The Daily Circuit: How ADNOC has transited Hormuz + Dubai’s Alec to build Sphere

In today’s Daily Circuit, we’re reporting on Dubai’s Alec Holdings winning a $1.7 billion contract to build Sphere Abu Dhabi, Neom terminating its $1.6 billion railroad contract with Italy’s Webuild, Egypt conducting an aerial survey to identify mineral reserves, and more than 1.5 million Muslims from abroad pouring into Mecca this week for the Hajj pilgrimage, topping last year’s arrivals. But first, ADNOC and QatarEnergy ships are slipping through the Gulf blockade.

ADNOC has been quietly running a wartime shipping operation through the Strait of Hormuz, ferrying oil, fuel and gas cargoes past Iranian and U.S. naval forces to customers across Asia.

The UAE’s national oil company has relied on “dark transits” – switching off tanker transponders while crossing Hormuz – and a fleet tied to Navig8, a shipping company majority-owned by ADNOC’s logistics arm and Chinese petrochemicals giant Wanhua Chemical Group, allowing it to keep exports flowing, Bloomberg reports.

ADNOC has been among the Gulf’s most successful exporters during nearly three months of war, using short shuttle runs from Zirku Island, Ruwais and Das Island to transfer cargoes in safer waters off Fujairah, Sohar and India’s west coast before sending them onward to buyers, according to the news agency.

QatarEnergy has also quietly resumed exports through Hormuz, with the LNG tanker Al Rayyan recently detected heading toward China after disappearing from public tracking systems near Qatar’s Ras Laffan export terminal.

The urgency reflects both limited regional storage capacity and the UAE’s increasingly independent oil strategy after its formal departure from OPEC on May 1. The successful transits, however, represent only a fraction of pre-war trade flows: Only seven shipments have been identified making it through Hormuz since the U.S. and Israel started strikes against Iran on Feb. 28, compared to roughly three exits a day before the conflict began.

Editor’s Note: The Daily Circuit will be off for the Eid Al Adha holiday week. We will be back on Monday, June 1.

📰 Developing Stories

Saudi Arabia has welcomed more than 1.5 million foreign pilgrims for Hajj this week, despite the Iran conflict, exceeding the number of both international visitors last year and the resulting air-travel interruptions. The influx is evidence for the kingdom that its investments in religious tourism and property development around the holy cities of Mecca and Medina are paying off despite the broader drop-off in travelers to the region. Security forces in the country are on high alert amid the regional tensions and face the added complication of tens of thousands of worshippers coming from Iran and Iraq, where drone and missile barrages against the kingdom and its Gulf neighbors have originated.

💲 Sovereign Circuit

Investment Corp. of Dubai: Alec Holdings, a subsidiary of the Dubai government fund, secured a $1.7 billion contract to design, procure and build the technically complex Sphere Abu Dhabi entertainment venue on Yas Island, set to open in 2029.

NEOM: Saudi Arabia’s megaproject development company has terminated a $1.6 billion contract won by Italy’s Webuild to construct a 57-kilometer high-speed rail link between its Oxagon and The Line sites, with the project only 20% complete.

MGX: Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed, Chairman of MGX and the UAE’s National Security Advisor, led the Abu Dhabi-based AI investment fund’s second board meeting of the year.

Qatar Investment Authority: Qatar Holding, an affiliate of the QIA, sold a $77 millionstake in Indian billionaire Gautam Adani’s Adani Energy Solutions.

↪↩ Closing Circuit

💉 Healthcare Expansion: UAE developer Arada plans to invest $544.5 million to build an 800-bed healthcare network, expanding Reem Hospital into four locations across the country as part of a diversification strategy.

Clean Fuel: ENOC Group and Abu Dhabi-based Allied Biofuels Holding are working together to explore the offtake and distribution of Sustainable Aviation Fuel and e-SAF from a planned Uzbekistan facility.

💰 Muscat Bonds: Oman’s Sohar International Bank raised about $69 million by issuing mandatory convertible bonds.

⚙️ Steel Trade: India’s Jindal Saw plans to invest $390 million to build an integrated iron and steel plant in Oman’s Sohar to boost steel pipe production for domestic use and exports.

🗣 Circuit Chatter

🛰️ Shadow Network: Iran’s Revolutionary Guards used a UAE-based company to procure advanced Chinese satellite communications equipment linked to its drone program, according to leaked contracts and shipping records reviewed by the Financial Times.

✈️ Green Light: Australia has expanded air services agreements with the UAE and Qatar to allow up to seven weekly flights each to the upcoming Western Sydney International Airport.

💺 Flight Boom: Etihad Airways will expand service between Tel Aviv and Abu Dhabi to six daily flights starting June 15, making Israel the airline’s busiest route with 42 weekly flights as demand for connections to Asia surges, Ynet reports.

🇨🇭 Risky Business: A little-known Swiss trading company played a key role in an oil supertanker’s transit through the Strait of Hormuz in a high-stakes gambit earlier this month, Bloomberg reports.

🌍 Power Circuit

UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed took part in a call on Sunday with U.S. President Donald Trump, King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa of Bahrain, Qatar’s Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Jordan’s King Abdullah II, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, and Field Marshal Asim Munir, Chief of Army Staff of Pakistan.

Sheikh Mohamed’s views on the Iran war and the UAE’s plans for the Middle East are analyzed by journalist Robert Worth in an interview with Le Grand Continent.

Sheikh Mohamed held a phone call with Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad on Saturday.

Sheikha Shamma bint Sultan, President and CEO of Frontier25, a climate action advisory organization, called for stronger collaboration to accelerate global climate action.

➿ On the Circuit

Dr. Thani Al Zeyoudi, UAE Minister for Foreign Trade, said during a panel discussion at GLOBSEC Forum 2026 in Prague that the war with Iran has pushed Gulf countries to compress a decade-worth of logistics redesign into years. 

Abdulla Balalaa, UAE Assistant Minister for Energy and Sustainability Affairs, met with Amina J. Mohammed, Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations, to discuss ways to further strengthen cooperation.

Jarrah bin Mohammed, Spokesperson for the Saudi Minister of Industry and Mineral Resources, said in a post on X that the kingdom issued 80 new mining licenses in March, which is more than double the number in February.

Pep Guardiola is leaving Manchester City, after 10 years of managing the Premier League soccer club owned by UAE Vice President Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed.

Andrés Iniesta will manage Dubai-based Gulf United FC, his first head-coaching role since retiring from professional soccer in 2024. 

🎶 Culture Circuit

🏺 Knockout Views: The ancient pyramids of Giza have long been used as a scenic backdrop to concerts, hosting stars from Frank Sinatra to the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Now, Egypt is turning to boxing, orchestrating a series of bouts dubbed “Glory in Giza,” in front of the 4,000-year-old monuments in an attempt to boost luxury tourism and generate hard-currency revenue, Bloomberg reports.

📷 Photo of the Day

Muslims perform the evening prayer around the Kaaba, Islam’s holiest shrine, on Sunday, ahead of the annual Hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia. (Zain Jaafar / AFP via Getty Images)

📅 Ahead on the Circuit

June 1-4, Baghdad. Iraq Oil and Gas Technology Exhibition. Exploring industry-leading solutions propelling the oil, gas, and energy sectors into the future. Baghdad International Fairground.

June 3-4, Dubai. MENA Investor Conference. Capital market trends, GCC macro outlooks, and investment opportunities in the Middle East and North Africa. The Ritz Carlton DIFC. 

June 5-7, Dubai. Dubai Esports & Games Festival. More than two weeks of events, tournaments and game launches, including GameExpo 2026. Dubai World Trade Center. 

June 10-11, Doha. Project Qatar. The international construction and building materials exhibition showcases cutting-edge innovations and sustainable solutions. Doha Exhibition and Convention Center.

June 15-18, Cairo. Africa Health Excon. An annual event that brings together leaders and policy makers in health care. AlManara International Conference Center. 

June 17-19, Rome: FII Priority Europe. Saudi Arabia’s Future Investment Initiative holds a conference focusing on European business links with the Middle East. Cavalieri, Waldorf Astoria Hotel.

June 17, Tashkent. Investopia Global – Tashkent. The UAE’s flagship investment conference lands in Uzbekistan, bringing together leaders from government and the private sector to create new investment opportunities. Venue TBA.

June 23-24, Abu Dhabi. Forbes Middle East Building the Future Summit. Industry leaders, investors, architects, and innovators explore the trends and technologies shaping the next era of real estate. Conrad Etihad Towers.

June 24, Dubai. Energy & Sustainability Summit. The summit aims to drive forward the effective decarbonization of the Middle East’s construction and energy sectors, in support of Net Zero agendas, and their short- and long-term goals. Habtoor Grand Beach Resort & Spa.

June 23-25, Cairo. Big5 Construct Egypt. Exploring the latest products, innovations and technologies in the construction industry. Egypt International Exhibition Center.

