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Forum Playback — A new narrative

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INTRO

IForum Playback - part 2

Good morning, friends, and welcome to the second edition of EnterpriseAM Forum Playback, where we bring you highlights from our successful Enterprise Egypt Forum 2025, held on 7 October.

In today’s issue, we revisit our on-stage conversation with Planning, Economic Development, and International Cooperation Minister Rania Al Mashat at the forum, where she discussed the main pillars of the National Narrative for Economic Development and how it will be implemented. We also bring you our sideline interview with Ahmed Ali Abdelrahman, CEO and managing director of Post for Investment (PFI), on the company’s upcoming plans, the impact of economic reforms on capital markets, and his outlook for 2026.

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PANEL DISCUSSION

Keynote interview with Dr. Rania Al Mashat: A new economic narrative

At this year’s EnterpriseAM Egypt Forum — we sat down for a keynote interview with Dr. Rania Al Mashat, the Minister of Planning, Economic Development, and International Cooperation to unpack Egypt's new economic game plan. The minister detailed the strategy to anchor expectations and propel the private sector into the driver's seat, fueled by a pool of concessional finance to offset high interest rates. Al Mashat highlighted a structural shift in GDP, with high-productivity sectors like manufacturing and ICT now leading the charge and private investment reaching 57%, setting the stage for 2026 as a key inflection point.

Anchoring expectations with a clear economic narrative: “Anchoring expectations is a very important objective... It means that you need to be clear. You need to be clear with your policies, you need to be clear with the tools that you’re going to use,” she said. “[This is the] reason why we came out with Egypt’s narrative for economic development—and the rest of it is policies for growth, jobs, and resilience.”

The state’s structural reform program rests on three pillars. “First, maintaining macroeconomic stability. Second, pushing more competitiveness and increasing private sector engagement. And the third is the green transition.” The narrative includes time-bound commitments so the private sector can track progress.

Where is GDP growth coming from? The key metric, she explained, is not just the headline GDP number (averaging 4.4% this year, 5% last quarter) but its source. “It’s all coming from industry, the ICT sector, and tourism,” despite negative contributions from the Suez Canal and oil and gas. “GDP is really being pushed by… more industrialization, more productive sectors, more competition.” She stressed these new sectors are diversified — pointing to pharmaceuticals, vehicle manufacturing, textiles, and chemical production — and have “high employment multipliers.”

“The private sector needs to be the engine of growth,” Al Mashat stated. The goal is to build “an economy that focuses more on high-productivity sectors, one that pushes more exports.” She described this strategy as moving into a “continuous circle” where “macroeconomic stability… is maintained through fiscal, monetary, and governance of public investments. That is coupled with continuing reforms on the structural side, the real economy. And that leads to economic development, more exports, creating more foreign exchange, which pushes macroeconomic stability.”

The private sector now accounts for 57% of total investments. This is supported by “very strict ceilings we have on public investment” and reforms to “ease business [and] to create more competitive neutrality.”

Clarity of policy is the key point for attracting investment, Al Mashat said, adding that “nobody wants to work in a high-inflation context.” She explained that “to regain credibility, real interest rates are kept high for some time,” underscoring that maintaining macroeconomic stability through clear fiscal, monetary, and public investment governance “is the only way we can guarantee the continuation of the GDP rebound we are seeing today.”

Utilizing international concessional finance: Addressing the challenge of high interest rates, Al Mashat said companies are already “benefiting from concessional finance from different IFIs,” such as the EBRD and IFC. Egypt, she explained, acts as a “platform” for these institutions to channel private sector financing. “In four years, more than USD 16 bn went to the private sector,” she noted, “whether through credit lines, equity increases, or concessional finance.” Initiatives such as Hafiz, the Nexus of Water, Food, and Energy (NWFE), and a recent EUR 1.8 bn investment guarantee help “leverage more financing from EBRD or EIB for the private sector in Egypt.” These mechanisms, she added, enable Egyptian and foreign firms to “access cheaper financing compared to local sources” by leveraging Egypt’s “very strong relationships with the international community.”

Focusing on the real economy, not just macro stability. “We’re focused on the ground,” she stated. Al Mashat pointed to “real credit from the banking sector to the private sector,” which is “moving upwards” and “going mostly to the industrial sector.” This, she said, is part of a “very consistent narrative” where policy is reflected in real-world results. While macroeconomic stability is “chapter one,” it is supported by an industrial policy, an FDI policy, and a new trade policy for the first time since the 2000s. “All of this is tied together with a very clear structural reform program” that includes vocational training and localization at the governorate level, Al Mashat concluded.

Managing the employment transition and the rise of AI: Addressing concerns about the national narrative's plan to shift from “non-tradeable sectors” — which employs many low-skill workers — to tradeable ones, the minister said the paths “are not mutually exclusive.” She noted that the plan emphasizes vocational training through PPPs, offering private sector opportunities to harness the demographic dividend, alongside growth in outsourcing. The objective, she explained, is to build a “spectrum of different jobs” in sectors with higher productivity and stronger employment multipliers. She cited tourism as a high-multiplier sector — with a 1-to-3 ratio — that remains resilient to AI disruption, adding that even with automation, “you need somebody to dissect and analyze that data.”

