Palestinian abstract artist Samia Halaby and âMekarzel Hillâ by Mahmoud Said, regarded as the father of Egyptian modernism.
đ· Photo of the Day
Mfiondu Kabengele of the Dubai Basketball Club in action during the EuroLeague Round 5 match against FC Barcelona at Coca-Cola Arena in Dubai on Thursday. Dubai defeated the two-time Euroleague champions 83-78. (Jorge Ferrari/Euroleague Basketball via Getty Images)
đ Circuit Calendar
Oct. 15-18, Sharjah. Evolve Future Mobility Show. Shaping the future of the electric vehicle industry in the region. Sharjah Expo Center.
Oct. 16-21, Riyadh. Riyadh Fashion Week. A six-day event featuring more than 30 runway shows. Various locations.
Oct. 21-23, Dubai. Healthcare Future Summit. The summit explores the evolving landscape of vaccine innovation and global disease control. Dubai World Trade Center.
Oct. 22, Abu Dhabi. Reuters NEXT Gulf Summit. Hosting critical conversations with world leaders, innovators and market movers to define the Middle East’s next chapter. St Regis Saadiyat.
Oct. 22-24, Sharjah. World Investment Conference & Sharjah Investment Forum. A global investment summit exploring foreign direct investment, policies and collaboration for resilient and sustainable growth. Al Jawaher Reception and Convention Centre.
Oct. 27, Dubai. The UAE Africa Tourism Investment Summit. Hosted by the UAE Ministry of Economy and Tourism as part of Future Hospitality Summit World 2025 to foster investment and strengthen tourism partnerships between the UAE and African nations. Madinat Jumeirah.
Oct. 27-28, Jeddah. Sustainable Coastal Development Forum. Exploring strategic solutions for developing eco-friendly coastal communities. Hilton Jeddah.
Oct. 27-29, Dubai. Future Hospitality Summit. Connecting global investment opportunities and projects to hospitality decision-makers. Madinat Jumeirah.
Oct. 27-30, Riyadh. Future Investment Initiative, 9th Edition. Investors, corporate executives, cabinet ministers and political leaders from around the world attend Saudi Arabiaâs flagship business conference. King Abdulaziz International Conference Center.
Nov. 1-2, Dubai. Womenâs Empowerment Convention. The 3rd Womenâs 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 Eastâs 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: Making Room in Mecca + JPMorgan HQ in Riyadh
đ Hello from the Middle East!
In the Daily Circuit today, weâre reporting on Saudi plans to create a national scrap metal company, JPMorganâ Chase’s new license to open a regional HQ in Riyadh, Emirati banks offering corporate loans in Turkey and the imposing Zayed National Museum setting a date to open its doors in Abu Dhabi. But first, making room for millions more pilgrims in Mecca.
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman launched a massive development alongside the Grand Mosque in Mecca that aims to almost double the holy cityâs capacity to host Muslim pilgrims coming from around the world.
The new plan, introduced by the Saudi leader on Wednesday as the King Salman Gate project, is part of a broader push to modernize Meccaâs municipal services and accommodate 30 million visitors annually by 2030, up from about 18 million last year.
The development will span nearly a quarter the size of Manhattan, covering 12 million square meters of space (130 million square feet). Managed by RUA AlHaram AlMakki Co., a subsidiary of Saudi Arabiaâs Public Investment Fund, the project will include residential towers, hotels and retail space in addition to worship areas.
The real estate surrounding Islamâs holiest sites in Mecca and Medina has become a magnet for hotel chains, developers and apartment owners, drawn by the guaranteed demand that comes from the religious obligation of Hajj. High-end lodging and property rentals in the surrounding districts have produced strong returns, encouraging more private and institutional participation.
Saudi authorities are also updating regulations to open parts of Mecca and Medina to additional foreign capital. While special restrictions will remain for property ownership in the holy cities, broader reforms in Riyadh and Jeddah are designed to attract outside investors and integrate the religious tourism sector into the kingdomâs diversification plans.
Editorâs Note: Kindly let us know your thoughts and feedback by replying to this newsletter or emailing us at [email protected].
CIRCUIT INTERVIEW
Core42 walks tightrope between AI growth and global regulation
GITEX Global participants visit the Core42 booth.
As Core42 rolls out its Nvidia-powered AI cloud platform, senior executives say the Abu Dhabi-based tech company is trying to grow internationally without tripping over tightening regulatory frameworks.
Chief Financial Officer Neha Gupta says the firm âmade an intentional decisionâ to enter the U.S. and European markets despite the added compliance challenges. âThe industry is evolving practically on a daily basis,â she told The Circuitâs Omnia Al Desoukie.
Sitting alongside Gupta on the sidelines of this weekâs Gitex Global 2025 conference in Dubai, Core42 General Counsel Roopal Jobanputra described the partnership between the two women as a balancing act. âNeha drives growth, and I make sure we grow responsibly,â she said. âThe key is finding equilibrium between expansion and compliance.â
UAE banks are stepping in to offer corporate loans in Turkey, where foreign investors are shying away from political turbulence and a credit squeeze that has seen interest rates held at a staggering 40%. Emirati lenders are opening local offices and hiring Turkish bankers as they double down on the lucrative market. Over the past five months Emirates NBD and Dubai Islamic Bank have granted about $440 million in financing, including loans to telecom Turkcell and supermarket chain A101, while DIB made an Islamic financing deal with Turkish Airlines, Bloomberg reports. That builds on a UAE push to lend to Turkish banks following a trade deal signed in 2023. Emirates NBD and Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank have become the second and third-largest bookrunners for syndicated loans to Turkish banks, according to Bloomberg.
BON APPETIT
Franceâs fine food bible, the Michelin Guide, launched in Saudi Arabia on Wednesday, unveiling the first of three batches of restaurants that made the cut. The first stage named restaurants that made the Bib Gourmand category, awarded to eateries offering high-quality food at lower prices, as well as those that made the guide without any award. Saudi breakfast joint Tameesa, contemporary Saudi eatery Mirzam and Japanese restaurant Kayzo were among the Bib Gourmand selections for Riyadh, Arab News reports. Restaurants that earned coveted Michelin stars will be announced on Nov. 15 and Dec. 15.
đČ Sovereign Circuit
MGX: Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei held talks in Abu Dhabi with MGX just weeks after the AI startup closed one of the largest venture financing rounds in tech history. Meanwhile, MGX and BlackRockâs Global Infrastructure Partners confirmed that they are leading a $40 billion acquisition of Aligned Data Centers.
đïž Retail Money:UAE retail conglomerate, Majid Al Futtaim Properties, priced its $500 million 10-year senior unsecured Islamic bonds.
đ° Financial Relations: Saudi Specialized Medical Company secured a $293 million Islamic-compliant credit facility agreement with Saudi Awwal Bank to finance the construction of SMC 4 Hospital in Riyadh.
đ·đ»ââïžSaudi Bound:KEC International won a $118 million contract to provide the design and supply materials for a substation in Saudi Arabia.
đ” Trade Ties:DBS Group, the largest bank in Southeast Asia, partnered with Riyadh-based Banque Saudi Fransi to boost trade finance and payment flows between Asia and Saudi Arabia.
đŁ Circuit Chatter
âïž Metal Drive: Saudi Minister of Industry and Mineral Resources Bandar Alkhorayef said the kingdom plans to establish a national scrap metal company to support roughly $16 billion in steel-sector investments.
đŠ Riyadh Footprint: JPMorgan Chase obtained a license to open a regional headquarters in Saudi Arabia, the latest bank to fall in line with rules making establishment of a Mideast base in the kingdom into a prerequisite for government contracts, Bloomberg reports.
đ To Space: Omanâs Civil Aviation Authority has introduced a framework allowing commercial spaceflights from the sultanate.
đŒ Swiss Bankers: UBS bank opened an advisory office in Abu Dhabiâs ADGM, its second office in the UAE.
âïž Stronger Ground:The UAE passport surpassed both the U.S. and Canada to become the eighth most powerful in the world, with visa-free access to 184 destinations, according to the latest Henley Passport Index.
đPower Circuit
UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayeddirected an expansion of nature reserves in Abu Dhabi to reach 20% of the emirateâs total land area.
Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed, Crown Prince of Dubai, UAE Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defense, and Chairman of The Executive Council of Dubai, met with more than 40 founders and CEOs of Indian unicorn companies on Wednesday.
Sheikh Maktoum bin Mohamed, UAE Minister of Finance and Deputy Prime Minister, met with BĂžrge Brende, President and CEO of the World Economic Forum, on the sidelines of the Annual Meetings of the Global Future Councils and Cybersecurity 2025, organised by the UAE Government in partnership with the Forum.
Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, Saudi Arabiaâs Minister of Energy, met with Alexander Novak, Russiaâs Deputy Prime Minister, on Wednesday to discuss OPEC+ actions on oil.