The Daily Circuit: PIF mulls creating logistics giant + Qatar Airways cuts bonuses

In today’s Daily Circuit, we’re reporting on Qatar Airways canceling bonuses for its 60,000-strong workforce after flight disruptions from the Iran war, Abu Dhabi’s IHC executing a milestone $30 million transaction using blockchain developed by its ADI Foundation, ADIA backing CVC Capital Partners’ $12 billion takeover offer for Italian drugmaker Recordati, and Tom Clancy’s “Jack Ryan: Ghost War,” putting Dubai front and center on Prime Video. But first, the Gulf’s sovereign wealth funds are reconfiguring to meet the new logistics landscape.

Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund is considering consolidating its portfolio of shipping, ports and rail assets into a logistics giant that can attract foreign investment and strengthen and reshape its trade corridors following the upheaval of the Iran war. 

PIF executives have held early-stage talks about creating a single entity which could become a vehicle for multibillion-dollar investments across the logistics industry and eventually be listed via an initial public offering, Bloomberg reports. The sovereign fund owns or holds stakes in firms including Saudi Railway Co., National Shipping Company of Saudi Arabia and Saudi Global Ports.

A combined Saudi entity would compete directly with the UAE’s DP World, the logistics behemoth that helped propel Dubai into an economic powerhouse and now operates across 83 countries, including the Middle East’s biggest port at Jebel Ali. 

Gulf countries have moved quickly to reconfigure their logistics and shipping operations to work around the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, which exposed gaping vulnerabilities in the Middle East’s supply chains.Saudi Arabia has redirected much of its trade, including crucial oil exports, through its Red Sea ports, while the UAE is rapidly expanding capacity via Fujairah on its east coast and developing new corridors via Oman.

Editor’s Note: Have thoughts or feedback? Hit reply or drop us a note at [email protected].

📰 Developing Stories

Abu Dhabi’s International Holding Co. has executed a $30 million transaction using blockchain technology developed by the ADI Foundation, a part of its Sirius digital arm. The transaction using DDSC, a UAE dirham-backed stablecoin built on the ADI Chain, represents a “defining milestone” for the stablecoin system in the UAE and shows that it can handle high-value financial flows, IHC said in a statement. The company said it will now focus on increasing institutional adoption, expanding use cases and building cross-border payment and trade corridors linking the Middle East with key global markets. ADI Foundation, launched two years ago, is a philanthropic initiative closely tied to Abu Dhabi’s broader push to expand its influence in financial technology and data infrastructure, an effort spearheaded by Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed, Chairman of IHC and the UAE National Security Advisor.

💲 Sovereign Circuit

Abu Dhabi Investment Authority: ADIA was named among the funds backing CVC Capital Partners’ voluntary offer to take Italian drugmaker Recordati private in a potential $12 billion deal, in one of the biggest European healthcare transactions this year.

Abu Dhabi Investment Authority: Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed, Deputy Ruler of Abu Dhabi and Chairman, chaired ADIA’s first Board of Directors meeting for 2026 on the company’s 50th anniversary.

G42: Core42, a G42 company, has raised $550 million in structured trade finance from HSBC to expand its AI cloud and compute infrastructure across the U.S. and Europe.

Mubadala: Acelen, owned by Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala sovereign fund, has secured $1.5 billion from a consortium led by HSBC and International Finance Corporation to begin building a $3 billion biofuels refinery in Bahia, Brazil.

Mubadala: Mubadala Energy is expected to announce a final investment decision within months for its Tangkulo gas development in Indonesia’s South Andaman block.

Masdar: Masdar signed a deal with China’s Sungrow to supply 7.5GWh of battery storage and 2.6GW of solar inverter capacity for Abu Dhabi’s 24/7 gigascale solar project.

Public Investment Fund: Video-game publisher Take-Two Interactive, which counts the PIF’s Savvy Games Group as a major shareholder, has confirmed a Nov. 19 release date for “Grand Theft Auto VI,” expected to be one of the top-selling video games of all time, with a marketing campaign to begin this summer.

↪↩ Closing Circuit

🛢️ Oil Discovery: Egypt has announced its largest oil and gas discovery in 15 years: a Western Desert well with an estimated 330 billion cubic feet of gas and 70 million barrels of oil equivalent.

🏦 Support Provided: Emirates NBD has provided a $100 million loan to Luxembourg-based CPI Property Group to cover deferred payments on its Dubai luxury property portfolio.

💰 Investing Inwards: Egypt’s Sky Investments Holding plans to invest $300-$350 million in logistics over three years, mainly expanding East Port Said Port and developing new projects in Ain Sokhna and Alexandria as part of a broader $500 million investment plan.

🏗️ Border Post: Two consortia of Omani and Saudi companies have secured contracts worth $192 million to develop infrastructure in an economic zone near the Omani-Saudi border, Arabian Gulf Business Insight reports.

🗣 Circuit Chatter

👍 Thumbs Up: Cantor Bank, part of the New York financial services firm Cantor Fitzgerald, has been granted approval to operate within the Abu Dhabi Global Market.

🪙 Crypto War: One of the Iranian regime’s key financiers secretly moved billions of dollars through Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange, despite repeated red flags, The Wall Street Journal reports.

⚓ Port Plot: Abu Dhabi National Company for Building Materials is exploring an integrated logistics hub at Oman’s Port of Salalah to expand re-exports of building materials to markets including India, China and East Africa.

💼 Touch Down: Dutch legal firm TMF Group will begin operating within the Dubai International Financial Center.

🗓️ New Dates: Dubai’s flagship tourism industry expo, Arabian Travel Market, postponed due to the Iran conflict, has been rescheduled again to Sept. 14-17.

🌍 Power Circuit

Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed, Crown Prince of Dubai and UAE Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defense, approved a $400 million economic relief package to support the city’s business and tourism sectors, including suspending the hotel tax. 

Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed, UAE Minister of Foreign Affairs, met with Julia Klöckner, President of the German Bundestag, Omid Nouripour, Vice President of the Bundestag, and Armin Laschet, Chairman of the Bundestag’s Foreign Affairs Committee, on Thursday as part of his working visit to Germany.

Prince Faisal bin Farhan, Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Minister, held a phone call on Thursday with Asaad Al-Shaibani, his Syrian counterpart.

➿ On the Circuit


Mohamed Alabbar, the Emirati founder of Emaar, said his Noon e-commerce platform will cut staff numbers in half in the next three months, as he hires artificial intelligence agents across his companies.

Arif Amiri, CEO of DIFC Authority, met with Jihad Azour, Director of the Middle East and Central Asia Department at the International Monetary Fund, on Thursday.

Yogesh Mehta, Founder of Petrochem, spoke with Arabian Gulf Business Insight about the effects of the Iran war, saying that with both imports and exports curbed, manufacturers have had to limit production. “The crisis has taken two wheels off the car,” he said.

🎶 Culture Circuit

🎥 Movie Magic: From the winding alleys of Al Seef to the gleaming skyline of One&Only One Za’abeel, Dubai is more than a backdrop in Tom Clancy’s “Jack Ryan: Ghost War,” The National reports. The latest installment in the espionage thriller franchise, which was shot in early 2025 in collaboration with the Media Council and Dubai Department of Economy and Tourism,  premiered on Prime Video on Wednesday. The film sweeps through Dubai Marina’s glittering waterfront and the desert’s vast silence, blending contrast into cinematic scale. Cameras also capture Emirates Towers, Gate Avenue in DIFC, and Burj Park.

📷 Photo of the Day

Portuguese soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo is presented with the championship trophy after his team Al-Nassr defeated Damac 4-1 in the final game of the Saudi Pro League at King Saud University Stadium in Riyadh on Thursday. (Mohammed Saad/Anadolu via Getty Images)

📅 Ahead on the Circuit

June 1-4, Baghdad. Iraq Oil and Gas Technology Exhibition. Exploring industry-leading solutions propelling the oil, gas, and energy sectors into the future. Baghdad International Fairground.

June 3-4, Dubai. MENA Investor Conference. Capital market trends, GCC macro outlooks, and investment opportunities in the Middle East and North Africa. The Ritz Carlton DIFC. 

June 5-7, Dubai. Dubai Esports & Games Festival. More than two weeks of events, tournaments and game launches, including GameExpo 2026. Dubai World Trade Center. 

June 10-11, Doha. Project Qatar. The international construction and building materials exhibition showcases cutting-edge innovations and sustainable solutions. Doha Exhibition and Convention Center.

June 15-18, Cairo. Africa Health Excon. An annual event that brings together leaders and policy makers in health care. AlManara International Conference Center. 

June 17-19, Rome: FII Priority Europe. Saudi Arabia’s Future Investment Initiative holds a conference focusing on European business links with the Middle East. Cavalieri, Waldorf Astoria Hotel.

June 17, Tashkent. Investopia Global – Tashkent. The UAE’s flagship investment conference lands in Uzbekistan, bringing together leaders from government and the private sector to create new investment opportunities. Venue TBA.

June 23-24, Abu Dhabi. Forbes Middle East Building the Future Summit. Industry leaders, investors, architects, and innovators explore the trends and technologies shaping the next era of real estate. Conrad Etihad Towers.

