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National Printing’s next big moves

1

What We're Tracking Today

Madbouly is in NYC for UN conference on Palestine

Good morning, all. We hope you’ve said your final goodbyes to the beach and are ready for colder days as it is officially the first day of fall.

IN TODAY’S ISSUE- The Finance Ministry has begun clearing its overdue export subsidy payments as part of its efforts to support the local export market and the government is preparing a fresh package of incentives geared towards pharma players in a bid to help sector players grow.

PLUS- We dive into what’s next for National Printing in our Coffee With CEO Sherif El Moallem.



PSA-

WEATHER- It’s the first day of fall here in Cairo, with the capital in for another cool day with a high of 32°C and a low of 22°C, according to our favorite weather app.

It’s more or less the same in Alexandria, with a high of 30°C and a low of 23°C.

HAPPENING TODAY-

Prime Minister Moustafa Madbouly is in New York to head Egypt’s delegation at the UN conference on the two-state solution to the Israel-Palestine conflict, according to a cabinet statement. Madbouly will take to the stage to argue Egypt’s position at the conference co-chaired by France and Saudi Arabia.

The conference follows several Western nations announcing their formal recognition of a Palestinian state, including the UK, Canada, and Australia, with more expected to follow suit today. We have the details in the news well, below.

Madbouly will also participate in the UN General Assembly set to start tomorrow. He is also set to hold bilateral talks with world leaders and meet with representatives of regional and international organizations during his visit, according to the statement.

CIT Minister Amr Talaat is also in New York on a four-day visit, where he will meet senior executives from major American ICT companies to discuss expanding cooperation through new investments and scaling up operations in Egypt, according to a ministry statement. He will discuss opportunities in telecoms, outsourcing, electronics design, cybersecurity, and AI, and attend the US Executive Forum of the Global Semiconductor Alliance.

** DID YOU KNOW that we cover Saudi Arabia and the UAE?

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ICYMI- Missed this week’s Inside Industry? In our weekly vertical exploring all things industry and manufacturing, we spoke to Prometeon Tyre Egypt CEO and Managing Director Stefano Ziliani to learn more about the company and its local operations, Check out the story here.

THE BIG STORY ABROAD-

It’s relatively calm in the foreign press this morning, with one story dominating headlines. Canada, the UK, Australia, and Portugal announced their formal recognition of a Palestinian state yesterday, signalling a break with Washington and deepening Israel’s diplomatic isolation. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said the decision is meant “to revive the hope of peace and a two-state solution,” while Canadian Premier Mark Carney stressed it aligned with “principles of self-determination and fundamental human rights.” France, Belgium, Malta and other European states are expected to follow suit this week during the UN General Assembly.

What’s next? President Donald Trump — who had threatened Canada with trade consequences over its position and publicly clashed with Starmer over the matter — is set to meet Arab and Muslim leaders on the sidelines of the general assembly to discuss Gaza. Diplomats from the recognizing countries have been working to limit fallout with Washington. (Reuters | Bloomberg | New York Times | The Guardian | BBC | Associated Press | Politico)

ALSO MAKING HEADLINES- Syria will hold its first parliamentary elections since the fall of Bashar Al Assad on 5 October, as President Ahmed Al Sharaa moves to rebuild state institutions and consolidate power after years of conflict. (Reuters | Bloomberg)

*** It’s Blackboard day: We have our weekly look at the business of education in Egypt, from pre-K through the highest reaches of higher ed.

In today’s issue: We look at the efforts underway to open up a branch of Alexandria University in Abu Dhabi.

As the Sahel summer winds down, the Red Sea is just getting started. Say hello to Somabay, a year-round seaside escape where tranquil waters, world-class diving, kitesurfing, golf, and wellness come together in one breathtaking destination. This September, it also hosts the ITF World Tennis Tour, bringing world-class tennis to the coast. Somabay is the perfect next stop, a place where the season never ends, and every day feels like the first day of summer.