Sheikha Latifa bint Mohammed bin Rashid, Chairperson of Dubai Culture and Arts Authority, visited GITEX Global 2025 on Wednesday.
Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid bin Mohammed bin Rashid, a Dubai royal, visited GITEX Global 2025 on Wednesday.
âżOn The Circuit
Musab Abdulla, Director of the ICT sector at Bahrainâs Economic Development Board, said the country wanted to develop more sustainable energy, however, it was juggling demand for space between solar plants and data centers.
Ken Gilmartin, Group CEO of U.K.-based John Wood Group, will step down after an upcoming shareholder vote on its $292 million takeover by UAE-based engineering company Sidara.
Sabah Salem Al Shamsiwas appointed Assistant Secretary General of The Executive Council of Dubai for Government Communication and General Secretariat Affairs.
Prof. Robert F. Engle and Prof. Sir Konstantin Novoselov, two Nobel Laureates, have become part of the advisory board of ADIA Lab, the independent Abu Dhabi-based institute dedicated to basic and applied research in data and computational sciences.
Emad Saad, Chairperson of Avrio Gold, said the company is preparing to open a new factory for producing gold jewellery and bullion in Egypt.
đ¶ Culture Circuit
đïž Opening Day: Zayed National Museum will open to the public on Dec. 3, the day after UAE National Day, the Department of Culture and Tourism Abu Dhabi announced. The museum, designed by U.K. firm Foster+Partners, already dominates the skyline of the growing Saadiyat Cultural District, with five gigantic steel structures shaped like the feathers of a falcon. The museum will tell the story of the UAE through its collection of more than 3,000 artifacts, including the Abu Dhabi Pearl, one of the worldâs oldest natural pearls.
đ· Photo of the Day
Prince William of Wales and Princess Catherine welcomed Crown Prince Hussein of Jordan and Princess Rajwa at Windsor Castle, near London, on Wednesday. (Royal Hashemite Court)
đ Circuit Calendar
Oct. 13-17, Dubai. GITEX Global. The giant tech and startup show is back for its 45th edition, bringing together government and industry leaders., innovators and government. Dubai World Trade Center.
Oct. 15-18, Sharjah. Evolve Future Mobility Show. Shaping the future of the electric vehicle industry in the region. Sharjah Expo Center.
Oct. 16-21, Riyadh. Riyadh Fashion Week. A six-day event featuring more than 30 runway shows. Various locations.
Oct. 21-23, Dubai. Healthcare Future Summit. The summit explores the evolving landscape of vaccine innovation and global disease control. Dubai World Trade Center.
Oct. 22, Abu Dhabi. Reuters NEXT Gulf Summit. Hosting critical conversations with world leaders, innovators and market movers to define the Middle East’s next chapter. St Regis Saadiyat.
Oct. 22-24, Sharjah. World Investment Conference & Sharjah Investment Forum. A global investment summit exploring foreign direct investment, policies and collaboration for resilient and sustainable growth. Al Jawaher Reception and Convention Centre.
Oct. 27, Dubai. The UAE Africa Tourism Investment Summit. Hosted by the UAE Ministry of Economy and Tourism as part of Future Hospitality Summit World 2025 to foster investment and strengthen tourism partnerships between the UAE and African nations. Madinat Jumeirah.
Oct. 27-28, Jeddah. Sustainable Coastal Development Forum. Exploring strategic solutions for developing eco-friendly coastal communities. Hilton Jeddah.
Oct. 27-29, Dubai. Future Hospitality Summit. Connecting global investment opportunities and projects to hospitality decision-makers. Madinat Jumeirah.
Oct. 27-30, Riyadh. Future Investment Initiative, 9th Edition. Investors, corporate executives, cabinet ministers and political leaders from around the world attend Saudi Arabiaâs flagship business conference. King Abdulaziz International Conference Center.
Nov. 1-2, Dubai. Womenâs Empowerment Convention. The 3rd Womenâs 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 Eastâs 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.
Core42 walks tightrope between AI growth and global regulation
As Core42 rolls out its Nvidia-powered AI cloud platform, senior executives say the Abu Dhabi-based tech company is trying to grow internationally without tripping over tightening regulatory frameworks.
Chief Financial Officer Neha Gupta said the firm âmade an intentional decisionâ to enter the U.S. and European markets despite the added compliance challenges. âThe industry is evolving practically on a daily basis,â she told The Circuit.
Sitting alongside Gupta on the sidelines of this weekâs Gitex Global 2025 conference in Dubai, Core42 General Counsel Roopal Jobanputra described the partnership between the two women as a balancing act. âNeha drives growth, and I make sure we grow responsibly,â she said. âThe key is finding equilibrium between expansion and compliance.â
Core42, a subsidiary of AI conglomerate G42, provides customers, including governments, hospitals, airlines and banks, the computer power they need to scale up AI transformation. Among its clients are the Abu Dhabi Health Department, Etihad Airways and the ADNOC oil company. G42 is owned by the Mubadala sovereign wealth fund and investors that include private equity firm Silver Lake, Microsoft and Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio.
Core42 Corporate Counsel Roopal Jobanputra (left) and CFO Neha Gupta
At GITEX, Core42 unveiled its self-service AI Cloud platform, which gives enterprises quick access to high-performance computing while meeting so-called data sovereignty requirements that vest authority over data within their home countries.
Gupta said the model is built around partnerships. She described three approaches: bundling Core42âs technology with partner offerings, working through resellers across multiple countries and offering instant access via an on-demand platform launched this year.
âWeâre building an ecosystem where partners can bring their own industry use cases on top of our AI infrastructure,â she said.
Jobanputra said compliance frameworks are embedded from the start of each collaboration to reflect regional laws such as the EUâs GDPR, the U.S. Cloud Act and the UAEâs data protection rules. She said the company maintains a consistent baseline to ensure âcustomers are comfortable and confident wherever we operate.â
Core42âs proprietary Regulated Technology Environment, or RTE, was developed in the UAE to localize data and can be replicated in other jurisdictions. Jobanputra said it also acts as a âsovereign wrapperâ for public cloud services like Microsoft Azure, letting government clients meet requirements on data residency and security.
Both executives said the fast pace of AI regulation creates uncertainty but also opportunity. Jobanputra said Core42 supports âco-regulation,â working with governments to align technology development with evolving rules. Gupta said customer demand has been strong in the United States, Europe and the Gulf region for solutions that deliver âquick, seamless accessâ without bypassing compliance.
âWe see opportunities to co-develop frameworks that serve both the customerâs and providerâs best interests,â Gupta said. The company expects adoption of its on-demand platform to accelerate by yearâs end.
The Daily Circuit: Jay-Z talks tech with TBZ + Multiply buys 2PointZero
đ Hello from the Middle East!
In the Daily Circuit today, weâre reporting on Abu Dhabi-based Multiply Groupâs acquisition of 2PointZero and Ghita Holding, Egyptâs $5.7 billion oil-drilling plan, Masdarâs planned $1 billion renewable energy investment in Turkey and Solidarity Bahrainâs acquisition of Bahrain National Insurance. But first TBZ sits down with Jay-Z to talk about techâs impact on the entertainment industry.
While IBM, Deloitte and Cisco touted AI deals today on Day 3 of Gitex Global 2025 in Dubai, rap entrepreneur Sean âJay-Zâ Carter sat down in Abu Dhabi with Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed â gatekeeper of the UAEâs trillion-dollar investment funds â to talk about the music businessâs tech horizons, The Circuitâs Omnia Al Desoukie reports.
Sheikh Tahnoon, the UAE National Security Advisor, Deputy Ruler of Abu Dhabi and Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, said in an Instagram post that he talked with Carter, Chairman of Roc Nation, about âtechnological transformations driven by artificial intelligenceâ for the entertainment industry as well as âstrengthening the emirateâs position as a leading global destination for culture, creativity, tourism, and entertainment.â
Also sitting down with Sheikh Tahnoon were Jay Brown, Vice Chairman of Beverly Hill private equity fund MarcyPen Capital Partners; Elbert OâNeal Robinson Jr., CEO of the fund; and UAE Ambassador to the U.S. Yousef Al Otaiba.
Back in Dubai, executives from the 6,800 international companies present at GITEX jostled amid the crowds to negotiate deals, including a partnership to help companies in the Middle East adopt AI faster by combining IBMâs technology with Deloitteâs regional consulting expertise. Cisco, meanwhile, unveiled its âMake AI Work for Youâ program tailored for the region to simplify AI infrastructure and strengthen security.
Headlining GITEX on Tuesday was Sam Altman, founder and CEO of OpenAI, who appeared virtually in Dubai in a discussion with Peng Xiao, CEO of Abu Dhabiâs tech powerhouse G42, sitting onstage.