June 24, Dubai. Energy & Sustainability Summit. The summit aims to drive forward the effective decarbonization of the Middle East’s construction and energy sectors, in support of Net Zero agendas, and their short- and long-term goals. Habtoor Grand Beach Resort & Spa.

June 23-25, Cairo. Big5 Construct Egypt. Exploring the latest products, innovations and technologies in the construction industry. Egypt International Exhibition Center.

The Daily Circuit: Dr. Sultan talks AI infrastructure + GCC-British trade deal

In today’s Daily Circuit, we’re reporting on ADNOC fast-tracking its new crude pipeline to Fujairah, PIF-backed construction firm AlBawani’s $1.7 billion financing deal with Saudi Awwal Bank, and the GCC’s new trade deal with the U.K. Plus an interview with PepsiCo’s Wael Ismail on the beverage giant’s new Abu Dhabi bottling plant and logistics hub. But first, Dr. Sultan Al Jaber talks about using AI to build “intelligent infrastructure.”

Dr. Sultan Al Jaber, the UAE’s Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology, and its top oil executive, told a Washington audience that the country is moving to a new stage of artificial intelligence, using the technology to run business operations and develop its infrastructure.

“In the first phase, AI helped generate content. It helped analyze information and automate workflows,” Dr. Al Jaber said Wednesday in a webcast interview with the Atlantic Council. “In the next phase, AI is helping us operate physical systems through robotics, autonomous inspections, intelligent infrastructure, and real-time operational optimization,” he said, speaking from his office in Abu Dhabi.

The UAE has emerged as one of the world’s most aggressive state-backed AI investors through firms such as G42 and MGX. UAE funds have invested in OpenAI, xAI and Anthropic, while G42 teamed up with Nvidia on the massive Stargate data center project in Abu Dhabi.

Dr. Al Jaber, who is Group CEO of the ADNOC national oil company, linked AI directly to energy production and said the firm is deploying thousands of agentic AI and robotic applications, The Circuit reported

“The AI race is an electron race, and countries that can provide reliable, scalable, and affordable power will have a major competitive edge and a major strategic advantage,” Dr. Al Jaber said.

Editor’s Note: Have thoughts or feedback? Hit reply or drop us a note at [email protected].

📰 Developing Stories

The UAE is accelerating its push into Syria, treating the country as a strategic gateway for expanding trade networks and regional influence. Central to this strategy are Syrian ports, particularly Tartus and Baniyas, which are increasingly viewed as alternatives to Gulf maritime routes and as anchors in a wider logistics corridor linking the Eastern Mediterranean to Europe and Iraq. The approach is being pursued through large-scale capital commitments, including an estimated $11 billion investment by Emaar Properties in Damascus and coastal projects, as well as a $800 million port expansion deal by DP World at Tartus, Foreign Policy reports.

💲 Sovereign Circuit

ADNOC: The state energy company said that the UAE’s new crude pipeline bypassing the Strait of Hormuz is about 50% complete and being fast-tracked to double export capacity via Fujairah by 2027, Reuters reports.

Public Investment Fund: Saudi Awwal Bank has agreed to a $1.7 billion financing deal with PIF-backed construction firm AlBawani.

Dubai Holding: Dubai Holding Asset Management, a unit of Dubai Holding, has awarded a $185 million contract to Group AMANA to build the 390-home Lantana Hills gated community in Dubai Science Park.

Qatar Investment Authority: The QIA and COFIDES, Spain’s state-owned financial institution, announced a joint $330 million fund to invest in green transition, digital transformation and technological innovation projects in Spain.

Mubadala: Mubadala’s assets under management increased by 17% to $385 billion in 2025.

Mubadala Capital: Infrastructure investor I Squared Capital is among the firms that have advanced to the second phase of bidding to acquire a $5 billion Brazilian port owned by Trafigura Group and Mubadala Capital, Bloomberg reports.

↪↩ Closing Circuit

🛍️ Going South: Dubai South and UAE retail conglomerate Majid Al Futtaim will jointly develop a $16.9 billion retail and living community near Al Maktoum International Airport.

💰 Funding Round: The Exploration Company, a UAE-linked European aerospace startup, is seeking $200 million in new funding from global and UAE sovereign investors to advance its rocket engine development and space projects.

🦄 Unicorn Play: Morocco’s credit guarantee agency Tamwilcom is signing agreements to provide “millions of dirhams” to three local gaming startups in a state-sponsored attempt to create 1-2 new companies worth at least $1 billion by 2032.

🗣 Circuit Chatter

🛡️ High Growth: The GCC insurance market is projected to reach $61.8 billion by 2030, growing at 4.9% annually with Saudi Arabia leading regional expansion.

📉 IPO Doubts: The Indian IPO of Jio Platforms, a unit of Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries, is facing delays and valuation concerns amid geopolitical tensions and market volatility.

💼 Consulting Slump: Saudi Arabia has stopped giving new work to consultants as the Iran war rattles its finances, the Financial Times reports.

🏘️ Property IPO: Dubai Investments expects to go ahead with listing its real estate unit Dubai Investments Park on the emirate’s stock exchange before the end of 2026, Arabian Gulf Business Insight reports.

🌍 Power Circuit

UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed met with a delegation of Al Ain Football Club players and staff, following the team’s victory in the ADNOC Pro League.

Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, UAE Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, launched a batch of AI agents to be used in tax auditing and customer service.

Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed, UAE Minister of Foreign Affairs, met with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz in Berlin on Wednesday. Sheikh Abdullah also met with Alexander Dobrindt, the German Minister of the Interior.

Sheikh Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa, Crown Prince and Prime Minister of Bahrain, met with Jihad Azour, Director at the International Monetary Fund of the Middle East, North Africa and Central Asia.

➿ On the Circuit

Dr. Thani Al Zeyoudi, UAE Minister of Trade, outlined the country’s aggressive logistics infrastructure expansion plans, speaking at a meeting with the UAE India Business Council. 

Louis Margueritte, CEO of Business France, told The National “nearly 500 decision-makers from the Gulf” are expected at next month’s Vision Golfe Forum in Paris.

Kamran Abbas was appointed CEO of real estate and facilities management company International Real Estate Partners.

🎶 Culture Circuit

🎤 Race Stage: U.S. pop-rock group Imagine Dragons has been added to the lineup for the after-race concert series at this year’s Abu Dhabi F1 Grand Prix. The band, known for hits including “Believer,” “Radioactive,” “Demons” and “Thunder,” will headline Saturday, Dec. 5 at Etihad Park. The race weekend runs from Dec. 3 to Dec. 6 at Yas Marina Circuit.

📷 Photo of the Day

Dr. Sultan Al Jaber, the UAE’s Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology, and Group CEO of ADNOC, talked about the country’s AI strategy in a webcast interview with the Atlantic Council on Wednesday (Screenshot/Atlantic Council)

📅 Ahead on the Circuit

June 1-4, Baghdad. Iraq Oil and Gas Technology Exhibition. Exploring industry-leading solutions propelling the oil, gas, and energy sectors into the future. Baghdad International Fairground.

June 3-4, Dubai. MENA Investor Conference. Capital market trends, GCC macro outlooks, and investment opportunities in the Middle East and North Africa. The Ritz Carlton DIFC. 

June 5-7, Dubai. Dubai Esports & Games Festival. More than two weeks of events, tournaments and game launches, including GameExpo 2026. Dubai World Trade Center. 

June 10-11, Doha. Project Qatar. The international construction and building materials exhibition showcases cutting-edge innovations and sustainable solutions. Doha Exhibition and Convention Center.

June 15-18, Cairo. Africa Health Excon. An annual event that brings together leaders and policy makers in health care. AlManara International Conference Center. 

June 17-19, Rome: FII Priority Europe.Saudi Arabia’s Future Investment Initiative holds a conference focusing on European business links with the Middle East. Cavalieri, Waldorf Astoria Hotel.

June 17, Tashkent. Investopia Global – Tashkent. The UAE’s flagship investment conference lands in Uzbekistan, bringing together leaders from government and the private sector to create new investment opportunities. Venue TBA.

June 23-24, Abu Dhabi. Forbes Middle East Building the Future Summit. Industry leaders, investors, architects, and innovators explore the trends and technologies shaping the next era of real estate. Conrad Etihad Towers.

June 24, Dubai. Energy & Sustainability Summit. The summit aims to drive forward the effective decarbonization of the Middle East’s construction and energy sectors, in support of Net Zero agendas, and their short- and long-term goals. Habtoor Grand Beach Resort & Spa.

June 23-25, Cairo. Big5 Construct Egypt. Exploring the latest products, innovations and technologies in the construction industry. Egypt International Exhibition Center.

The Daily Circuit: Red Sea Express cargo channel + Riyadh Air’s July debut

In today’s Daily Circuit, we’re reporting on Riyadh Air selling tickets for the debut of its commercial flights to London on July 1, LIV Golf drawing up contingency plans for bankruptcy, Saudi Arabia’s PIF buckling up for the imminent IPO of Elon Musk’s SpaceX, in which it holds a 1% stake, and Qatar’s Estithmar Holding signing up Rothschild & Co. as it prepares to take its Apex Health unit public. But first, the Red Sea Express is gearing up to provide an alternative cargo channel to the Strait of Hormuz.