2

Trade

Egypt begins clearing export dues backlog with first tranche of direct payments

Some 601 exporters received EGP 368 mn in overdue receivables through the Export Development Fund, concluding the first tranche of the direct payment portion of the state’s mechanism to settle its owed export subsidy arrears, according to a statement from the Finance Ministry. The move is part of the state’s efforts to clear EGP 60 bn in overdue payments to exporters tied to shipments dating back to before 30 June 2024, which will be done through a combination of banknote disbursements and offset arrangements.

(Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

Expect to see more payments like this soon, with exporters set to receive 50% of their dues in banknote installments over four fiscal years, Prime Minister Moustafa Madbouly said when announcing the new mechanism in January. A total of EGP 8 bn will be paid out every year, while the remaining 50% will be settled through offsets against outstanding or future liabilities with the Tax Authority, Customs Authority, and utility providers like gas and electricity companies.

The state is also keen not to let arrears from export subsidy commitments pile up again, with the new mechanism requiring that exporters receive full payments going forward within 90 days and without tax deductions. The state has committed EGP 45 bn for the program this fiscal year.

Clearing backlogs and speedy subsidy payments will support the local export market, according to Finance Minister Ahmed Kouchouk. The funds will provide the needed liquidity to facilitate exports and improve Egyptian companies’ competitiveness globally.

3

Coffee With

From IPO to expansion: National Printing’s next big moves

Coffee with: National Printing CEO Sherif El Moallem. Fresh off a stellar EGX debut, National Printing still has a few cards to play. The company is planning to invest up to USD 20 mn to boost capacity by as much as 20%, grow exports to 45% of output, and keep the option open for a future primary issuance.

We sat down with CEO Sherif El Moallem to talk through the company’s expansion plans, how it’s managing its finances post-listing, and what its first earnings as a publicly traded firm revealed.

(Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

Quick recap: National Printing was only the second company to IPO on the EGX this year, following Bonyan’s float in July. The secondary sale — 10% of the company — raised some EGP 450 mn and was a hit, being 23.6x oversubscribed. Half of the offering went to a Saudi institutional investor, while the rest was picked up by local investors. The stock jumped 9.4% on debut to close at EGP 23.25 and was sitting at EGP 21.01 as of yesterday’s close.

The IPO was about more than just the debut. El Moallem says the listing set the stage for future fundraising: “One of the benefits of the IPO is that it makes a future primary issuance easier if we decide we need it. We’ve thought about that option, but there are no concrete plans or timeline in place at the moment.”

Expansion is already underway. National Printing is putting USD 18-20 mn into increasing capacity by 10-20% across subsidiaries Shorouk, Uniboard, and Baddar. “At Baddar, the new machines are already being installed and should be operational by the end of 4Q, which means we’ll start to see results in 2026,” El Moallem told us. At Uniboard, capacity will expand by 10% with installation planned for 2Q 2026 and output expanding into 2027. Shorouk’s expansion is still under review, with updates expected early next year.

Exports are the growth story. Management wants exports to account for more than 45% of revenues within five years, up from 25% today, with duplex board, corrugated boxes, and specialty papers driving growth. “Our current focus markets are MENA and Africa, but we are also expanding into Europe and the US,” El Moallem said. He added that diversification across products and geographies helps hedge against FX and geopolitical risks.

Integration is the edge. El Moallem argues the group’s integrated model — spanning raw materials to finished products — is a key competitive advantage. “Integration delivers two things: higher quality, because we control the process end to end, and lower costs, since we manage inputs internally,” he explained. Expansion also makes it harder for new entrants: “Building a company of this size takes decades, expertise, and significant hard-currency investment. That’s not easy for newcomers to replicate.” With a client base weighted toward defensive sectors like FMCG, pharma, and education, National Printing has enjoyed resilient demand.