âCooperation is key â no company or country can reach the full potential of AI alone,â Altman said. âWe are witnessing the greatest transformation in human history. Thatâs why we must constantly raise our goals.â
Editorâs Note: Kindly let us know your thoughts and feedback by replying to this newsletter or emailing us at [email protected].
đ° Developing Stories
TALENT GRAB
The September rollout of an AI-enhanced laptop by Saudi Arabiaâs Humain artificial intelligence company and Qualcomm underscored the kingdomâs push to localize its tech ambitions â with $10 billion in backing from the Public Investment Fund. However, Humain is struggling to recruit the necessary expertise to deliver on Crown Prince Mohamed bin Salmanâs greater tech vision, leading it to lure foreign specialists already working for other Saudi AI initiatives, Intelligence Online reports. Senior talent has migrated from the Saudi Data and AI Authority and the Saudi Company for Artificial Intelligence, raising fears of cannibalization rather than capacity building. The most prominent example is Australian executive Anthony Butler, who moved directly from SDAIA to become Humainâs chief AI architect, while several senior engineers have also shifted to Humain.
WISE RETURNS
London-based money transfer company Wise has secured approvals to operate in the UAE, five years after its first attempt to expand into the Emirates was blocked by regulatory hurdles. The firm offers cheaper global money transfers and foreign exchange than traditional banks by allowing clients to send money online at the mid-market exchange rate for a fixed fee. It has 15 million customers around the world and moves about $50 billion every quarter. Wiseâs arrival comes as another London fintech, Revolut, is preparing to launch in the UAE after receiving regulatory approvals from the Central Bank. The arrival of the so-called neobanks follows the launch of homegrown Wio Bank, backed by ADQ, e& and FAB, three years ago, which popularized app-based banking in the UAE.
đČ Sovereign Circuit
International Holding Co:Multiply Group, a subsidiary of Abu Dhabiâs IHC conglomerate, said it acquired 2PointZero and Ghitha Holding via a share swap, creating a $33 billion investment platform.
G42: UAEâs G42 will launch its sovereign artificial intelligence cloud in France within the coming months, a key step in its plan to expand globally and boost international supercomputing capabilities.
G42: UAE telecom operator e& will soon offer satellite-based 5G connectivity through a deal with Abu Dhabiâs Space42, a joint venture between G42, Mubadala and IHC, expanding internet access and resilience after recent Red Sea cable disruptions.
Masdar:Turkey is finalizing a $1 billion investment from UAE-based Masdar for joint renewable energy projects, including a 1,100 MW pumped-storage solar plant.
ADQ: The Abu Dhabi Investment Office, ADQ-owned AD Ports Group and automotive manufacturer Stellantis signed an agreement to build an integrated automotive ecosystem in Abu Dhabi.
Public Investment Fund:State-owned Saudi Agricultural & Livestock Investment Co., a PIF subsidiary, plans to acquire full ownership of Olam Agri, the agribusiness unit of Singaporeâs Olam Group, to advance the kingdomâs food security strategy, Bloomberg reports.
The Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Developmentsigned two loans with Belize and Saint Lucia, totaling about $26 million, to co-finance major highway projects.
đ Contractor Climbs:Dubai-based contractor Alec Holdingsâ shares rose up to 7.14% on debut after its $381 million IPO,Bloomberg reports.
đ€ Merger Move: Solidarity Bahrain, one of the countryâs biggest insurers, agreed to acquire Bahrain National Insurance from its parent company Solidarity Group for about $146 million.
đ° Increase Output: Egypt launched a five-year, $5.7 billion plan to drill 480 oil and gas wells, banking on expectations the project will attract foreign investment.
đŁ Circuit Chatter
đïž Rebuilding Gaza: The ceasefire pact in Gaza, signed last week, may set off a scramble among international companies for lucrative construction contracts, amid estimates that rebuilding the war-ravaged territory will cost $58 billion, The New York Times reports.
đ” Startup Surge: Startups in the Middle East raised a record $1.2 billion in the third quarter, almost quadrupling the amount for the same period last year, according to data platform Magnitt.
đ Saudi Growth: The International Monetary Fund raised its growth forecast for Saudi Arabia in 2025 to 4% in its October outlook, revising its July estimate of 3.6%. It raised its forecast for 2026 to 4% from 3.9%.
âïž Penalty Time:TheDubai International Finance Centre court ordered NMC Healthcare founder and former CEO BR Shetty to pay $46 million to State Bank of India after finding he lied under oath.
đPower Circuit
Prince Faisal bin Farhan, Saudi Arabiaâs Foreign Minister, met with Portuguese Foreign Minister Paulo Rangel in Riyadh on Tuesday.
Sheikh Hamdan bin Zayed, the Abu Dhabi Rulerâs Representative in the Al Dhafra Region and Chairman of the Environment Agency – Abu Dhabi, issued a decree on continuing preserving the emirateâs biodiversity.
âżOn The Circuit
FIFA President Gianni Infantino said the organization will support efforts to rebuild soccer infrastructure in Gaza, speaking at the summit meeting of world leaders in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt, on Monday.
Mohammed Al Jadaan, Saudi Arabiaâs Finance Minister, warned that rising global debt levels may lead to economic instability, speaking at the Atlantic Council in Washington on Tuesday.
Gwendal Poullennec, International Director of the Michelin Guide, said he hoped to see more independent and smaller restaurants âblossomâ in Saudi Arabia, speaking to Arab Newsahead of todayâs launch of the French fine food bible in the kingdom.
Joshua Kushner, founder and Managing Partner of Thrive Capital, an early investor in OpenAI, Instagram and Slack, is the subject of a profile in Colossus.
đ¶ Culture Circuit
đ Fashion Forward: Riyadh Fashion Week returns on Thursday for its third edition, a city-wide extravaganza with more than 30 runway shows and presentations across six days. British designer Stella McCartney, known for sustainable luxury, will present her first show in the kingdom on the final day. Another iconic British brand, Vivienne Westwood, will make its debut on the opening day, with a show of embroidered gowns blending British fashion heritage with Saudi craftsmanship, Arab News reports. It is the first time international brands have been featured at the event.
đ· Photo of the Day
Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, appeared virtually at GITEX Global 2025 on Tuesday to engage in conversation with Peng Xiao, CEO of G42, who was onstage at the Dubai tech exhibition. (G42)
đ Circuit Calendar
Oct. 13-17, Dubai. GITEX Global. The giant tech and startup show is back for its 45th edition, bringing together government and industry leaders., innovators and government. Dubai World Trade Center.
Oct. 14-16, Dubai. Global Future Council. The event on the Future of Growth convenes senior economists and thought leaders from across academia, business, government and civil society to provide intellectual guidance on new approaches to growth.
Oct. 15-18, Sharjah. Evolve Future Mobility Show. Shaping the future of the electric vehicle industry in the region. Sharjah Expo Center.
Oct. 16-21, Riyadh. Riyadh Fashion Week. A six-day event featuring more than 30 runway shows. Various locations.
Oct. 21-23, Dubai. Healthcare Future Summit. The summit explores the evolving landscape of vaccine innovation and global disease control. Dubai World Trade Center.
Oct. 22, Abu Dhabi. Reuters NEXT Gulf Summit. Hosting critical conversations with world leaders, innovators and market movers to define the Middle East’s next chapter. St Regis Saadiyat.
Oct. 22-24, Sharjah. World Investment Conference & Sharjah Investment Forum. A global investment summit exploring foreign direct investment, policies and collaboration for resilient and sustainable growth. Al Jawaher Reception and Convention Centre.
Oct. 27, Dubai. The UAE Africa Tourism Investment Summit. Hosted by the UAE Ministry of Economy and Tourism as part of Future Hospitality Summit World 2025 to foster investment and strengthen tourism partnerships between the UAE and African nations. Madinat Jumeirah.
Oct. 27-28, Jeddah. Sustainable Coastal Development Forum. Exploring strategic solutions for developing eco-friendly coastal communities. Hilton Jeddah.
Oct. 27-29, Dubai. Future Hospitality Summit. Connecting global investment opportunities and projects to hospitality decision-makers. Madinat Jumeirah.
Oct. 27-30, Riyadh. Future Investment Initiative, 9th Edition. Investors, corporate executives, cabinet ministers and political leaders from around the world attend Saudi Arabiaâs flagship business conference. King Abdulaziz International Conference Center.
Nov. 1-2, Dubai. Womenâs Empowerment Convention. The 3rd Womenâs 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 Eastâs 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.
The Daily Circuit: Stargate UAE online next year + U.S. hedge fund influx
đ Hello from the Middle East!
In the Daily Circuit today, weâre reporting on construction starting on Trump Tower Dubai, U.S. fund manager Davidson Kempner joining the growing list of hedge funds in the UAE, Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed using ChatGPT to design his own home and the app that allows couples in the UAE to get married entirely online. But first, hyperscale data is the talk of GITEX.Â
While shiny innovations, from flying cars to consumer robots, tend to steal the show at Dubaiâs megalithic annual tech conference, the underlying current at this yearâs GITEX Global is the dramatic rise of hyperscalers, the operators of the enormous data centers quietly feeding the gaping maw of the AI revolution.