Saudi Arabia is accelerating efforts to reroute Gulf trade around Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, launching a new Red Sea Express shipping service that connects its western port of Yanbu with Egypt and Jordan.

The alternative cargo corridor developed by Mawani, the Saudi Ports Authority, is designed to move containers to international ports more quickly, using large ships to improve efficiency and reduce waiting times, Arab News reports.

The service, which links Yanbu’s King Fahd Industrial Port with the Ain Sokhna Port in Egypt and the Aqaba port in Jordan, will be operated with Riyadh-based Folk Maritime and SABIC, the petrochemical unit of Aramco. 

In the UAE, AD Ports Group and Borouge said they are developing an export hub in its eastern Fujairah port, which is located outside the Hormuz chokepoint, while DP World is marketing war-risk insurance to keep cargo flowing through conflict zones.

Meanwhile, Abu Dhabi Ship Building, part of EDGE Group, signed a $370 million deal with Italy’s Leonardo to equip Kuwait’s new Falaj 3 missile boats with advanced naval combat systems.

Editor’s Note: Have thoughts or feedback? Hit reply or drop us a note at [email protected].

📰 Developing Stories

Saudi-backed LIV Golf has begun preparing for the end. The upstart league that’s losing its funding from the Public Investment Fund is making contingency plans for a possible U.S. bankruptcy filing if it fails to secure new investors before the season ends in August, Bloomberg reports. LIV executives are seeking private equity firms, family offices and wealthy investors while also considering restructuring options if fundraising efforts fail, the news agency says. The league says revenues have doubled this year and insists its team-based golf model still has long-term potential despite ongoing financial losses and failed merger talks with the PGA Tour.

💲 Sovereign Circuit

Public Investment Fund: Elon Musk’s rocket maker SpaceX could file publicly for an IPO as soon as today, after appointing Goldman Sachs as its lead bank in what could be the biggest stock market listing of all time. Saudi Arabia’s PIF holds a stake of just under 1% in SpaceX via its AI firm Humain and has been in talks to invest more in the stock market debut. Other Gulf funds have stakes, including Abu Dhabi’s AI investment vehicle MGX, which is backed by Mubadala and G42.

Public Investment Fund: The Saudi sovereign wealth fund is in talks with potential investors to sell a minority stake in Newcastle United to help finance stadium and infrastructure expansion plans that could cost more than $1.3 billion, Reuters reports.

MGX: Abu Dhabi’s MGX participated in a $2.1 billion Series B funding round for Isomorphic Labs, a U.K.-based drug design and development company.

Lunate: The Abu Dhabi-based alternative investment manager backed Manara Ventures, a $70 million Islamic-compliant fund, to support startups in Jordan.

ADNOC: The UAE national oil company’s logistics arm ADNOC Distribution  and Americana Restaurants formed a strategic partnership to expand restaurant and convenience retail offerings across roadside fuel stations.

Masdar: The Emirati renewable company is reportedly withdrawing from Spain’s Moeve-led 300MW Onuba green hydrogen project, the first phase of the planned 2GW Andalusian Green Hydrogen Valley.

QatarEnergy: Qatar’s state-owned oil company has entered Uruguay’s upstream sector by acquiring interests in three offshore exploration blocks from Shell.

↪↩ Closing Circuit

📈 Doha IPO: Estithmar Holding, a Qatari conglomerate that’s part of the billionaire Al-Khayyat family’s empire, is working with Rothschild & Co. on a potential initial public offering of its healthcare unit Apex Health, Bloomberg reports.

🏠 Estate Sale: A 39-bedroom Bel Air mansion listed for $400 million, the most expensive U.S. home on the market, is being sold by a member of Qatar’s royal family.

📉 Scaling Back: Saudi Arabia cut its U.S. Treasury holdings by $10.8 billion to $149.6 billion in March, while the UAE reduced its portfolio by $5.8 billion to $114.1 billion.

⛏️ Mining Venture: Dubai-based Averi Finance is in talks with South African mining company Mantengu over a reverse takeover that would list Averi in Johannesburg, Bloomberg reports.

🗣 Circuit Chatter

🏡 Broker Beachhead: Century 21 Real Estate established its Middle East regional headquarters in Dubai, using the emirate as a base for expansion across Gulf property markets.

🏘️ Shutting Down: Dubai’s real estate brokerage sector is undergoing rapid consolidation as a market slowdown is expected to force up to 30% of the emirate’s roughly 8,000 agencies to shut down in the coming months, Arabian Business reports.

🏀 Ball Drama: Liwa North America and CEO Paul Edalat claim in a lawsuit against the NBA that he helped initiate a deal with Emirates but was later excluded from final negotiations and left uncompensated, with the NBA denying liability and the dispute now continuing in federal court.

🏢 New Bureau: Swedish strategic communications consultancy Kreab Worldwide opened its first Middle East office in Riyadh, under the name “Kreab Saudi Arabia.”

🚂 Choo Choo: Etihad Rail has completed its first passenger station in Fujairah’s Madinat Al Hilal area  ahead of passenger service launches later this year.

🌍 Power Circuit

Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, UAE Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, honored the winners of the 2nd edition of the Zero Bureaucracy Award at a ceremony on Tuesday.

Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed, Crown Prince of Dubai, UAE Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Defense and Chairman of the Supreme Space Council, approved a $272 million international space cooperation program.

Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed, UAE Minister of Foreign Affairs, met with Johann Wadephul, Germany’s Minister for Foreign Affairs, during a working visit by the UAE top diplomat to Berlin.

Sheikh Rashid bin Abdullah Al Khalifa, Bahrain’s Minister of Interior, visited the Tasleeh Holding stand during the International Exhibition for National Security and Resilience in Abu Dhabi. 

➿ On the Circuit

Jasem Albudaiwi, Secretary-General of the Gulf Cooperation Council, said that a Free Trade Agreement between the GCC and the United Kingdom will be signed in London today.

Alexus Grynkewich, U.S. Air Force General and NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander for Europe, said on Tuesday that NATO is not drawing up any plans for a potential mission in the Strait of Hormuz and would need a political decision to do so.

Mazen bin Mohammed Johar, CEO of Jeddah Airports Company, met with Sean Chiao, CEO of Singapore’s Surbana Jurong Group, to explore collaboration to support the airport’s expansion and development plans.

Yahya Shaheen Alhammadi was appointed Managing Director at defense company Raytheon Emirates, a subsidiary of U.S.-based multinational defense and aerospace company RTX.

🎶 Culture Circuit

⌚ Cuckoo Clock: A global shopping frenzy over a new watch collaboration has forced retailers in Dubai to cancel launch events and move stock off-site to avoid the chaotic scenes that have unfolded elsewhere, The National reports. The much-hyped Swatch x Audemars Piguet Royal Pop watch launched on May 16, but competition for the watches became so intense across cities around the world that police intervened to disperse crowds, in some cases using tear gas and dogs. In Dubai Mall and Mall of the Emirates, launches were cancelled before they even started, and the watches remain unavailable while retailers re-evaluate how to release them in an organized fashion.

📷 Photo of the Day

Saudi Arabian film producers Rasha Al Emam and Faisal Baltyuor, CEO of the Red Sea Film Foundation, and Italian actress Tiziana Rocca attend Red Sea’s networking event during the Cannes Film Festival on Sunday. (Hoda Davaine/Getty Images for Red Sea Film Foundation)

📅 Ahead on the Circuit

May 18-20, Muscat. Oman Petroleum and Energy Show. Examining the future of sustainable energy and Oman Vision 2040. Oman Convention & Exhibition center.

May 19-21, Abu Dhabi. International Exhibition for National Security & Resilience. This conference focuses on cybersecurity, policing, national security, emergency response, and advanced security technologies. ADNEC.

June 1-4, Baghdad. Iraq Oil and Gas Technology Exhibition. Exploring industry-leading solutions propelling the oil, gas, and energy sectors into the future. Baghdad International Fairground.

June 3-4, Dubai. MENA Investor Conference. Capital market trends, GCC macro outlooks, and investment opportunities in the Middle East and North Africa. The Ritz Carlton DIFC. 

June 5-7, Dubai. Dubai Esports & Games Festival. More than two weeks of events, tournaments and game launches, including GameExpo 2026. Dubai World Trade Center. 

June 10-11, Doha. Project Qatar. The international construction and building materials exhibition showcases cutting-edge innovations and sustainable solutions. Doha Exhibition and Convention Center.

June 15-18, Cairo. Africa Health Excon. An annual event that brings together leaders and policy makers in health care. AlManara International Conference Center. 

June 17-19, Rome: FII Priority Europe.Saudi Arabia’s Future Investment Initiative holds a conference focusing on European business links with the Middle East. Cavalieri, Waldorf Astoria Hotel.