Margins are thinner, but in line with expectations. Profitability slipped in 1H 2025, but El Moallem says that was expected. “We knew revenues would grow but that margins would tighten,” he told us. Last year’s numbers were flattered by some EGP 18 mn in FX gains after the float of the EGP and by lower interest rates. The only real surprise was an unplanned maintenance shutdown at Uniboard, which temporarily took capacity offline. “That issue is resolved in Uniboard, and we expect the second half of the year to be stronger because there will be no repeat of the shutdown,” El Moallem said.

The balance sheet is holding up. With an equity ratio of 1.1-1.2x, the company can comfortably fund its current projects — including the expansion program — through a mix of debt and internal financing. “Larger projects in the coming years might require fresh capital, but that’s a decision for later,” El Moallem said.

Looking ahead: Over the next five years, El Moallem sees the biggest opportunities in exports, scale, and portfolio diversification. Risks? FX volatility, high borrowing costs, and geopolitics. “High borrowing costs, in particular, limit growth when financing machinery. If the central bank continues to cut rates, the outlook improves significantly,” he said. National Printing will start publishing quarterly earnings disclosures this month. “For investors, the key is to track both financial and production KPIs — the same ones we disclose quarterly in line with our budget.”

4

PHARMA

Egypt to roll out fresh incentives for pharma players

A new incentives package is in the works for pharma players: The Madbouly government is preparing a bundle of incentives to attract more investment to the pharma sector, sources in the sector told EnterpriseAM. The plan includes measures to resolve long-standing issues like rigid pricing, the high cost of drug registration, and the sector’s reliance on imported active ingredients.

(Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

A new pricing mechanism could be coming: The incentives package will include a more flexible pricing mechanism that balances sector profitability with the state’s strategic oversight of med prices, the sources said. The new pricing framework would be overseen by a specialist committee working alongside the Egyptian Drug Authority (EDA), they added.

REMEMBER- Some 500 local pharma firms had previously submitted price adjustment requests to the EDA, citing a major increase in production costs, we were told earlier this month. At the time, the source told us that the EDA rejected the requests.

Import substitution in the spotlight: Some 90% of the sector’s output depends on imported active ingredients — and the new package will reportedly prioritize localizing their production, the sources said. Incentives could include tax and customs breaks for production lines, machinery, and equipment that support localization efforts.

Making drug registration simpler: The plan will also include steps to slash the drug registration fee — which recently rose from EGP 1 mn to EGP 5 mn — and expedite the process.

That’s not all: The government is also planning to introduce new financing initiatives for manufacturers that are looking to scale exports and localize production, the sources told us.

ICYMI- The government wants to double pharma exports to USD 3 bn by 2030. Sector players have recently called for fresh financing initiatives to help local firms scale output and enter new markets.

5

EGYPT IN THE NEWS

Int’l press spotlights the increase in roadside advertising in Egypt

A dive into the eyesore that is roadside advertising: Reuters is out with a piece looking into the increasing number of large billboards on Cairo’s roads — now standing at around 6.3k or as Reuters put it over 30 per sqm. “There's nowhere left on the street that doesn't have ads,” one citizen is quoted as saying.

The bigger picture: Nationwide, the number of billboards increased 26.6% y-o-y to 40.9k in 2024, according to data from outdoor ad aggregator AdMazad.

The advertising sector has become an important source of state revenue, with revenues from the sector mostly going to the state treasury, a source at the Transport Ministry’s MOT Investment and Development told the newswire. Outdoor advertising revenues grew by more than 50% y-o-y in 2024 to record EGP 6.3 bn.

The state is taking action: Prime Minister Moustafa Madbouly last week took part in a meetingcentered around updating the regulation governing roadside advertising. During the meeting, Housing Minister Sherif El Sherbiny noted that upcoming regulations aim to maximize the state’s returns from renting out ad space and ensure these ads adhere to aesthetic standards.

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6

Also on our Radar

El Sisi returns new Criminal Procedures Law to the House

LEGISLATION-

New Criminal Procedures Law is going back to the House: President Abdel Fattah El Sisi has sent the draft Criminal Procedures Law back to the House of Representatives to address objections over several articles, according to an Ittihadiya statement. The move follows calls from multiple stakeholders urging a review of the law’s provisions.

(Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

What’s under review? The statement said the articles in question relate to governance, clarity, and practicality — specifically ensuring greater protection for defendant rights, expanding alternatives to pre-trial detention, removing ambiguous language that could cause conflicting interpretations, and allowing more time for ministries and agencies to prepare for new mechanisms and models introduced in the draft law.

What’s next? PMs will convene on Wednesday, 1 October, in the presence of Prime Minister Moustafa Madbouly, to look into the draft law again.

REMEMBER- After months of back-and-forth the House approved the new law in April, laying out the framework for investigating, prosecuting, and trying criminal cases. We dive into some of the key provisions of the draft law in our previous coverage — check it out here.

MANUFACTURING-

Saudi Paper and its local paper manufacturing arm Carta Misr want to establish a USD 50 mn paper manufacturing plant, Carta Misr CEO Mohamed Gamal told Hapi Journal. Operations are expected to kick off by the end of 2027, with the factory set to produce fluting and testliner paper — used in cardboard manufacturing — “at lower costs and with greater competitiveness.” The project will be fully financed by the group.

Carta Misr aims to double its production capacity to 300k tons annually within two years, up from the current 150k tons. It will also begin producing new types of paper that have not yet been manufactured domestically.

M&A WATCH-

Premium Healthcare Group plans to acquire Germany-based medical supplies company Biotina for EUR 3.5 mn, Premium Healthcare Vice Chairman Beshoy George told Al Borsa. Following the acquisition, Premium Healthcare will invest a further EGP 200 mn in Biotina, which manufactures products in China and South Korea and supplies them to Egypt, Iraq, and Jordan, according to an EGX disclosure (pdf).

The move comes as part of the group’s plan to invest EGP 2.8 bn in 12 companies across Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Kuwait, either through acquisitions or greenfield, as it aims to diversify its portfolio and regional footprint.

INFRASTRUCTURE -

Egypt awarded the construction and operation of five electrical transformer stations — whose collective investments total EGP 18 bn — to the private sector, Asharq Business reports, citing an unnamed government official. The companies undertaking the project include Kharafi National, XD-EGEMAC, and Al Gammal Contracting, according to the official.

DEBT WATCH-

Catalyst Partners’ Catalyst Leasing & Factoring secured a EGP 600 mn credit facility from a banking syndicate and hopes to double financing to EGP 1.2 bn by the end of the year, the company said in a statement seen by EnterpriseAM. ADCB Egypt, Suez Canal Bank, and the National Bank of Egypt are leading the facility.

7

PLANET FINANCE

BlackRock stays pro-risk as AI, infrastructure power equity rebound despite sticky inflation

BlackRock sticks to pro-risk stance: BlackRock is remaining risk-on as it looks ahead towards the resumption of Fed’s easing cycle after last week’s rate cut, which is expected to support US stocks and spur ongoing gains across the AI sector, according to its latest investment note.

Investors who stayed the course through April’s tariff-driven sell-off have been rewarded, with global equities staging a sharp rebound, BlackRock says. The firm argues that “immutable economic laws” — as supply chains remain to an extent intact — curbed the fallout from trade tensions, paving the way for risk assets to rally.

US stocks have led the charge, recovering from the tariff-induced sell-off at the start of the year. The S&P 500 is up 14% y-t-d, the Nasdaq 17%, and the Russell 2000 has broken past its 2024 peak after the Fed’s rate cut last week, the Financial Times reports. The MSCI All Country World index has hit a record, while emerging markets have outperformed developed peers.

Credit has joined the party, with spreads on high-grade US corporates now at their tightest since 1998. In Europe, some French companies are borrowing more cheaply than their government, underscoring just how far investors have chased yield. “It’s fair to say you’ve never been paid less to take risk,” one asset manager told the FT.