The UAE, having fallen behind the likes of OpenAI, Anthropic and DeepSeek in the race for consumer products, has honed in on hyperscale infrastructure as its biggest bet, spending billions to become a global AI hub and leveraging its strong relationship with Washington to gain access to advanced chips, The Circuitâs Omnia Al Desoukie reports.
Its flagship project, the 5 gigawatt Stargate UAE data center hub, will start to come online as early as next year, an official from Abu Dhabi AI powerhouse G42 said on the sidelines of GITEX. “Building towards the (first) 1 GW, we have 200 MW that should come online next year,” Talal Al Kaissi, Acting Group Chief of Global Affairs officer at G42, said. “The rest of the four gigawatts, we’re also in deep discussions with other hyperscalers from the U.S.”
Stargate is being built in partnership with tech giants Nvidia, OpenAI, Cisco, Oracle and SoftBank, following a deal made during U.S. President Donald Trumpâs visit to the emirates in May.
Khazna Data Centers, a G42 company which is delivering the infrastructure layer for the project, announced at GITEX that it would expand its total operational capacity by more than 1GW over the next five years. Khazna, the UAEâs biggest data center operator, is expanding aggressively with the help of a $2.6 billion credit facility from UAE banks.
Yousef Alharmoodi, Chief of Business Development at Core42, another arm of G42, told Al Desoukie that the company was using GITEX to officially unveil its sovereign AI Cloud platform and reinforce its leadership in âadvancing the UAEâs global influence in the AI economy.â
Editorâs Note: Kindly let us know your thoughts and feedback by replying to this newsletter or emailing us at [email protected].
đ° Developing Stories
RISING TOWER
Construction is set to begin this month on the $545 million Trump Tower Dubai, developer Dar Global has revealed. Rising along the busy Sheikh Zayed Road beside the Shangri-La Hotel, the tower will combine a Trump-branded hotel, opulent residences, and world-class amenities, the CEO Ziad El Chaar told Arabian Gulf Business Insights. Homebuyers can choose from apartments and penthouses boasting sweeping views of the Burj Khalifa and Arabian Gulf, starting at $463,000. The project marks another milestone in Dar Global and the Trump Organizationâs growing partnership across the Gulf, following ventures in Oman, Saudi Arabia, and Dubai. Trump tower was previously supposed to rise on the Palm in Dubai with developer Nakheel, but the move was cancelled in 2011 following the global credit crunch.
DIGITAL MARRIAGE
Couples in Abu Dhabi can now get married via a mobile app, completing the entire process online within a day. Launched on the sidelines of GITEX Global 2025, the service will be overseen by the Abu Dhabi Judicial Department via the TAMM app. Couples, witnesses, and officiants can join virtual ceremonies via WebEx. The marriage certificate, digitally signed with UAE Pass, can be issued within a day once documents are ready. The government also launched AutoGov, billed as the worldâs first AI public servant, which automatically manages recurring tasks such as licence renewals and utility payments.
đČ Sovereign Circuit
PIF: PIF-backed Jada Fund of Funds and Abu Dhabi-listed Investcorp Capital are among the investors backing the $750 million Investcorp Golden Horizon platform, a pre-IPO growth initiative anchored by China Investment Corporation.
Aramco: Aramco President & CEO Amin H. Nasser told the Energy Intelligence Forum in London that Saudi Arabiaâs national oil company is is determined to remain dominant in oil due to a massive resource base, low costs, and one of the lowest upstream carbon intensities across the industry.
G42: Space42, a G42 company, announced that its AI-powered geospatial intelligence platform, GIQ, is now available on the Microsoft Azure Marketplace to improve accessibility for customers.
ADQ: Egyptâs master developer Midar signed a revenue-sharing agreement with Sodic, which is controlled by a consortium of ADQ and Aldar, to co-develop a $2.3 billion mixed-use project within the Mada City development in East Cairo.
✠Exploration Time: Algeriaâs state-owned Sonatrach signed a $5.4 billion contract with Saudi Arabiaâs Midad Energy for oil and gas exploration and exploitation in the Illizi South region.
đ„ Portfolio Gains: Al Mal Capital REIT, a Dubai Investments subsidiary listed on the Dubai Financial Market, acquired NMC Royal Hospital in Dubai Investments Park, expanding its portfolio to six assets worth about $381 million.
đ” Cashing In: Abu Dhabi developer Aldar Properties made $354 million from its sales at its Yas Living project, amid strong foreign demand, Bloomberg reports.
đ° Private Talks: Dubai-based bank Emirates NBD is in advanced talks to buy a stake in Indian private lender RBL Bank, Reuters reports.
đŁ Circuit Chatter
đïž Capital Gains: U.S. fund manager Davidson Kempner Capital Management has joined the rush of hedge funds into the UAE, setting up shop in Abu Dhabiâs International Financial Centre, Bloomberg reports.
đ Advanced DIY: Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed, UAE National Security Adviser and G42 chairman, designed his own home using ChatGPT, G42 CEO Peng Xiao revealed during a panel discussion at GITEX Global 2025 on Tuesday.
đ€ Tech Rush:Dubai International Financial Centre and Partners for Growth, a global specialty credit manager, formed a strategic partnership to scale high-growth technology companies across Dubai and the GCC.
âïž New Route: Lufthansaâs budget airline subsidiary Eurowings may add more flights to Abu Dhabi when it starts services from Berlin to the UAE capital in November, after the exit of Wizz Air, The National reports.
đąïž Digging Wells:Kuwait Oil Company announced its third offshore discovery of the year at the 40-square-kilometer Jazza field, Reuters reports.
UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayedheld a phone call with Nikos Christodoulides, President of Cyprus, on Monday.
Sheikh Mohamedhas called for rain prayers to be held in all mosques across the UAE on Friday, half an hour before the Friday prayer, after a dry September and October.
Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed, UAE Vice President, Deputy Prime Minister and Chairman of the Presidential Court, led the UAE delegation to the Sharm El Sheikh Peace Summit in Egypt on Monday. Sheikh Mansour met on the sidelines with Turkeyâs President Recep Tayyip ErdoÄan, Iraqâs Prime Minister Mohammed Shiaâ Al-Sudani and Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim.
Sheikh Mansoor bin Mohammed bin Rashid, Chairman of the Dubai Ports and Borders Security Council, attended the launch of Dubai Customsâ Advance Cargo Information system during GITEX Global 2025.
âżOn The Circuit
Omar Al Olama, UAE Minister for Artificial Intelligence, told Bloomberg that the first loop of the Dubai Loop, an underground transit system being built by Elon Muskâs Boring Co., is expected to be operational by the second quarter of 2026.
Salim al Harrasi, Head of Airport Projects at Omanâs Civil Aviation Authority, said that direct investments in Muscatâs airport city have surpassed $80 million, and are projected to exceed $500 million by 2030.
Kamal Shehadi, Lebanonâs Minister of Technology and AI, told The National at Gitex on Monday that governments need to have flexible frameworks and collaborate to keep up with AI.
Mohamed Ebrahim Hassan Al Mansooriwas appointed as Undersecretary of the UAEâs Ministry of Energy and Infrastructure, for Infrastructure and Transportation Affairs, by a presidential decree.
Marwan Abdulaziz Janahiwas appointed to the board at Vitalls, a UAE-based AI-powered digital health passport company.
Ahmed Issa Al Hosani, Director General of the Sharjah International Marine Sports Club, was appointed to the Formula 1 Racing Committee of the International Marine Sports Federation.
đ¶ Culture Circuit
đ Book Smart: Collectors in the UAE are taking a new interest in investing in rare books, amid growing nostalgia for old and tangible things for those living in futuristic megacities, The National reports. âI think itâs precisely because the UAE is such a new country and everything feels so futuristic that it drives a hunger for old things â they command a premium,â Alex Warren, founder of Zerzura, the UAEâs first and only dealer in rare books, told the newspaper.
đ· Photo of the Day
U.S. President Donald Trump, flanked by Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi and Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim, joins world leaders and dignitaries for a picture at the Gaza Peace Summit held at Sharm El-Sheikh on Monday. (Yoan Valat / AFP via Getty Images)
đ Circuit Calendar
Oct. 9-15, Abu Dhabi. IUCN World Conservative Congress. A gathering of conservation experts and leaders from around the world. ADNEC.
Oct. 12-15, Dubai. Expand NorthStar. An annual startup and investor event in Dubai that connects founders, the corporate sector and VCs across tracks like climate tech, deep tech, fintech, and innovation. Dubai Harbour.
Oct. 13-17, Dubai. GITEX Global. The giant tech and startup show is back for its 45th edition, bringing together government and industry leaders., innovators and government. Dubai World Trade Center.