June 17, Tashkent. Investopia Global – Tashkent. The UAE’s flagship investment conference lands in Uzbekistan, bringing together leaders from government and the private sector to create new investment opportunities. Venue TBA.

June 23-24, Abu Dhabi. Forbes Middle East Building the Future Summit. Industry leaders, investors, architects, and innovators explore the trends and technologies shaping the next era of real estate. Conrad Etihad Towers.

June 24, Dubai. Energy & Sustainability Summit. The summit aims to drive forward the effective decarbonization of the Middle East’s construction and energy sectors, in support of Net Zero agendas, and their short- and long-term goals. Habtoor Grand Beach Resort & Spa.

June 23-25, Cairo. Big5 Construct Egypt. Exploring the latest products, innovations and technologies in the construction industry. Egypt International Exhibition Center.

The Daily Circuit: UAE bets on rooftop solar + Investcorp’s U.S. acquisition

In today’s Daily Circuit, we’re reporting on Mubadala-backed Investcorp acquiring a $200 million U.S. real estate portfolio, AD Ports buying out Germany’s MBS Logistics, and Aramco teaming up with France’s Pasqal to launch Saudi Arabia’s first quantum computer. Plus, the UAE is encouraging property owners to draw solar power from their rooftops. But first, Red Sea Global is cutting the ribbon on its delayed Shura Island beach resort.

It’s showtime this week for Shura Island, the Saudi Public Investment Fund’s $690 million luxury resort project whose opening has been postponed since early last year.

Managed by Four Seasons, the island’s development is backed by the PIF’s Red Sea Global and Prince Alwaleed bin Talal’s Kingdom Holding as a part of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s effort to turn the kingdom into a luxury tourism magnet.

But in the shadow of the launch parties and coral reef marketing campaigns, consultants are being hired to tell ministries and developers that some of Saudi Arabia’s multibillion-dollar projects are too expensive to build, as the kingdom struggles with budget deficits, Intelligence Online reports.

The government’s budget troubles have forced officials to slow, shrink or shut down projects ranging from parts of NEOM’s The Line and the Trojena ski resort to Riyadh’s cube-shaped Mukaab.

A centerpiece of the Red Sea gigaproject, the Shura Island resort includes 149 rooms and suites, 31 residences and six restaurants, with 11 hotels already operating along the Red Sea beach area and six more opening soon on Shura Island itself, Arabian Gulf Business Insight reports. Bookings open from May 20.

Editor’s Note: Have thoughts or feedback? Hit reply or drop us a note at [email protected].

Abu Dhabi turns to rooftops for next solar power wave

For more than a decade, the Gulf’s clean-energy ambitions have been etched into the desert with vast solar parks that rank among the world’s largest and cheapest producers of electricity. Left virtually untouched, however, are the region’s sun-soaked rooftops.

From the UAE’s soaring corporate towers to the high-end villas in its residential neighborhoods, rooftop installations provide less than 1% of the nation’s solar capacity compared to more than 40% globally. That is about to change, The Circuit’s Louise Burke reports. Under a new set of policies being rolled out this year, property owners are being encouraged to install solar panels and battery systems to generate electricity for their own use. 

The changes, initiated before the war, are aimed at reducing peak pressures on the grid and improving electricity management across the emirate. At the same time, rising energy costs and the threat of Iranian strikes against power plants are motivating more homeowners and businesses in the Gulf to consider installing rooftop systems for peace of mind.

Click here to read the full article.

📰 Developing Stories

Saudi Arabia’s ultra-luxurious Dream of the Desert unveiled its Riyadh headquarters and announced the appointment of Raffaele Breschi as General Manager and CEO of Arsenale International, overseeing the project. The train was conceived as the kingdom’s answer to the Orient Express and built by Italy’s Arsenale Group. Passengers will pay between $4,000 and $28,000 for the 1,300-kilometer (810-mile) trip through the Saudi desert. The train evokes a gilded vision of Arabian travel, with interiors conceived by architect and interior designer Aline Asmar d’Amman. Each coach features plush sleeper cabins with private bathrooms, marble-accented dining cars serving regional cuisine, and lounges adorned with brass, walnut, and desert-hued fabrics.

💲 Sovereign Circuit

Mubadala: Bahrain-based Investcorp Capital, backed by the Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund, acquired a diversified U.S. industrial real estate portfolio comprising 19 properties valued at more than $200 million.

Public Investment Fund: Taiba Investments Co., a PIF-backed company, finalized a $633 million deal to develop three hotels owned by Osool Integrated Real Estate in central Madinah.

Qiddiya: The Saudi entertainment city being built by the PIF picked Google Cloud to run its digital systems.

Aramco: Saudi Arabia’s national oil company teamed up with France-based Pasqal to launch the kingdom’s first quantum computer, which Aramco said would be used in efforts to accelerate lower‑carbon fuel development.

AD Ports Group: The Abu Dhabi-owned international ports operator agreed to acquire MBS Logistics, expanding its freight forwarding and logistics network.

Qatar Investment Authority: Doha has launched a $30 million Tech Venture Fund run by Qatar Science and Technology Park under the Qatar Foundation. The first set of partners includes Dubai-based Global Ventures and VentureSouq, as well as San Francisco’s Builders VC, U.S./U.K.-based White Star Capital, and Singapore’s Golden Gate Ventures.

↪↩ Closing Circuit

☀️ Sun Power: Oman Nama Power and Water Procurement has signed a major renewables power deal to curb gas reliance, Arabian Gulf Business Insight reports.

🏋️ Money Muscle: UAE-based company GymNation  secured a $100 million investment facility from HPS Investment Partners, part of BlackRock, to expand in the Gulf. 

✈️ Mega Hangar: Emirates broke ground on a $5.1 billion engineering facility in Dubai, which is being delivered by China Railway Construction Corporation.

🚖 Robotaxi Cover: Dubai Insurance was selected as the insurer for Dubai Taxi Co.’s new autonomous taxi fleet

🗣 Circuit Chatter

📈 ETF Trailblazer: SAB Invest, the investment arm of Saudi Awwal Bank, became the first market maker for ETFs on Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul Exchange  under new stock market rules.

🚦 Green Light: AI-powered digital Islamic finance platform Mal has secured preliminary approval from the Central Bank of the UAE to launch a bank.

🏰 Palace Living: Abu Dhabi’s opulent Emirates Palace Mandarin Oriental is planning to build 35 private mansions within its grounds. 

🌴 Dubai Style: Indonesia plans to create a tax-free financial center in Bali’s Kura Kura Special Economic Zone, modeled on the Dubai International Financial Centre, the Financial Times reports

✈️ Flight Path: Israel has put forward a proposal for Emirates airline to fly direct flights between Tel Aviv and New York, Jewish Insider reports.

🌍 Power Circuit

Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, UAE Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, chaired a UAE Cabinet meeting in the attendance of Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed, Vice President, Deputy Prime Minister and Chairman of the Presidential Court; Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed, Crown Prince of Dubai, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defense; and Lt. Gen. Sheikh Saif bin Zayed, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior.

Sheik Mohammed has inaugurated the Dubai Electricity and Water Authority’s new headquarters in the Al Jaddaf neighborhood.

Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed, UAE Minister of Foreign Affairs, met withYvette Cooper,  U.K. Foreign Secretary, on Tuesday, during his working visit to London.

➿ On the Circuit

Dr. Sultan Al Jaber, UAE Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology and Managing Director of ADNOC, said in a post on X that a drone assault on the Barakah nuclear plant on Sunday was a “terrorist attack on a peaceful project…, and on the right of every nation to build, to progress, and to deliver clean energy to its people.” 

Robert Smith, Chairman and CEO of Vista Equity Partners, said in a social media post that he met at the Milken Global Summit in Los Angeles earlier this month with Ahmed Jasim Al Zaabi, Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Global Market, as the firm was preparing to establish an office in the financial center.

Bill Winters, CEO of Standard Chartered Bank, said that cutting 8,000 jobs is not just a cost-cutting move. “It’s replacing, in some cases, lower-value human capital with the financial capital and investment capital we’re putting in,” he told the Financial Times.

Dunja Gottweis, Director of Art Dubai – which wrapped up on Monday – told Artsy that despite being delayed due to the ongoing war in the region, “Our galleries, collectors, and partners have come together and really shown up.”

Archer Fu was appointed Senior Vice President, East, at Aramex, the shipping and logistics company acquired by ADQ.

Saqr Ghobash, Speaker of the UAE Federal National Council, will lead the Council’s delegation on an official visit to the European Parliament in France’s Strasbourg from May 19 to 22.

🎶 Culture Circuit

🎥 Courting Hollywood: Saudi Arabia is raising the stakes in its bid to become a global hub for film production, offering to pay back the majority of production costs and accelerate payouts to attract major productions to the kingdom. In an announcement at the Cannes Film Festival, the Saudi Film Commission said it would increase cash rebates from 40% to 60% of eligible expenditure, improve disbursement processes and create a “more supportive operating environment.”