AI boom offsetting spending slowdown: BlackRock points to AI buildout and infrastructure as “mega forces” offsetting a slowdown in consumption and anchoring returns, with the tech sector accounting for over 40% of total return and a similar share of earnings growth, according to LSEG data. Corporate investment in data centers and chip plants is supporting US GDP growth, even as household spending cools. These durable shifts, the firm says, are replacing traditional macro anchors.

But valuations are stretched: Nvidia, Alphabet, and other AI giants have powered the gains, raising concerns over concentration risk. BlackRock cautions that further upside will hinge on productivity-driven earnings growth, not multiple expansion. “Earnings, not valuations, will drive equities higher,” the report (pdf) says.

Bond markets are flashing warning signs: Long-term yields have jumped to multi-decade highs in Japan, France, and the UK as fiscal concerns dominate. In the US, the yield curve has steepened despite Fed cuts, with investors focused on the tension between taming inflation and containing ballooning debt.

The inflation picture is equally complicated: Goods prices are rising again as tariffs feed through. BlackRock sees a “lucky alignment” — where — equities broaden beyond AI while yields ease on a softer labor market — as its baseline scenario, but warns the Fed faces tough trade-offs if inflation stays high.

Private markets are playing a bigger role in this landscape, with companies looking to them for funding as IPOs are pushed back. BlackRock highlights infrastructure equity and private credit as areas where investors can still capture attractive returns relative to public markets.

Tactically, the firm is overweight on US and Japan equities, and favors emerging markets over developed peers on select exposures. It remains underweight on global investment-grade credit, given wafer-thin spreads, but likes infrastructure credit and short-term, inflation-linked bonds as hedges against tariff-fueled price pressures.

MARKETS THIS MORNING-

Asian markets are mixed this morning, with Japan’s Nikkei leading gains as it extends a rally, and Chinese shares flat after its central bank kept loan prime rates unchanged. Over on Wall Street, futures point to another strong open after a rally across all three indices last week.

EGX30

35,247

-0.4% (YTD: +18.5%)

USD (CBE)

Buy 48.16

Sell 48.30

USD (CIB)

Buy 48.18

Sell 48.28

Interest rates (CBE)

22.00% deposit

23.00% lending

Tadawul

10,809

+0.3% (YTD: -10.2%)

ADX

10,128

+0.3% (YTD: +7.5%)

DFM

6,023

+0.7% (YTD: +16.8%)

S&P 500

6,664

+0.5% (YTD: 13.3%)

FTSE 100

9,217

-0.1% (YTD: 12.8%)

Euro Stoxx 50

5,458

0.0% (YTD: +11.5%)

Brent crude

USD 66.85

+0.3%

Natural gas (Nymex)

USD 2.93

+1.3%

Gold

USD 3,724

+0.5%

BTC

USD 115,289

-0.4% (YTD: +23.3%)

S&P Egypt Sovereign Bond Index

922.60

+0.1% (YTD: +18.7%)

S&P MENA Bond & Sukuk

150.45

-0.1% (YTD: +7.5%)

VIX (Volatility Index)

15.45

-1.6% (YTD: -11.0%)

THE CLOSING BELL-

The EGX30 fell 0.4% at yesterday’s close on turnover of EGP 3.4 bn (24.1% below the 90-day average). Regional investors were the sole net sellers. The index is up 18.5% YTD.

In the green: Orascom Construction (+3.8%), Ibnsina Pharma (+3.3%), and Fawry (+3.0%).

In the red: CIB (-2.0%), Emaar Misr (-1.8%), and GB Corp (-1.8%).

CORPORATE ACTIONS-

EFG Holding’s extraordinary general assembly approved the reduction of its issued capital by EGP 118.6 mn to EGP 7.2 bn, the financial services company said in a disclosure (pdf). The move cancels 23.7 mn shares at EGP 5 apiece that it had bought as part of last year’s buyback program.