Oct. 14-16, Dubai. Global Future Council. The event on the Future of Growth convenes senior economists and thought leaders from across academia, business, government and civil society to provide intellectual guidance on new approaches to growth.
Oct. 15-18, Sharjah. Evolve Future Mobility Show. Shaping the future of the electric vehicle industry in the region. Sharjah Expo Center.
Oct. 21-23, Dubai. Healthcare Future Summit. The summit explores the evolving landscape of vaccine innovation and global disease control. Dubai World Trade Center.
Oct. 22, Abu Dhabi. Reuters NEXT Gulf Summit. Hosting critical conversations with world leaders, innovators and market movers to define the Middle East’s next chapter. St Regis Saadiyat.
Oct. 22-24, Sharjah. World Investment Conference & Sharjah Investment Forum. A global investment summit exploring foreign direct investment, policies and collaboration for resilient and sustainable growth. Al Jawaher Reception and Convention Centre.
Oct. 27, Dubai. The UAE Africa Tourism Investment Summit. Hosted by the UAE Ministry of Economy and Tourism as part of Future Hospitality Summit World 2025 to foster investment and strengthen tourism partnerships between the UAE and African nations. Madinat Jumeirah.
Oct. 27-28, Jeddah. Sustainable Coastal Development Forum. Exploring strategic solutions for developing eco-friendly coastal communities. Hilton Jeddah.
Oct. 27-29, Dubai. Future Hospitality Summit. Connecting global investment opportunities and projects to hospitality decision-makers. Madinat Jumeirah.
Oct. 27-30, Riyadh. Future Investment Initiative, 9th Edition. Investors, corporate executives, cabinet ministers and political leaders from around the world attend Saudi Arabiaâs flagship business conference. King Abdulaziz International Conference Center.
Nov. 1-2, Dubai. Womenâs Empowerment Convention. The 3rd Womenâs 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 Eastâs 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.
The Daily Circuit: GITEX kicks off in Dubai + Dubizzle set for IPO
đ Hello from the Middle East!
In the Daily Circuit today, weâre reporting on Dubizzle getting ready for an IPO, the Qatar Investment Authority teaming up with Carlyle to buy control of Germanyâs BASF, neobank Revolut bringing its money management services to the UAE and Chinaâs Aridge sending its flying car above Dubaiâs Palm Jumeirah island. But first, techies from around the world descend on Dubai for GITEX week.
By midday it was standing room only as one of the worldâs biggest tech and AI gatherings kicked off. Cramming into the exhibition halls at Dubai World Trade Center were exuberant crowds trying to get a glance of the future: from fully autonomous AI-powered cars to a pink feather-boa clad humanoid robot rubbing shoulders with its warm-blooded compatriots.
GITEX Global 2025, now in its 45th edition, and sister event Expand NorthStar, a startup and investor event running in parallel at Dubai Harbor, brought the city to a standstill early on Monday morning, prompting the police issue a notice to motorists to avoid the area if possible, The Circuitâs Omnia Al Desoukie reports.Â
The five-day event, which has drawn more than 6,800 companies from 180 countries, is growing so big that it will be moved next year to Expo City Dubai, the futuristic purpose-built site developed for Expo 2020 Dubai, which has now been transformed into a permanent city and free zone. It will also be shuffled forward into December to coincide with the cooler tourist season.Â
Dubaiâs ruler Sheikh Mohamed bin Rashid, along with his son, Dubai Crown Prince Sheikh Hamdan, were seen touring exhibits with a large entourage in tow on Monday morning.
Among the major companies participating are Abu Dhabi AI powerhouse G42, Google, Microsoft, Huawei, AMD, Cerebras, Qualcomm, and Tenstorrent.
Hassan Aljohani, the Vice President for Business Development at Saudi Arabiaâs Neo Space Group, came to the event to show off the companyâs near real-time geospatial intelligence and a sovereign mapping platform to the wider region.
âWe see GITEX as the ultimate platform to showcase and establish familiarity, connections and partnerships with the like-minded innovative institutions,â Aljohani said.
Editorâs Note: Kindly let us know your thoughts and feedback by replying to this newsletter or emailing us at [email protected].
đ° Developing Stories
POWER PLATFORM
Dubizzle Group, the Dubai-based classified and property tech firm,is getting ready to go public. The company, which is developing expansion plans across the MENA region, said it will offer about 30% of its share capital in an IPO on the Dubai Financial Market, with trading expected to begin early next month. Dubizzle operates a variety of digital platforms â most notably Dubizzle classified advertising and the Bayut real estate portal. The firm, which owns auto-listing service DriveArabia and data arm Property Monitor, acquired Egyptâs Hatla2ee online car market in February.
MIDEAST RESET
Egypt is convening a summit in Sharm el-Sheikh today with at least 20 heads of state, led by U.S. President Donald Trump, in an effort to cement an end to the two-year Gaza war and begin charting plans to rebuild the devastated enclave. Trump is due to arrive after a brief visit to Israel, joining Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi as co-chair of the gathering. The meeting will also include Qatarâs Emir, Sheikh Tamim, and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan â two leaders who, alongside the U.S. and Egypt, helped broker Fridayâs cease-fire between Israel and Hamas. Leaders from France, Britain, Germany, Pakistan, and Indonesia are expected at the summit, along with the UN Secretary-General, the presidents of the European Council and the Arab League.
đČ Sovereign Circuit
Saudi Arabia Refineries Co.: The Aramco-backed company signed a non-binding agreement with UAE-based Go Energy to study a joint green hydrogen and ammonia project.
International Holding Co: Multiply Group, a subsidiary of IHC, completed the $1 billion sale of its district cooling subsidiary, PAL Cooling Holding, to a consortium of Tabreed and CVC DIF.
Qatar Investment Authority: BASF agreed to sell a majority stake in its coatings business to the QIA and Carlyle for about $6.7 billion.
Qatar Investment Authority: The QIA invested $535 million in Colombian energy company Isagen, bringing its stake up to almost 15%.
đ€ Major Energy:Indiaâs Larsen & Toubroâs hydrocarbon onshore arm, together with Greeceâs Consolidated Contractors, won a $1.7 billion contract to build a natural gas liquids plant.
đšđł Panda Bonds: The Government of Sharjah is seeking a five-year, Chinese yuan-denominated syndicated loan of up to $400 million,Bloomberg reports.
đŁ Circuit Chatter
đ„ïž Revolut Arrives:U.K.-based fintech Revolut is working with the UAE Central Bank to launch services soon, aiming to serve the countryâs large expatriate and remittance-driven market with more competitive prices.
đ€ Qatar Partnership: The Pentagon announced plans to host Qatari F-15 jets and train their pilots at Mountain Home Air Force Base in Idaho.
đĄ Dubai Jitters: Amid record-breaking home sales in Dubai and soaring prices, economists warn the pace resembles the lead-up to the 2009 crash, raising concerns about speculative excess and the sustainability of the current boom, Bloomberg reports.
đȘ Crypto Capital: Dubai has unveiled a plan to become a top-three global financial hub and double the financial sectorâs GDP share, built on virtual assets, capital markets and FinTech.
đ Up and Away: Chinese company Aridge demonstrated its flying car, which has already attracted pre-orders from the UAE and Qatar, over Dubaiâs glitzy Palm Jumeirah on Sunday.
đPower Circuit
UAE President Mohamed bin Zayed, Saudi Arabiaâs King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salmansent condolences to Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim after the death of several diplomats from a Qatari delegation in a car accident in Egyptâs Sharm el-Sheikh on Sunday.
Sheikh Maktoum bin Mohammed, First Deputy Ruler of Dubai, Deputy Prime Minister, UAE Minister of Finance, and Chairman of the Higher Committee for the Development of the Economic and Financial Sector in the emirate of Dubai,chaired a committee meeting approving a strategy to strengthen Dubaiâs position as the worldâs largest licensed Virtual Assets market.
Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed, UAE National Security Advisor, Deputy Ruler of Dubai and Chairman of International Holding Co., met with computer scientist Roman Yampolskiy, Director of the Cybersecurity Laboratory at University of Louisville, to discuss artificial intelligence trends.
âżOn The Circuit
Reem Al Hashimy, UAE Minister of State for International Cooperation and the UAE Foreign Ministerâs Special Envoy to Ukraine, met with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky on Friday in Kyiv.
Majid Al-Hogail, Saudi Arabiaâs Minister of Municipalities and Housing, said the kingdomâs mortgage financing portfolio has exceeded $240 billion, in comments during the Qatar Real Estate Forum in Doha.
đ¶ Culture Circuit
đ Floating Parade: The annual Riyadh Season festival opened on Friday with a spectacular procession of giant balloons borrowed from New Yorkâs Macyâs Thanksgiving Day parade. It is the first time the iconic balloons, which were shipped to the Saudi capital for the occasion, have been displayed outside the U.S. The Riyadh Season was introduced in 2019 to promote the kingdomâs entertainment, cultural and sporting events over the cooler winter months.