The 2026 outlook: “I think that 2026 is going to be a very important inflection point or year for Egypt. When I take a look at the consistent performance over the past four quarters, it gives me a lot of faith that when we’re doing policies in the right direction, they’re being reflected,” She said. “Any turnaround that happens with the Suez Canal is going to be creating an extra push. What we're seeing with respect to the recovery in the oil and gas sector is also quite positive. Tourism next year is going to be another record. This year is; next year, hopefully, it will be as well. So 2026 to me is, I would say, a year of really dramatic change.”

We have a window of opportunity with what’s happening globally, and that window of opportunity means that those countries that have a very strong narrative are matching it with the reforms on the ground. Our numbers are showing improvement. We want to maintain that momentum and push forward. It takes an ecosystem. It takes all of us.”

Tap or click here to read the panel’s full transcript.


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ON THE SIDELINES

PFI’s Ahmed Ali Abdelrahman on how reforms are driving capital market opportunities

Post for Investment (PFI) marked one of its most productive years yet, launching a digital factoring arm, and rolling out a new investment services marketplace. We spoke with CEO and Managing Director Ahmed Ali Abdelrahman on the sidelines of the EnterpriseAM Egypt Forum 2025, where he shared an upbeat outlook on Egypt’s economy, citing improving fundamentals, ongoing reforms, and a monetary easing cycle that he says will unlock new private-sector investment, particularly across financial services and logistics.

EnterpriseAM: So, what's new with PFI?

Ahmed Ali Abdelrahman: I think we have a very exciting year. 2025 was actually one of the most productive in terms of the transactions that we had this year. We had two transactions that we've been working on since 2024.

To start with, we closed 2024 on a very positive note as we signed off on our new venture with AXA International to set up a new micro-insurance business. This is a major milestone that complements our existing mandate and portfolio.

In the meantime, we've launched our digital factoring company, which has received initial approval from the FRA and is working on the final approval. We've also scaled our PFI Investment Service, which is going to be the marketplace for investment funds in Egypt. We also have quite a few transactions in the pipeline and hopefully will close one by the end of this year.

EnterpriseAM: What are the promising sectors you see today in Egypt?

AA: At PFI, we focus on certain sectors where we believe we can add value. Our strategy focuses on the entire financial services spectrum as a whole — the NBFI sector, investment services, and insurance.

These three sectors under the financial services space are quite interesting for us. We also have a focus on the logistics business, where we believe we can add value. This comes again from our strategy, which leverages our DNA as an investment holding company of Egypt Post, which primarily works in the financial as well as logistics businesses. These sectors, among others, have a strong investment outlook, and we're hopeful that we can conclude a transaction or two during the upcoming year.

EnterpriseAM: On a personal level, which asset class or asset classes do you prefer to invest in at the moment?

AA: It’s a very volatile market at the moment. Asset classes across the board have reached a point where you have to be cautious when selecting a certain one.

However, we believe the stock market still holds a lot of potential given the cheap valuations we’re seeing today and the fundamental and structural reforms that started early last year. So, I think the stock market would be my first pick.

Private equity as an asset class — since it’s our core area of expertise — and the companies that are benefiting from the current reforms will definitely require growth capital, which we can provide as a growth capital provider in industries where there’s tangible value added. Again, the logistics and industrial sectors are areas where we believe we can add a lot of value.

EnterpriseAM: What exchange rate are you considering in your 2026 budget?

AA: It’s a million-dollar question. Everybody is wondering how the exchange rate will look. We’ve heard a number of panelists projecting an average exchange rate between EGP 48 and EGP 50 for the USD; we’ve also heard EGP 55. I believe working in the neighborhood between 46 and up to 50 would be a realistic assumption for 2026.

EnterpriseAM: How do you plan to finance growth in 2026? And where do you see interest rates needing to be to unlock private sector borrowing in a meaningful way?

AA: It’s been a challenging year and a half since the rate hike in March 2024 — a very tough market to navigate. Borrowing costs have risen to levels that have become prohibitive for new investments. Now, with the easing cycle taking place since the start of 2025, we’ve seen almost 6–6.25 percentage points coming down from the 8% we saw in 2024.

I think we’re on the right track to capture the downward trend that I believe will continue during the remainder of 2025 and 2026 as well. Historically, in Egypt’s interest rate environment, the level where you see 12–15% is a normalized rate that would encourage more investment and support expansion plans. We’ve already seen some indications of private sector CAPEX projects coming in. So, to answer your question, we’re talking about 12–15% as a normalized rate for the upcoming period.

EnterpriseAM: Has AI had any impact on your hiring plan at PFI?

AA: Honestly, in our field of business, I don’t think AI is going to help much. Probably at the portfolio level, where we’re leveraging one of our portfolio companies — Wavz — which is working on many digital transformation and AI projects. Indirectly, portfolio companies will definitely benefit from the AI wave we’re seeing. As far as PFI is concerned, there could be some optimization, but to tangibly feel it today, I think it will take more time.

EnterpriseAM: Are you optimistic or pessimistic about 2026, and why?

AA:Definitely optimistic. The fundamental story of Egypt is still intact — actually, it’s on the rise. If you heard the two ministers this morning, it’s quite apparent that we’re on the right track. FDIs will definitely come, and the private sector is much more encouraged than before. So, I’m very optimistic about 2026 and what it holds for Egypt.

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