SOUND SMART- Cancelling treasury shares is typically the last step in a share buyback. A share buyback is when a company repurchases its own shares, effectively making them treasury shares and shrinking the total pool of outstanding stock in the market. Companies doing this will generally retire the shares at the end of the process. The net effect: Each remaining share becomes more valuable because earnings are spread across fewer shares, and the share price often goes up as a result. It also gives shareholders who took the buyback an easy exit. Everyone else? Enjoy the scarcity premium.

8

Diplomacy

Economic cooperation, Gaza top agenda of Singaporean president’s first visit to the region

It’s the final day of Singaporean President Tharman Shanmugaratnam’s four-day visit to Egypt, which marks the president’s first ever visit to both the Middle East and North Africa, according to a statement from Singapore’s Foreign Ministry.

(Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

Boosting investment and trade cooperation ranked high on the agenda during Shanmugaratnam’s meeting with President Abdel Fattah El Sisi, which was followed by El Sisi calling for “public and private institutions and companies in Singapore to invest more in the Egyptian market,” during a joint presser. The two heads of state also agreed that it was the right time to “explore the feasibility of a freetrade agreement between Singapore and Egypt,” according to a separate statement from Singapore’s Foreign Ministry. Economic and trade cooperation also featured heavily in Shanmugaratnam’s meeting with Prime Minister Moustafa Madbouly.

Gaza also featured prominently in discussions, with the two discussing efforts to end the attack on Gaza and ensure the delivery of humanitarian aid. The two also called for increased cooperation on Islamic education between Singapore and Egypt’s Al Azhar.

The joint presser was followed by the signing of seven MoUs between the countries, including to cooperate on the development of Egyptian ports and for Singapore to develop an interactive digital map that “includes logistics corridors, sea, in-land and dry ports, planned and operating logistic areas as well as licensed storage sector and industrial zones.” The MoU between the Transport Ministry and Singapore Cooperation Enterprise (SCE) also seeks to utilize Singapore’s experience in the logistics sector in terms of capacity building, along with exploring funding options for planned projects.

The Planning Ministry also inked a wide-ranging economic partnership promotion MoU with the SCE, which covered logistics, cybersecurity, digitization, and more. The agreement also covered supporting a separate agreement between the SCE and the Suez Canal Economic Zone to develop West Port Said into a smart port.

An MoU was also inked between the SCE and the Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprise Development Agency, which will see the two cooperate to support “inclusive and sustainable economic growth.” The Social Solidarity Ministry, Health Ministry, Agriculture Ministry, and National Training Academy also inked MoUs with their Singaporean counterparts to cooperate on social protection, health, agricultural production, and public sector governance and leadership training.

ALSO- The two countries also signed a package of cooperation agreements during the Egyptian-Singaporean Business Forum, covering investment, education, training, and capacity building, according to a statement. The General Authority for Investment and Freezones signed an MoU with a Singaporean group to deepen investment ties, while the Education Ministry inked an agreement with Egypt’s NASS Academy, Inovo, and Singapore’s ITE Education Services (ITEES) to modernize vocational training and align skills with market demand.

9

BLACKBOARD

Alexandria University gears up to open its Abu Dhabi branch for the 2026 spring semester

Egypt’s higher education push abroad is about to get its biggest test yet, with Alexandria University (AU) preparing to open a campus in Abu Dhabi. Egypt is entering one of the most competitive education markets in the world: the Gulf. The key question is whether Egyptian universities can carve out a viable niche — on price, programs, or target students — in a market already dominated by Western and regional heavyweights.

(Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

AU is now in the final stages of preparing its Abu Dhabi branch, with the university set to begin welcoming students in a temporary branch in Spring 2026, hosted by the Khawarizmi International Academy building until the main campus in the UAE is completed in five years, a source at the university told EnterpriseAM. The campus will offer both undergraduate and graduate programs in health, engineering, computer science, business, and the humanities, alongside professional courses and joint degrees with American, British, and European partner universities, AU President Abdelaziz Konsowa said.