đ· Photo of the Day
Visitors at the first day of Gitex Global 2025 in Dubai take turns behind the wheel of Oracleâs Red Bull racing car, with a simulation screen showing off the companyâs cloud-based data analytics. (Omnia Al Desoukie)
đ Circuit Calendar
Oct. 9-15, Abu Dhabi. IUCN World Conservative Congress. A gathering of conservation experts and leaders from around the world. ADNEC.
Oct. 12-15, Dubai. Expand NorthStar. An annual startup and investor event in Dubai that connects founders, the corporate sector and VCs across tracks like climate tech, deep tech, fintech, and innovation. Dubai Harbour.
Oct. 13-17, Dubai. GITEX Global. The giant tech and startup show is back for its 45th edition, bringing together government and industry leaders., innovators and government. Dubai World Trade Center.
Oct. 14-16, Dubai. Global Future Council. The event on the Future of Growth convenes senior economists and thought leaders from across academia, business, government and civil society to provide intellectual guidance on new approaches to growth.
Oct. 15-18, Sharjah. Evolve Future Mobility Show. Shaping the future of the electric vehicle industry in the region. Sharjah Expo Center.
Oct. 21-23, Dubai. Healthcare Future Summit. The summit explores the evolving landscape of vaccine innovation and global disease control. Dubai World Trade Center.
Oct. 22, Abu Dhabi. Reuters NEXT Gulf Summit. Hosting critical conversations with world leaders, innovators and market movers to define the Middle East’s next chapter. St Regis Saadiyat.
Oct. 22-24, Sharjah. World Investment Conference & Sharjah Investment Forum. A global investment summit exploring foreign direct investment, policies and collaboration for resilient and sustainable growth. Al Jawaher Reception and Convention Centre.
Oct. 27, Dubai. The UAE Africa Tourism Investment Summit. Hosted by the UAE Ministry of Economy and Tourism as part of Future Hospitality Summit World 2025 to foster investment and strengthen tourism partnerships between the UAE and African nations. Madinat Jumeirah.
Oct. 27-28, Jeddah. Sustainable Coastal Development Forum. Exploring strategic solutions for developing eco-friendly coastal communities. Hilton Jeddah.
Oct. 27-29, Dubai. Future Hospitality Summit. Connecting global investment opportunities and projects to hospitality decision-makers. Madinat Jumeirah.
Oct. 27-30, Riyadh. Future Investment Initiative, 9th Edition. Investors, corporate executives, cabinet ministers and political leaders from around the world attend Saudi Arabiaâs flagship business conference. King Abdulaziz International Conference Center.
Nov. 1-2, Dubai. Womenâs Empowerment Convention. The 3rd Womenâs 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 Eastâs 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.
The Daily Circuit: Dalio backs NYUAD index + ADQ taps Chinese banks
đ Hello from the Middle East!
In the Daily Circuit today, weâre reporting on ADQ tapping Chinese banks for a $4 billion syndicated loan, Saudi Arabiaâs Public Investment Fund shying away from several planned share sales, next weekâs opening of the colossal GITEX tech conference in Dubai and an award by Mideast bankers for BTD & MSDâs Dina Powell McCormick. But first NYU Abu Dhabi comes up with an index to rate global financial centers.
Investor Ray Dalio is backing NYU Abu Dhabiâs launch of a new research center, the Institute for Global Financial Competitiveness, which aims to benchmark the main hubs of international finance.
The institute will publish its first major work, the Financial Centres Competitiveness Index, during Abu Dhabi Finance Week in December, The National reports. The index will use data science to assess financial centers on innovation, competitiveness and future readiness.
The initiative came out of diplomatic and academic discussions held during last weekâs Abu Dhabi Investment Trade Mission to New York. Lending global visibility to the endeavor is the involvement of Dalio, founder of Bridgewater Associates, which manages one of the worldâs biggest hedge funds.
âHis contribution reflects our shared goal to better understand how financial systems evolve and compete in an interconnected world,â Rob Salomon, Dean of Stern at NYUAD, a joint initiative between the NYU Stern School of Business in New York City and NYU Abu Dhabi, said of Dalio.
The index was conceived as a way for the UAE to lead the narrative on what defines a global financial hub.Similar indexes include Z/Yenâs in London and Xinhuaâs in Shanghai, but none yet originate in the Middle East.
Editorâs Note: Kindly let us know your thoughts and feedback by replying to this newsletter or emailing us at [email protected].
FINANCE & DIPLOMACY
Dina Powell McCormick receives ABANA award for MENA work
Dina Powell McCormick speaks at the FII Priority Summit in Miami Beach, Fla., on February 20
Investment banker Dina Powell McCormick received the annual ABANA Achievement Award, recognizing her work in fostering cooperation between financial professionals in the U.S. and in the Middle East and North Africa.
McCormick, the former Deputy National Security Advisor to President Donald Trump who is Vice Chairman, President and Head of Global Client Services at BDT & MSD Partners, was presented with the award at a dinner reception in New York on Thursday night by Khaldoon Al Mubarak, Managing Director and CEO of Abu Dhabiâs Mubadala sovereign wealth fund, The Circuitâs Jonathan Ferziger reports.
The award dinner, which was held at the Waldorf Astoria, was co-chaired by an array of top Wall Street figures, including BlackRockâs Larry Fink, Jane Fraser of Citi, Nir Bar Dea of Bridgewater Associates, Harvey Schwartz of the Carlyle Group, Jenny Johnson of Franklin Templeton, Byron Trott and Gregg Lemkau of BDT & MSD Partners, Gary Cohn of Apollo Global Management, and Chuck Davis of Stone Point Capital.
A new âfull-scale small cityâ has been slated for development on the road between Dubai and Abu Dhabi, amid a strained housing market in both cities from strong population growth. The $15 billion housing project by Dubai-based Mira Developments will include 14,000 apartments, 1,700 villas, 1,000 townhouses, schools, hotels and a mall. Construction will start in the next 12 months and is expected to be complete by the end of 2035. Mira is purchasing the land at Al Mamoura, roughly halfway between the UAEâs two biggest cities, from ADQ-owned AD Ports Group in a $673 million deal, which was announced on Monday. Funding will come from the companyâs own equity and Swiss funds, Mira CEO Timur Mamaikhanov told The National.
TECH GATHERING
The 45th edition of GITEX Global 2025 will open on Monday in Dubai, drawing thousands of tech companies from 180 countries. The five-day event, which has grown into one of the worldâs largest gatherings for artificial intelligence and emerging technologies, places a strong emphasis on advances in biotechnology, quantum computing, semiconductors and AI-driven infrastructure. Running in parallel, Expand North Star at Dubai Harbour marks its tenth edition, connecting early and late-stage startups with investors managing over $1.1 trillion in assets. Among the companies participating are G42, Google, Microsoft, Huawei, AMD, Cerebras, Qualcomm, and Tenstorrent.
đČ Sovereign Circuit
Public Investment Fund: The Saudi sovereign wealth fund is scaling back work on several planned local share sales, potentially affecting funding for the kingdomâs wide-ranging economic transformation projects, Bloomberg reports.
ADQ: The Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund is close to finalizing a $4 billion syndicated loan primarily arranged by banks from Greater China, Bloomberg reports.
ADQ: The fund has emerged as a potential suitor in a sale of the operator of Catania airport in Sicily, Italy, Reuters reports.
Oman Investment Authority:Omanâs sovereign fund and Azerbaijan Investment Holding launched a joint $200 million fund to invest equally in both countries across sectors including food, manufacturing, renewable energy, logistics, healthcare, and consumer goods.
Aramco: Saudi Arabiaâs national oil company has paused three chemical expansion projects to conserve cash amid low oil prices, delaying design work while prioritizing more advanced international investments in China and South Korea, Bloomberg reports.
đ Water Energy:Emirates Water and Electricity Company awarded the 1.5-gigawatt Khazna Solar PV project near Abu Dhabi to Franceâs ENGIE and Masdar, with a power purchase agreement under which EWEC will pay only for net energy supplied.
đ” Bad Debts: Sharjah-based United Arab Bank is working with Rothschild & Co. to explore the sale of about $800 million in bad debt, as it seeks to clean up its balance sheet, Bloomberg reports.
đ° Bulking Up: Dubai Investments said its portfolio has reached $4.4 billion in value and the firm plans to pursue further expansion across key construction and industrial sectors.
đ» Chip cooperation: The U.S. and Saudi Arabia are advancing discussions on an agreement to permit U.S. semiconductor firms to export chips to the kingdom, with a potential deal expected soon, The Wall Street Journal reports.