📷 Photo of the Day

Thousands of Muslim pilgrims circle the Kaaba in Mecca ahead of next week’s Hajj pilgrimage

📅 Ahead on the Circuit

May 18-20, Muscat. Oman Petroleum and Energy Show. Examining the future of sustainable energy and Oman Vision 2040. Oman Convention & Exhibition center.

May 18-19, Riyadh. Stadium and Sports Innovation Summit. The future of stadiums, smart sports infrastructure, and sports innovation in Saudi Arabia. Hyatt Regency Al Olaya.

May 19-21, Abu Dhabi. International Exhibition for National Security & Resilience. This conference focuses on cybersecurity, policing, national security, emergency response, and advanced security technologies. ADNEC.

June 3-4, Dubai. MENA Investor Conference. Capital market trends, GCC macro outlooks, and investment opportunities in the Middle East and North Africa. The Ritz Carlton DIFC. 

June 5-7, Dubai. Dubai Esports & Games Festival. More than two weeks of events, tournaments and game launches, including GameExpo 2026. Dubai World Trade Center. 

June 17-19, Rome: FII Priority Europe: Saudi Arabia’s Future Investment Initiative holds a conference focusing on European business links with the Middle East. Cavalieri, Waldorf Astoria Hotel.

June 17, Tashkent. Investopia Global – Tashkent. The UAE’s flagship investment conference lands in Uzbekistan, bringing together leaders from government and the private sector to create new investment opportunities. Venue TBA.

The Daily Circuit: UAE probes nuclear plant attack + Saudi green ammonia plant

In today’s Daily Circuit, we’re reporting on Saudi Arabia Refineries building a green ammonia plant with China’s Ally Hydrogen energy, Qatar’s billionaire Al-Khayyat family bidding for big infrastructure projects in Africa, Egypt unveils $15 billion food security megaproject, and senior Middle East wealth management bankers leaving UBS. But first, the UAE’s Barakah nuclear plant becomes a target in the ongoing Middle East conflict.

The UAE is investigating a weekend drone attack on its $28 billion Barakah nuclear power plant that could escalate its three-month old conflict with Iran.

Though air defense systems shot down two of the three drones, the third one hit an electrical generator within the massive compound, which is operated by state-owned Emirates Nuclear Energy Co. and was built with the Korea Electric Power Corp. The attack came from the UAE’s western border with Saudi Arabia and officials did not explicitly blame Iran.

Barakah, the Gulf’s first commercial nuclear power installation, is a central part of the UAE’s strategy to shift away from fossil fuels and move toward net zero emission energy sources. It currently supplies 25% of the country’s power.

No radiation was released in the attack, though one of Barakah’s four reactors was switched to emergency diesel power, The National reports.

Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed condemned what he described as a “treacherous terrorist attack,” while Presidential Advisor Anwar Gargash indicated that Iran was the prime suspect. The assault on Barakah, “whether carried out by the principal perpetrator or through one of its agents, represents a dangerous escalation,” Gargash wrote on X.

Since the end of February, Iran-linked attacks have hit or damaged Gulf-linked assets, including ADNOC tankers and gas facilities in Abu Dhabi, KEZAD industrial sites and the Emirates Global Aluminium complex.

Editor’s Note: Have thoughts or feedback? Hit reply or drop us a note at [email protected].

📰 Developing Stories

Swiss multinational bank UBS Group AG has lost several senior wealth management bankers in the Middle East, less than two years after hiring them. Among those departing are Rana Al Emam and Ali Khunji, who joined UBS from HSBC Holdings in 2024 to expand the bank’s wealth business in Abu Dhabi, Bahrain, and Saudi Arabia. Al Emam moved to Banco Santander, while Khunji joined J. Safra Sarasin earlier this year, Bloomberg reports. The moves are a visible indicator of the intense competition for talent in regional wealth management, though some firms have been recently scaling back since the war with Iran started.

💲 Sovereign Circuit

Public Investment Fund: The PIF has been named the official tournament supporter of the 2026 FIFA World Cup in North America and Asia, with the partnership to cover initiatives worldwide, including grassroots movements, youth, women’s football, education and infrastructure, Reuters reports

ADQ: Abu Dhabi-listed developer Modon Holding, appointed by ADQ, and U.S.-based ultra-luxury hospitality company Montage Hotels & Resorts, launched Montage Ras El Hekma within the $35 billion Ras El Hekma master plan on Egypt’s Mediterranean coast.

Masdar: The Abu Dhabi green energy company is pushing ahead with the deployment of $45 billion globally despite the Iran war, with plans to deliver 100 gigawatts of capacity by 2030.

AD Ports: AD Ports Group launched the Consortium of UAE Shipbuilders, led by Noatum Maritime, to unite national maritime companies and strengthen collaboration, procurement and competitiveness.

Mubadala: Luca Molinari, Co-CEO of Private Equity at Mubadala, was a guest on Mubadala’s podcast The Exchange, in which he reflects on today’s investment environment.

↪↩ Closing Circuit

🔋 Hydrogen Push: Saudi Arabia Refineries Co. signed a deal with China’s Ally Hydrogen Energy to develop a green ammonia plant and hydrogen equipment hub in Jazan Industrial City.

💧 Delta Expansion: Egypt unveiled a $15 billion “New Delta” megaproject aimed at expanding agricultural land and boosting food security through large-scale desert reclamation and infrastructure investment.

💵 Insurance Money: Private equity firm BlueFive Capital will invest $34 million in troubled Saudi-listed insurer Gulf General Cooperative Insurance.

💰 Investing India: The UAE pledged $5 billion in investments across key sectors in India, including energy, defense, infrastructure, shipping and advanced technology, following Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit.

🗣 Circuit Chatter

🌍 Eying Africa: Power International Holding, owned by the Qatari billionaire Al-Khayyat family, is targeting major African infrastructure projects, including Ethiopia’s planned $12.5 billion airport and a 400-kilometer highway in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

⚓ Sailor Strain: Commercial sailors operating in Gulf shipping lanes are facing mounting danger and exhaustion as the Iran conflict disrupts maritime routes and raises security risks across the region, the Financial Times reports.

🫩 Qatar Challenge: The growing pressure on Qatar’s economy from the Iran war is making it difficult for the country to preserve its role as a stable Gulf financial and diplomatic hub, The New York Times reports.

🏦 Beyond War: Asset managers and hedge funds are expanding in the Middle East and opening new offices, saying the Iran conflict won’t alter their long-term regional commitment, the Financial Times reports.

🚢 Saving Hormuz: Defense firms are preparing to deploy autonomous mine-clearing drones in and around the Strait of Hormuz to reopen shipping lanes, the Financial Times reports.

🌍 Power Circuit

UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed met with Australian Defense Minister Richard Marles on Saturday in Abu Dhabi.

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim held a phone call on Friday to discuss regional developments. 

Sheikh Shakhboot bin Nahyan, UAE Minister of State at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, took part in a closed roundtable at Investopia Europe on how the UAE and Italy can multiply private capital into priority African markets.

➿ On the Circuit

Jassem Al Zaabi, Group CEO and Managing Director of L’imad Holding, has become central to Abu Dhabi’s efforts to manage its oil wealth amid rising geopolitical risk, Bloomberg reports.

Mohamed Alabbar, the Emirati founder of Emaar Properties, announced that his e-commerce platform Noon plans to launch operations in Syria.

Roberto Mancone was appointed CEO of du Pay, the digital financial services arm of UAE telecom company du.

Lana Nusseibeh, UAE Minister of State, met with Arsenio Dominguez, Secretary General of the International Maritime Organization, on Saturday to discuss Iran’s threats to vessels and seafarers in the Strait of Hormuz.

Dr. Thani Al Zeyoudi, UAE Minister of Foreign Trade, attended the CEO Forum Africa in Rwanda, where he led a delegation of business executives and government officials.

Mohammad Al Hawi, Undersecretary at the UAE Ministry of Investment, led delegates from the UAE to the Investment Summit in Maryland, where they met with U.S. Deputy Under Secretary for International Trade Diane Farrell.

🎶 Culture Circuit

🎮 Game On: Emirati company Red Dunes Games has gone from indie start-up to global player in just four years, growing a catalogue of diverse titles, from publishing 1990s anime-inspired hit “Samurai Pizza Cats: Blast from the Past!” to developing an original game inspired by the UAE’s pearl-diving heritage. The firm was founded by two friends who met in college 25 years ago and charted separate career paths across film, animation, cybersecurity and nuclear energy before finally starting their dream company together, The National reports. “We want people to know that high-quality games can come from Emirati leadership,” Co-Founder Sultan Al Darmaki said.

📷 Photo of the Day

Sheikh Nahyan bin Mubarak, UAE Minister of Tolerance and Coexistence, appeared with businessman and author Augie K. Fabela II, Founder and Chairman of Dubai-based telecom company VEON, at the launch of his book “Tenacity: The UAE’s Finest Hour.” The volume chronicles the first 31 days of the conflict with Iran through Fabela’s experience. (Emirates News Agency)

📅 Ahead on the Circuit

May 15-17, Dubai. Art Dubai. A special edition of the annual event taking place in Dubai, bringing together artists from the region and the Global South. Madinat Jumeirah.