The move comes as part of a broader government-backed strategy to expand Egyptian universities abroad. The Madbouly government gave the green light for Cairo University, Alexandria University, and Ain Shams University to establish overseas branches — in a bid to bolster Egypt’s academic presence in the Gulf, Africa, and Asia and to promote education as an export industry. Cairo University has already secured approvals to open branches in Qatar’s Doha and Saudi Arabia’s Riyadh, while Future University in Egypt has received an offer to establish a postgraduate branch in the UAE.

Penetrating Abu Dhabi’s higher education market will be no easy task, with the Abu Dhabi Department of Education and Knowledge (ADEK) currently listing 28 authorized higher education institutions operating in the emirate — a mix of public universities, specialist academies, and prominent international branch campuses. The list features New York University Abu Dhabi, Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi, INSEAD Abu Dhabi, and IIT Delhi-Abu Dhabi, alongside national flagships, such as Khalifa University, Zayed University, and the United Arab Emirates University. That’s a crowded, globally connected field for any new entrant.

Getting a foot in the door in Abu Dhabi isn’t just about building a campus — it means clearing ADEK’s strict entry requirements. Any new provider must first obtain a no-objection letter from the department, which is only issued if the proposal aligns with Abu Dhabi’s strategic education priorities and passes review by an external expert panel.

ADEK explicitly requires a partnership with a highly ranked, reputable higher-ed institution in the fields on offer. Only after meeting these conditions can providers apply for program accreditation with the UAE’s federal Commission for Academic Accreditation — a two-layered process that weeds out unserious players.

Abu Dhabi is just the first stop on AU’s international expansion, with the university nearing the completion of the final preparations for its Malaysia branch due to open in October 2026, our source at the university told us. The branch is hoped to attract the interest of students from across the East Asia region and contribute to the university’s goal of increasing the establishment’s competitiveness on a regional and international scale by offering a high-quality education, our source added.

AU is also preparing to establish three more international branches, including one in Saudi Arabia in partnership with Cairo University, as well as in Iraq and Greece, Alexandria University International Students Office Director Hala Mokled told EnterpriseAM. The regional expansion plan also includes branches in Sudan and Chad, “helping to extend the university’s global footprint and strengthen academic and cultural exchange with the region,” she added.

Alongside AU’s expansions abroad is a push to bring international students to study here in Egypt, with the university now hosting 18k international students from 71 different countries, Mokled told us. This represented a 3x increase since 2019, helped in part by the Study in Egypt initiative, she added.


Your top education stories for the week:

  • Public schools opened their doors for the fall term yesterday, likely making your morning commute a little worse.
  • Nahdet Misr’s edtech-focused VC Edventures invested in AI-powered educational content startup LRNOVA. The fresh funds and practical support from Edventures will help the edtech expand in the region, with Saudi Arabia being the top priority.
  • The UK’s Anglia Ruskin University is looking to set up an overseas branch in the new capital, which will be hosted by Universities of Canada in Egypt under a cooperation agreement inked between the two.

SEPTEMBER

24-26 September (Wednesday-Friday): The launch of the 2025 Egyptian Entrepreneurial Sector Diagnostic Report at El Gouna.

24-27 September (Wednesday-Saturday): Cityscape Egypt 2025, Egypt International Exhibition Center

29-30 September-6 October (Monday-Tuesday): Techne Summit Cairo, Sultan Hussein Kamel Palace, Cairo

29 September-6 October (Monday-Monday): Egypt Innovation Week

30 September (Tuesday): The Egypt-South Korea Economic Cooperation and Partnership Forum.

The Egyptian-Moroccan Business Council to send a delegation of 23 local companies to Rabat.

The Engineering Export Council of Egypt will ship a commercial delegation to Russia to ramp up exports to European markets.

Egypt Education Platform (EEP) to launch two new schools in Alexandria and Somabay.

Egypt Otsuka’s nutritional products factory in Tenth of Ramadan to begin operations, with exports to Gulf countries expected by January 2026.

OCTOBER

1 October (Wednesday): IMF mission expected to visit Egypt for talks on combined fifth and sixth reviews of the EFF arrangement.