đȘ Kremlin Snubbed: Russian President Vladimir Putin has quietly scrapped the debut Russia-Arab summit which was due to be held in Moscow on Oct. 15 because of a lack of attendance from Arab leaders, Bloomberg reports.
đą Global hub: DP World has begun the next phase of construction on its new global headquarters at Dubaiâs Expo City, with completion expected in 2027.
đšđ»âđ Expensive Education: Dubai school operator Taaleemâs revenue rose 20% year-on-year to $310 million in 2024-25, driven by a 19% increase in premium school enrolment.
âż Crypto Time: The UAE Securities and Commodities Authority granted Bybit, the cryptocurrency exchange, a virtual asset platform operator licence.
đPower Circuit
UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed issued a federal decree on Friday that aims to strengthen the UAE Central Bankâs independence, enhance financial sector stability and competitiveness, and align the nationâs regulatory framework with global standards.
Sheikha Latifa bint Mohammed, Chairperson of Dubai Culture and Arts Authority, was awarded the Diamond Award for Excellence in Culture, the highest distinction conferred annually by the Asociación Española del Lujo.
Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Executive Council, inaugurated the IUCN World Conservation Congress 2025 in Abu Dhabi on Thursday.
Sheikh Rashid bin Hamdan bin Mohammed, Board Chairman of the Presidential Flight, and Sheikh Mohammed bin Hamdan bin Zayed, a member of the ruling family, awarded winners at the Al Ain Camel Racing Festival 2025.
âżOn The Circuit
Changpeng Zhao, founder of the world-leading cryptocurrency exchange Binance, said at the FinTech Forward event in Bahrain on Thursday that AI will drive crypto’s development âlike crazy.â
Reem Al Hashimy, UAE Minister of State for International Cooperation, attended a high-level meeting convened by France on Thursday to discuss the implementation of U.S. President Donald Trumpâs peace plan.
Dr. Amna Al Dahak, UAE Minister of Climate Change and Environment, said that protection of the planet is a humanitarian responsibility during her opening speech at IUCN World Conservation Congress 2025 in Abu Dhabi on Thursday.
Sherif Fathy, Egyptâs Minister of Tourism and Antiquities, told The National that the Egyptian Grand Museum would âdefinitely be openingâ on November 1, after years of delays. It is the fourth opening date the government has set since 2020.
đ¶ Culture Circuit
đš Art Start: Abu Dhabi Art, one of the most prominent events on the Gulfâs cultural calendar, will evolve into Frieze Abu Dhabi starting next year, after teaming up with the organization behind some of the worldâs biggest contemporary art fairs. Frieze, which hosts events in London, New York, Los Angeles and Seoul, features contemporary and modern art, with a focus on curatorial excellence, emerging artists and large-scale installations. The first edition of Frieze Abu Dhabi will be held in November 2026 at Manarat Al Saadiyat, while this yearâs Abu Dhabi Art will run in its current format from Nov. 19-23.
đ· Photo of the Day
Spanish driver Christine Giampaoli of JBX Powered by Team Monaco competes in a hydrogen-powered car during the first FIA Extreme H World Cup in Qiddiya, Saudi Arabia, on Thursday. (Fayez Nureldine / AFP via Getty Images)
đ Circuit Calendar
Oct. 9-15, Abu Dhabi. IUCN World Conservative Congress. A gathering of conservation experts and leaders from around the world. ADNEC.
Oct. 12-15, Dubai. Expand NorthStar. An annual startup and investor event in Dubai that connects founders, the corporate sector and VCs across tracks like climate tech, deep tech, fintech, and innovation. Dubai Harbour.
Oct. 13-17, Dubai. GITEX Global. The giant tech and startup show is back for its 45th edition, bringing together government and industry leaders., innovators and government. Dubai World Trade Center.
Oct. 14-16, Dubai. Global Future Council. The event on the Future of Growth convenes senior economists and thought leaders from across academia, business, government and civil society to provide intellectual guidance on new approaches to growth.
Oct. 15-18, Sharjah. Evolve Future Mobility Show. Shaping the future of the electric vehicle industry in the region. Sharjah Expo Center.
Oct. 21-23, Dubai. Healthcare Future Summit. The summit explores the evolving landscape of vaccine innovation and global disease control. Dubai World Trade Center.
Oct. 22, Abu Dhabi. Reuters NEXT Gulf Summit. Hosting critical conversations with world leaders, innovators and market movers to define the Middle East’s next chapter. St Regis Saadiyat.
Oct. 22-24, Sharjah. World Investment Conference & Sharjah Investment Forum. A global investment summit exploring foreign direct investment, policies and collaboration for resilient and sustainable growth. Al Jawaher Reception and Convention Centre.
Oct. 27, Dubai. The UAE Africa Tourism Investment Summit. Hosted by the UAE Ministry of Economy and Tourism as part of Future Hospitality Summit World 2025 to foster investment and strengthen tourism partnerships between the UAE and African nations. Madinat Jumeirah.
Oct. 27-28, Jeddah. Sustainable Coastal Development Forum. Exploring strategic solutions for developing eco-friendly coastal communities. Hilton Jeddah.
Oct. 27-29, Dubai. Future Hospitality Summit. Connecting global investment opportunities and projects to hospitality decision-makers. Madinat Jumeirah.
Oct. 27-30, Riyadh. Future Investment Initiative, 9th Edition. Investors, corporate executives, cabinet ministers and political leaders from around the world attend Saudi Arabiaâs flagship business conference. King Abdulaziz International Conference Center.
Nov. 1-2, Dubai. Womenâs Empowerment Convention. The 3rd Womenâs 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 Eastâs 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.
The Daily Circuit: Â Riyadh Air gets off the ground + Nvidia chips to UAE
đ Hello from the Middle East!
In the Daily Circuit today, weâre reporting onU.S. approval for Nvidia to sell advanced chips to the UAE, Aramcoâs taking over control of Saudi refining company Petro Rabigh from Japanâs Sumitomo, Omani developer Musstirâs $520 million wellness village and the Cleveland Clinicâs new vertiport in Abu Dhabi. But first, Saudi Arabiaâs new airline gets off the ground.
Riyadh Air plans to launch its first commercial flights this month after delays in Boeing aircraft deliveries pushed off the new carrierâs debut by almost a year.
The Saudi startup, which is owned by the Public Investment Fund, will startdaily service to London Heathrow Airport on Oct. 26, adding flights to Dubai International Airport in November once it receives its first Boeing 787 widebody jet.
Tickets for the general public are expected to go on sale in December, following an initial phase limited to staff of the PIF sovereign wealth fund, Riyadh Air employees and their families, CEO Tony Douglas said at a press conference on Wednesday.
Backed by billions from the Saudi fund, Riyadh Air aims to attract luxury travelers from established Gulf rivals Emirates and Qatar Airways as part of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salmanâs broader plan to diversify the economy beyond oil.
The new airline ordered more than 150 aircraft from Boeing and Airbus but none of them have been delivered. Riyadh Air plans to fly to 100 cities by 2030.
Editorâs Note: Kindly let us know your thoughts and feedback by replying to this newsletter or emailing us at [email protected].
Al Nowais said in a LinkedIn post on Wednesday that he will take a new job at the UAEâs Executive Affairs Authority after a period at Columbia University in New York, where he will study venture capital, The Circuitâs Jonathan Ferziger reports.
The 41-year-old diplomat, who worked under UAE Ambassador Yousef Al Otaiba in Washington as an economic policy adviser and liaison for businesses in the UAE and U.S., said he will use the coming months to âprepare for a change in direction in my career and pursue my passion for investing.â
The UAE will soon get its hands on the advanced American chips that underpin its AI ambitions, after the U.S. issued the export permits required for Nvidia to start shipping billions of dollars worth of the critical technology to the emirates. The approval came after the UAE made concrete plans for reciprocal investment in the U.S., the main condition of the chip deal made after Donald Trumpâs visit in May, Bloomberg reports. The permits are a top priority for the UAE, which pledged to invest $1.4 trillion in the U.S. over 10 years, matched dollar-for-dollar against what it receives in chip shipments. The U.S. agreed to approve up to 500,000 of the AI chips annually, with a large number reserved for Abu Dhabi AI powerhouse G42, which is partnering with OpenAI to build a massive Stargate AI campus in the UAE capital.
KINGDOM FOR A HOUSE
Saudi Arabia is hoping that dramatic moves to curb its property crunch, including a five-year freeze on rents, will help it to compete with Dubai and Abu Dhabi for key foreign talent. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who last month vowed to stop the âunacceptableâ rise in property prices during a rare address, has begun âthrowing the kitchen sinkâ at the problem, Bloomberg reports. On top of the rent freeze, the kingdom has implemented a tax regime imposing a hefty penalty for anyone with more than 5,000 square meters of undeveloped land, in an attempt to stop investors hoarding property for capital gains. Apartment prices in Riyadh have almost doubled over the past five years, while rent for a basic two-bedroom apartment in an expat-friendly compound ranges from $4,000 to $6,000 a month.