May 15, Milan. Investopia Global – Milan. The UAE investment conference series lands in Europe with a high-level delegation of leaders from companies including EDGE Group, 2PointZero and Khazna Data Centers. Palazzo Mezzanotte. 

May 18, Paris. Investopia Roundtable – Paris. A high level B2B/B2G investment roundtable in Paris that will bring together about 30 senior government officials, business leaders, and investors. Embassy of the UAE in Paris.

May 18-20, Muscat. Oman Petroleum and Energy Show. Examining the future of sustainable energy and Oman Vision 2040. Oman Convention & Exhibition center.

May 18-19, Riyadh. Stadium and Sports Innovation Summit. The future of stadiums, smart sports infrastructure, and sports innovation in Saudi Arabia. Hyatt Regency Al Olaya.

May 19, Abu Dhabi. International Exhibition for National Security & Resilience. This conference focuses on cybersecurity, policing, national security, emergency response, and advanced security technologies. ADNEC.

May 19-21, Abu Dhabi. World Utilities Congress. Global policymakers, industry leaders and innovators discuss transforming the utilities sector into resilient, low‑carbon systems. ADNEC. 

June 3-4, Dubai. MENA Investor Conference. Capital market trends, GCC macro outlooks, and investment opportunities in the Middle East and North Africa. The Ritz Carlton DIFC. 

June 5-7, Dubai. Dubai Esports & Games Festival. More than two weeks of events, tournaments and game launches, including GameExpo 2026. Dubai World Trade Center. 

June 17-19, Rome: FII Priority Europe: Saudi Arabia’s Future Investment Initiative holds a conference focusing on European business links with the Middle East. Cavalieri, Waldorf Astoria Hotel.

June 17, Tashkent. Investopia Global – Tashkent. The UAE’s flagship investment conference lands in Uzbekistan, bringing together leaders from government and the private sector to create new investment opportunities. Venue TBA.

The Daily Circuit: ADNOC to fast-track new pipeline + Mubadala finances LNG

In today’s Daily Circuit, we’re reporting on Mubadala’s financing package for a $13 billion LNG plant, the Oman fertilizer firm mulling an IPO, an even-larger-than-expected leap in the Nasdaq debut of Cerebras, and combat sports at Abu Dhabi’s future Vegas Sphere. But first, ADNOC’s new Hormuz-bypass pipeline.

Anticipating future shipping headaches in the Strait of Hormuz, the UAE is accelerating plans to build a new pipeline that can bypass the Iran-blocked waterway.

Crown Prince Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed issued an order on Thursday to fast-track construction of ADNOC pipeline aimed at expanding the UAE’s capacity to transport oil for export through the Gulf of Oman.

The national petroleum company’s existing Habshan-Fujairah pipeline already carries as much as 1.8 million barrels a day to the Indian Ocean coast, avoiding the narrow Hormuz channel, The Wall Street Journal reports. But that’s only about half the country’s prewar daily oil output.

Sheikh Khaled’s order comes a month after Saudi Arabia restored its East-West oil pipeline to full capacity, fixing damage linked to the Iran conflict that disrupted flows across the kingdom. Repairs to the pipeline, which runs from oil fields in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province to the Red Sea port of Yanbu, enabled the kingdom to service customers amid skyrocketing oil prices.

The new pipeline project, scheduled for completion in 2027, follows the UAE’s withdrawal from OPEC, which will allow it to increase production and meet the war-related rise in global demand for oil and gas.

Editor’s Note: Have thoughts or feedback? Hit reply or drop us a note at [email protected].

📰 Developing Stories

Oman India Fertiliser Co. is weighing an IPO that could value the company at more than $2.5 billion, potentially making it one of the Sultanate’s biggest stock offerings. The fertilizer producer, which is backed by the Oman Investment Authority and the Indian government, is planning to raise several hundred million dollars, with shareholders selling a combined stake of about 25%, Bloomberg reports. It comes amid a rally in fertilizer prices driven by the regional conflict and would offer a welcome boost for both the Muscat exchange and the wider Middle East region, where deal flow had already started to slow down before the war began. Société Générale, Arqaam Capital Ltd. and Bank Muscat SAOG are among the arrangers working on the deal. 

💲 Sovereign Circuit

G42: Shares in California-based chipmaker Cerebras, which counts UAE tech investor G42 among its biggest customers, soared 68% on the first day of trading on the Nasdaq, valuing the company at $67 billion.

G42: Presight signed an agreement with the Ministry of the Interior of Montenegro to develop a next-generation AI-powered “Smart Nation” platform to oversee infrastructure, traffic management, public safety, and integrated emergency response systems.

Mubadala: Emirates Global Aluminium is in advanced talks to buy a stake in Omani rival Sohar Aluminium as it expands outside the UAE and adapts after Iran-related disruptions forced major production cuts and shipping changes, Reuters reports

DP World: The Dubai-owned port operator said it remains bullish on African expansion despite inflation pressures linked to the Iran war and will keep investing in countries including Mozambique and Congo, Bloomberg reports.

Masdar: Masdar and German energy company RWE received U.K. approval for the 3-gigawatt Dogger Bank South offshore wind projects.

↪↩ Closing Circuit

💰 Retail Finance: Gulf retail group Brands For Less secured a $68 million sustainability-linked Islamic financing facility from Emirates Islamic to support its operations and working capital needs.

🚧 Housing Investments: VIE Communities, an Emirati-Egyptian joint venture, launched operations in Egypt with two mixed-use developments in New Cairo valued at a combined $2.8 billion.

⚖️ Nearing Settlement: Indian billionaire Gautam Adani and his nephew Sagar have agreed to pay a total of $18 million to settle U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission allegations that they made false and misleading representations about Adani Green Energy, Bloomberg reports.

🗣 Circuit Chatter

🤖 Expanding Reach: Vista Equity Partners, a U.S. tech-focused private equity company, opened an office in Abu Dhabi Global Market.

👍 Good News: Senegal is nearing a new agreement with the International Monetary Fund after talks to resolve its debt issues, Abdullah Almusaibeeh, the President of Riyadh-based lender Arab Bank for Economic Development in Africa, said in a Bloomberg Television interview.

🏭 Smelter Plans: Commodity trader Trafigura is considering a $900 million aluminum smelter project in Egypt that would rely on renewable energy, part of Cairo’s push to attract industrial investment.

🌍 Power Circuit

UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed welcomed Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi upon his arrival in the UAE for an official visit on Friday.

Sheikh Mohamed met with a delegation from the UAE defense company EDGE Group on Thursday. 

Sheikh Mohamed and Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, met with Will Ahmed, CEO of Whoop, last week in Abu Dhabi, according to an Instagram post by the Egyptian-American entrepreneur. 

Sheikh Khaled chaired a meeting of the Executive Committee of the ADNOC Board of Directors, held at the company’s headquarters in Abu Dhabi today.

Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed, UAE Minister of Foreign Affairs, met with the U.K.’s Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy in London on Thursday, where they discussed the repercussions of the ongoing conflict with Iran.

➿ On the Circuit

Richard Attias, the events impresario who consults for Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, accompanied U.S. President Donald Trump to Beijing, Intelligence Online reports.

Bob Diamond, the former Barclays CEO, praised the response in the Gulf to the Iran war, saying, “I probably have more confidence today in the leadership and the future of the economies like Qatar and the UAE.”

Mariam Almheiri, Vice Chair and Managing Director of 2PointZero, a subsidiary of Abu Dhabi’s International Holding Co., appeared on Morning Joe to discuss the company’s anti-poverty efforts with New York’s Global Citizen.

Nabil Sultan was appointed CEO of Dubai-based dnata, Loadstar reports. Sultan joins dnata from Emirates Cargo. 

Dwayne Lysaght and Alberto Piana were appointed as Co-Heads of Investment Banking for the EMEA region at U.S. investment bank JPMorgan, as part of a wider leadership shuffle.

Omran Sharaf, UAE Assistant Foreign Minister for Advanced Science and Technology, led a delegation to the U.S. to discuss further cooperation across critical, emerging, and advanced technologies.

🎶 Culture Circuit

🎭 Abu Dhabi Orb: An international version of the blockbuster Sphere Vegas is expected to open on Abu Dhabi’s Yas Island by 2029. The $1.7 billion Sphere Abu Dhabi is being built between Yas Mall and SeaWorld Abu Dhabi and will have a capacity of 20,000 people. It will be used for concert residencies, combat sports and business conferences.

📷 Photo of the Day

A guest brandishes a Star Wars-style light saber at an interactive show running through May 17 at the Art Dubai Special Edition in Madinat Jumeirah (Cedric Ribeiro/Getty Images for Art Dubai)

📅 Ahead on the Circuit

May 15-17, Dubai. Art Dubai. A special edition of the annual event taking place in Dubai, bringing together artists from the region and the Global South. Madinat Jumeirah.

May 15, Milan. Investopia Global – Milan. The UAE investment conference series lands in Europe with a high-level delegation of leaders from companies including EDGE Group, 2PointZero and Khazna Data Centers. Palazzo Mezzanotte. 