1 October (Wednesday): Applications for alternative housing for old rent tenants will open through an online platform or at post offices nationwide.

2 October (Thursday): Monetary Policy Committee’s sixth meeting.

4-6 October (Saturday-Monday):Techne Summit Alexandria, Alexandria Bibliotheca, Alexandria

7 October (Tuesday): The 2025 EnterpriseAM Egypt Forum.

7-8 October (Tuesday-Wednesday): HACE-Hotel Expo, Egypt International Exhibitions Center.

7-9 October (Tuesday-Thursday): EgyMedica Exhibition, Cairo International Convention Center.

12-16 October (Sunday-Thursday): Cairo Water Week, Cairo.

19-20 October (Sunday-Monday): Egypt to host the fifth edition of the Aswan Forum.

19-22 October (Sunday-Wednesday): Arab African Investment and International Cooperation Summit.

23-25 October (Thursday-Saturday): Stone Africa Expo, Cairo International Conference Center.

October: The third iteration of the Export Smart Exhibition and Conference.

Mid-October: Capmas to publish the findings of its 2023-2024 income and expenditure survey.

NOVEMBER

1 November (Saturday): The official opening of the Grand Egyptian Museum.

16-19 November (Sunday-Wednesday): Cairo ICT 2025, Egypt International Exhibition Center

20 November (Thursday): Monetary Policy Committee meeting.

23-25 November (Sunday-Tuesday): NEBU Expo 2025 gold and jewelry exhibition, Egypt International Exhibitions Center, New Cairo.

November: Egypt to join the EU’s Horizon Europe research and innovation program.

DECEMBER

1-4 December: Egypt Defence Expo (EDEX), Egypt International Exhibition Center.

25 December: (Thursday): Monetary Policy Committee meeting.

EVENTS WITH NO SET DATE

Mid-2025: EGX launches sustainability index.

3Q 2025: Nasr Automotive begins locally manufacturing passenger cars.

3Q 2025: Polaris Parks to finalize contracts for two new industrial zones in the new capital and Sadat City.

Mid-2025: The Administrative Capital for Urban Developments to roll out the second phase of offering industrial plots to investors

2H 2025: Potential visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping to Egypt

4Q 2025: The beginning of construction works on China’s State Grid two solar projects.

4Q 2025: GB Auto starts assembling one of China’s Great Wall Motor models in 4Q 2025.

4Q 2025-1Q 2026: Kasrawy Group to launch first Avatr EV models in Egypt.

2025: The InterAcademy Partnership assembly.

2025: Nile Basin States Summit, Cairo, Egypt.

2025: Release of the government’s Startup Charter document.

Before 2025-end: The government will launch two ro-ro shipping lines with Saudi Arabia and Turkey.

2026

Early 2026: Passenger operations on the New Administrative Capital–Nasr City monorail scheduled to begin.

1Q 2026: Trial operations for the Ain Sokhna–Sixth of October section of Egypt’s first high-speed rail line scheduled to begin.

1 January: European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) to fully come into effect.

10-12 February (Tuesday-Thursday): Gitex Global’s AI Everything Middle East & Africa Summit

15 March 2026: IMF to hold its seventh review of Egypt’s USD 8 bn EFF arrangement.

May 2026: End of extension for developers on 15% interest rates for land installment payments

15 September 2026: IMF to hold its eighth review of Egypt’s USD 8 bn EFF arrangement.

2H 2026: Operations at Deli Glass Co’s new USD 70 mn glassware factory kick off.

2027

20 January-7 February: Egypt to host the African Games.

April 2027: Tenth of Ramadan dry port and logistics hub to begin operations.

https://entlaq.com/events/2

EVENTS WITH NO SET DATE

2027: Egypt to host EBRD’s annual meetings for 2027.

End of 2027: Trial operations at the Dabaa nuclear power plant expected to take place.

September 2028: First unit of the Dabaa nuclear power plant begins operations.

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