đČ Sovereign Circuit
Mubadala: The Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fundâs Mamoura Diversified Global Holding unit has begun investor discussions for a 10-year U.S. dollar benchmark bond under its Global Medium Term Note Program.
Mubadala: Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi announced plans to build the UAEâs first hospital-based vertiport, designed to facilitate air ambulance and emergency medical transport.
ADNOC: Subsidiaries of Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. plan to distribute a combined $43 billion in dividends by 2030, Reuters reports.
Aramco: The Saudi energy giant bought an additional 22.5% stake in Petro Rabigh, a refining and petrochemical company based in Rabigh, Saudi Arabia, from Sumitomo Chemical for $702 million, increasing its ownership to 60%.
Qatar Investment Authority:QNB Group received the approval of the Central Bank of Egypt to launch ezbank, a digital-first bank, three days after it obtained a license to operate in Saudi Arabia.
Public Investment Fund:Diriyah Company has awarded a $244 million contract to a joint venture between Al-Majal El-Arabi Group and MAN Enterprise AlSaudia to develop the Grand Mosque in the second phase of the Diriyah mega project.
đ° Expanding Course:Saudi Arabia plans to invest $292 million in Senegal, including a 300 MW solar-powered desalination project.
đĄ Helping Locals: Oman launched seven community projects worth $1.8 billion, adding 12,000 homes and 9,000 land plots for citizens to build subsidized housing over the next three years.
â°ïž Wellness Care: Oman-based developer Musstir partnered with the Ministry of Housing and Urban Planning to develop a $520 million âWellness Villageâ within the $3 billion Al Jabal Al Aali project in Jabal Al Akhdar.
đ Blue Bond:First Abu Dhabi Bank issued its second $20 million, three-year Blue Bond to finance ocean and water projects.
đŁ Circuit Chatter
đ” Investment Accord: Saudi Arabia and Morocco signed an agreement in Rabat to promote and protect mutual investments.
đ Foreigners Welcomed:Saudi Arabiaâs Capital Market Authority has proposed creating simplified investment funds with lighter regulations to boost the asset management sector, attract foreign investors and expand investment opportunities.
đ» Next Year: Dubai announced that GITEX GLOBAL and Expand North Star will move to Expo City Dubai and take place from December 7â11 2026, aligning with the tourist season in an experience with city-wide lifestyle activities.
â°ïž Davos Decline: The future of the World Economic Forum and its scandal-battered Swiss organizers may depend on the success of next yearâs summit, insiders have told the Financial Times.
đPower Circuit
UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed traveled to Kuwait, where he was met at the airport by Emir of Kuwait Sheikh Meshal.
Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed, UAE Vice President, Deputy Prime Minister, and Chairman of the Presidential Court, chaired a meeting of the Ministerial Development Council held at Qasr Al Watan palace in Abu Dhabi on Thursday.
Sheikh Humaid bin Rashid, Ruler of the northern emirate of Ajman, met with Sultan bin Abdullah Al Anqari, Saudi Arabiaâs Ambassador to the UAE, at the Emiri Court on Thursday.
âżOn The Circuit
Omar Yaghi, a U.C. Berkeley professor and Palestinian citizen of Jordan and Saudi Arabia, won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Susumu Kitagawa of Kyoto University and the University of Melbourneâs Richard Robson.
James Martinwas appointed Chief Growth Officer and Kevin OâReilly was appointed Head of Commodities at the Gulf Mercantile Exchange.
Dr. Thani Al Zeyoudi, UAE Minister of Foreign Trade, joined Shadi Malak, CEO of Etihad Rail, for a pre-launch journey on the companyâs passenger service, which is due to start commercial operations in 2026.
đ¶ Culture Circuit
đ Culture Vulture: Saudi Arabia is drawing stars from music, sports and entertainment as part of a drive to open up the kingdom to international culture. Exploring the phenomenon amid the current Riyadh Comedy Festival, the Financial Times notes that pop icons like Christina Aguilera, Mariah Carey and BTS have performed for Saudi audiences, while soccer legend Cristiano Ronaldo plays for Saudi Arabiaâs Al Nassr. Officials deny charges of âsportswashing,â saying investments in culture and sports are meant to spur economic growth and create opportunities for the countryâs youthful population.
đ· Photo of the Day
Riyadh Air CEO Tony Douglas speaks during a press conference announcing the company’s inaugural flight at the Saudi carrier’s headquarters in Riyadh on Wednesday. (Fayez Nureldine / AFP via Getty Images)
đ Circuit Calendar
Oct. 9-15, Abu Dhabi. IUCN World Conservative Congress. A gathering of conservation experts and leaders from around the world. ADNEC.
Oct. 12-15, Dubai. Expand NorthStar. An annual startup and investor event in Dubai that connects founders, the corporate sector and VCs across tracks like climate tech, deep tech, fintech, and innovation. Dubai Harbour.
Oct. 13-17, Dubai. GITEX Global. The giant tech and startup show is back for its 45th edition, bringing together government and industry leaders., innovators and government. Dubai World Trade Center.
Oct. 14-16, Dubai. Global Future Council. The event on the Future of Growth convenes senior economists and thought leaders from across academia, business, government and civil society to provide intellectual guidance on new approaches to growth.
Oct. 15-18, Sharjah. Evolve Future Mobility Show. Shaping the future of the electric vehicle industry in the region. Sharjah Expo Center.
Oct. 21-23, Dubai. Healthcare Future Summit. The summit explores the evolving landscape of vaccine innovation and global disease control. Dubai World Trade Center.
Oct. 22, Abu Dhabi. Reuters NEXT Gulf Summit. Hosting critical conversations with world leaders, innovators and market movers to define the Middle East’s next chapter. St Regis Saadiyat.
Oct. 22-24, Sharjah. World Investment Conference & Sharjah Investment Forum. A global investment summit exploring foreign direct investment, policies and collaboration for resilient and sustainable growth. Al Jawaher Reception and Convention Centre.
Oct. 27, Dubai. The UAE Africa Tourism Investment Summit. Hosted by the UAE Ministry of Economy and Tourism as part of Future Hospitality Summit World 2025 to foster investment and strengthen tourism partnerships between the UAE and African nations. Madinat Jumeirah.
Oct. 27-28, Jeddah. Sustainable Coastal Development Forum. Exploring strategic solutions for developing eco-friendly coastal communities. Hilton Jeddah.
Oct. 27-29, Dubai. Future Hospitality Summit. Connecting global investment opportunities and projects to hospitality decision-makers. Madinat Jumeirah.
Oct. 27-30, Riyadh. Future Investment Initiative, 9th Edition. Investors, corporate executives, cabinet ministers and political leaders from around the world attend Saudi Arabiaâs flagship business conference. King Abdulaziz International Conference Center.
Nov. 1-2, Dubai. Womenâs Empowerment Convention. The 3rd Womenâs 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 Eastâs 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.
Nvidia, Abu Dhabi tech hub team up to make smarter AI robots
Abu Dhabiâs Technology Innovation Institute is collaborating with Nvidia to improve artificial intelligence models and build smarter robots.
The UAE tech center and U.S. chipmaker said on Sunday they will establish a joint research lab focused on developing next-generation AI models, robotics platforms, and humanoid technologies, The National reports.
Among the projects will be pairing Nvidiaâs accelerated computing with TIIâs Falcon AI software to expand the capabilities of robotic learning in Arabic.Â
Najwa Aaraj, CEO of TTI, said the lab will use Nvidiaâs Thor chip to build robotic systems capable of reasoning, adapting, and acting in complex environments. TTI already works on four-legged robots, robotic arms, and humanoids that resemble people.
âBy combining our advanced robotic platforms with powerful AI models,â she said, âwe are accelerating the convergence of perception, control and language â laying the foundation for a new era of intelligent machines.â
The joint venture comes as the UAE pushes to accelerate AI adoption across government and business, aiming to position the country among the worldâs most advanced digital economies.
UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed and U.S. President Donald Trump agreed in May to establish an âAI Acceleration Partnershipâ and build an academic center dedicated to pushing the frontiers of artificial intelligence.
Saudi Arabia’s Humain bets big on opening data centers in 2026
With ample resources to run power-hungry AI servers, Saudi Arabia is plunging into the worldwide race to build massive data centers.
Humain, an artificial intelligence firm owned by the kingdomâs Public Investment Fund, has started construction on its first set of data centers and plans to launch operations early next year.
Driving the facilities will be semiconductors from U.S. chipmakers, including 18,000 of Nvidiaâs latest AI chips in centers at Riyadh and Dammam, Bloomberg reports.
âIt depends on the governance and the protocols and the approval of the U.S. government, and these are formalities that we are going to start going through very, very soon,â Humain CEO Tareq Amin told the news agency.