May 18, Paris. Investopia Roundtable – Paris. A high level B2B/B2G investment roundtable in Paris that will bring together about 30 senior government officials, business leaders, and investors. Embassy of the UAE in Paris.

May 18-20, Muscat. Oman Petroleum and Energy Show. Examining the future of sustainable energy and Oman Vision 2040. Oman Convention & Exhibition center.

May 18-19, Riyadh. Stadium and Sports Innovation Summit. The future of stadiums, smart sports infrastructure, and sports innovation in Saudi Arabia. Hyatt Regency Al Olaya.

May 19, Abu Dhabi. International Exhibition for National Security & Resilience. This conference focuses on cybersecurity, policing, national security, emergency response, and advanced security technologies. ADNEC.

May 19-21, Abu Dhabi. World Utilities Congress. Global policymakers, industry leaders and innovators discuss transforming the utilities sector into resilient, low‑carbon systems. ADNEC. 

June 3-4, Dubai. MENA Investor Conference. Capital market trends, GCC macro outlooks, and investment opportunities in the Middle East and North Africa. The Ritz Carlton DIFC. 

June 5-7, Dubai. Dubai Esports & Games Festival. More than two weeks of events, tournaments and game launches, including GameExpo 2026. Dubai World Trade Center. 

June 17-19, Rome: FII Priority Europe: Saudi Arabia’s Future Investment Initiative holds a conference focusing on European business links with the Middle East. Cavalieri, Waldorf Astoria Hotel.

June 17, Tashkent. Investopia Global – Tashkent. The UAE’s flagship investment conference lands in Uzbekistan, bringing together leaders from government and the private sector to create new investment opportunities. Venue TBA.

Saudi Arabia prepares to build second green hydrogen plant

Saudi Arabia has doubled down on its ambition to dominate the global green hydrogen market, with plans to build a second multi-billion dollar plant, even as it struggles to sell the output from its first large-scale hydrogen project.

ACWA Power, which is backed by the kingdom’s Public Investment Fund, has awarded a front-end engineering design contract for the 4 gigawatt Yanbu plant to Madrid-based engineering firm Tecnicas Reunidas and China’s Sinopec Guangzhou Engineering, Bloomberg reports.

The new plant, which is expected to go online in 2030, will generate 400,000 tons of green hydrogen per year using wind and solar power, almost double the 219,000 tons expected from its first $8.5 billion NEOM plant, which is estimated to be about 85% complete.

Green hydrogen, which is produced using renewable energy to split water molecules, is seen as a key to decarbonizing industries including steelmaking, shipping and fertilizer production. For export, it can be converted into more stable green ammonia and later reconstituted at its destination – a process known as “cracking.”

However the nascent industry has faced uncertainty and supply chain issues across multiple fronts, as it remains expensive compared to fossil fuels and industries have been slow to commit to building the infrastructure needed to use it.

Earlier this month, ACWA’s partner in the NEOM plant, U.S.-based Air Products & Chemicals, which has an exclusive off-take agreement, paused its $2.7 billion hydrogen cracking terminal in the English port town of Immingham over uncertainty related to obtaining U.K. subsidies.

The Saudi decision to press ahead with the Yanbu plant is a strong bet on the future of the green industry at a time when the kingdom needs to wean itself off fossil fuels. New analysis by Bloomberg Economics suggests Saudi’s dependence on oil revenue is largely unchanged from 2016 – and may have even grown deeper on some measures.

Eager Israeli food startups shrug off Beyond Meat’s market woes

When Beyond Meat Inc. went public in May 2019, investor excitement over the sizzle of its plant-based burgers sent the stock soaring, giving the California-based company a market value of almost $14 billion. Three years later, the shares have fallen more than 90%, fueling concern about whether consumer demand for meat alternatives will live up to the expectations they’ve generated.

In Israel, home to a thriving vegan culinary culture and more than 400 food-tech startups, the prevailing outlook is optimistic. While several Israeli companies are producing plant-based versions of beef, chicken and fish – as well as eggs and dairy products – another frontier of so-called cultivated meat, which is made from animal cells grown in a lab, is gaining traction.

“Plant-based meat as it is today won’t get people to stop eating meat,” Guy Nevo Michrowski, CEO of Israel’s ProFuse Technology, told The Circuit. “The only thing that will get them to switch is something that really tastes like meat and that is what is already happening.”

ProFuse raised $2.5 million last month in a funding round led by New York’s Green Circle. Investors included Tnuva, one of Israel’s top two food producers; beverage-maker Tempo; OurCrowd, a Jerusalem-based platform for crowdfunded venture capital investment; and Newport Beach, Calif.-based Finistere Ventures.

Until now, high cost and lengthy production time have been the main problems in making cultivated meat marketable. If these can be solved, cultivated meat can take off exponentially as demand continues to grow, Michrowski said, citing projections that meat consumption will double by 2050 as the world’s population reaches 10 billion. Despite the initial hype, he said, companies like Beyond Meat and Redwood City-based Impossible Foods have not produced a satisfactory substitute for steak-lovers. Michrowski himself is a vegan for ideological reasons, but says he has no problem eating cultivated meat.

ProFuse’s technology, which nurtures the cells in a nourishing liquid, was developed over six years of research at Israel’s Weizmann Institute of Science. The process can potentially enable the large-scale manufacture of meat in bioreactors at a cost similar to producing farm-grown beef, chicken and pork, Stu Strumwasser, managing director of Green Circle, said last month after the new investment was announced. ProFuse’s method “may substantially accelerate that process and thus fundamentally change the calculus for the commercialization of lab-grown meat,” he said.

Another Israeli company working on cultivated meat is Aleph Farms, which gained fame for producing the world’s first lab-grown steak. With actor Leonardo Dicaprio among its investors, Aleph Farms raised $105 million last year to bring its steaks to market by 2023. The funding round was led by DisruptAD, the venture capital platform of the Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund ADQ,  and the Growth Fund of Greenwich, Conn.-based L Catterton, the largest global consumer-focused private equity firm. The company’s process of cultivating cells extracted from cattle was developed at Israel’s Technion Institute of Technology and supported by Strauss Group, Israel’s other top food manufacturer.

The United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, which import the vast majority of their food, have been developing partnerships with Israeli food-tech companies since the 2020 Abraham Accords, which normalized relations between Israel and the two Gulf states. Aleph Farms and DisruptAD have discussed building a manufacturing facility in Abu Dhabi to produce cultivated meat products and sell them across the Gulf.

The alternative protein market as a whole drew $1.75 billion in investment in the first half of 2022, according to the Good Food Institute Israel. Of that, $320 million was invested in Israeli companies, second only to the U.S. Consumer demand for plant-based alternatives (PBA) to meat, however, have stalled in the U.S., according to a report by Deloitte published in September.

“The addressable market may be more limited than many thought,” the report said. Dramatically improved taste in recent years unlocked new interest in PBA meat. But the portion of the U.S. population open to trying (and repeat buying) it may already have reached a saturation point.” Among the reasons cited for the halt in market growth were the higher price compared to meat and “cultural resistance to a product some view as ‘woke,’ the report said.

Until its shares started their steady slide in July 2021, Beyond Meat looked like a sure winner. The stock, which reached a peak of $234.90 in 2019, and was trading as high as $178 in 2021, has fell last week to a low of $12.76.

Introduced in 2012, it offered an enticing combination – a completely plant-based product that looked like meat, could be cooked like meat, and tasted more like meat than any previous product. The company took off first with strips of fake chicken, then created products emulating beef and pork. There were rollouts in Whole Foods, and a major partnership with  McDonalds dubbed the McPlant burger, which was discontinued this year in the U.S. 

But since the 2019 IPO, Beyond Meat has failed to meet sales targets. Part of the problem was the impact of COVID-19 restrictions on restaurants, many of which closed for months during the pandemic, and the company’s shift in focus to supermarkets. One bizarre incident that may indicate the level of tension at Beyond Meat was the arrest of Chief Operating Officer Douglas Ramsey in September after he got into a fight in an Arkansas parking garage with another driver and bit the man’s nose. Ramsey was suspended by the company.

Among other Israeli companies that have drawn large international investment is Redefine Meat, which uses a proprietary 3-D printing process to turn plant-based proteins into steaks. The Rehovot, Israel-based company, whose logo is an upside-down cow, raised $135 million in January in a funding round led by Tel Aviv-based Hanaco Ventures and London’s Synthesis Capital.

SavorEat, an Israeli company that trades on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange features a robot chef making plant-based dishes to order, is rolling out its technology on U.S. college campuses. The machine it sells allows food operators to “customize the meal based on level of doneness as well as fat and protein level,” Barak Orenstein, vice president of marketing,  told The Circuit . “This has not been done before.”

Despite Beyond Meat’s market plunge, Israeli companies see a bright future for meat substitutes and expect even more companies to join the race for the perfect alternative steak.

“If the megatrends of health and wellness and sustainability persist, the foundations of the industry will remain strong,” Orenstein said.