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Regional tensions rise as Israel strikes Iran. Plus: New oil production concessions awarded

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WHAT WE’RE TRACKING TODAY

THIS MORNING: Israel strikes Iran in biggest attack on the country since Iraq war + President heads to G7 summit this Sunday

Good morning, friends. Israel struck Iran overnight in what looks to be a major escalation of tensions in the region, sending jitters through markets. We have the details in the Big Story Abroad, below.

THE BIG STORY here at home: We have fresh details on government spending and revenues in 2024, as well as three oil production concessions awarded to Adnoc and other international partners. Plus: Plenty of investment news from Dubai-based Stake, Shaiva Group, and Taranis Capital. Let’s dive in.

WEATHER- Don't forget to hydrate: Dubai will be seeing an afternoon high of 45°C today, and an overnight low of 31°C. In Abu Dhabi, the mercury will peak at 37°C, though it will feel like 41°C, before cooling to an overnight low of 30°C.

WATCH THIS SPACE-

#1- Sidara’s Wood takeover deadline pushed again: The deadline for Dubai-based Sidara to submit a takeover bid for UK-listed engineering firm Wood Group has been extended again to 30 June, according to a statement. The extension allows time to resolve outstanding pre-conditions tied to debt restructuring and liquidity arrangements, Wood said. The delay also gives Wood time to finalize its overdue 2024 financial audit, which prompted a temporary suspension of its shares on the London Stock Exchange in April.

REMEMBER- Wood Group has been the subject of an on-again, off-again takeover interest from Sidara for over a year. The most recent proposal — a GBP 0.35 per share allcash offer valued at USD 318.4 mn — includes a USD 450 mn debt package and has been described by Wood’s board as a “better option” for shareholders. Previous takeover proposals had valued Wood at GBP 1.59 bn, though valuations subsequently fell following financial governance issues.


#2- The US Senate rejected resolutions that would have blocked over USD 3 bn in arms sales to the UAE and Qatar, with votes split largely along party lines, Reuters reports. The agreements include a USD 1.6 bn package to the UAE covering helicopters and other equipment, and a USD 1.9 bn sale of armed drones to Qatar. Opponents cited concerns over Gulf-linked gifts and Emirati links to Trump-affiliated crypto ventures (read: here and here), while those voting against the resolutions described both countries as reliable US security partners.

REFRESHER- Announced in May, the UAE agreement includes six CH-47F Chinook helicopters and F-16 parts for use in counterterrorism, disaster relief, and humanitarian operations. The sale follows the UAE’s designation last year as a major defense partner of the US — a status previously granted only to India.

… Gulf-linked gifts? During his Gulf visit, the Trump administration formally accepted a USD 400 mn Boeing 747 jet from Qatar, gifted for use as a future Air Force One aircraft.


#3- Bybit and Bitget to relocate Singapore team to Dubai amid regulatory crackdown: Singapore-based crypto exchanges like Bitget and Bybit are considering relocating employees to Dubai after Singapore's Monetary Authority (MAS) ordered crypto firms offering offshore services to cease operations by 30 June, Bloomberg reports citing sources familiar with the matter. Neither of the exchanges hold local licenses in Singapore, and both already operate in Dubai.


#4- Circle eyes UAE remittance market: Stablecoin issuer Circle is in early talks with UAE-based remittance firms to integrate its USDC stablecoin into local money transfer networks, company president Heath Tarbert told Arabian Gulf Business Insight. The move follows Circle’s IPO on the New York Stock Exchange, which valued the firm at USD 21 bn, and is part of a broader push to expand in high-volume remittance corridors.

The pitch: Circle says USDC, which has a USD 60 bn market capitalization, could dramatically reduce settlement times and costs — as much as “30 to 100x” cheaper than traditional methods — by replacing bank-led clearing with near-instant blockchain transfers.

Why the UAE? The UAE ranks among the busiest global remittance hubs, with USD 44 bn sent home annually by the country’s 9 mn expatriates, and USDC already accounts for over half of crypto transactions in the UAE. Circle secured in-principle approval to operate as a money-services provider in ADGM in April, after receiving Dubai International Financial Center recognition for USDC and EURC as accepted digital tokens earlier in February.


#5- GCC banks with Turkish subsidiaries are expected to benefit from improved operating conditions in Turkey, with easing inflation projected to curb the subsidiaries’ net monetary losses in 2025-2026, Fitch Ratings wrote in a note on its website. GCC banks have sustained net monetary losses since 2022, reporting more than USD 7 bn in losses — equivalent to about 5% of aggregated equity by the end of 2024, as cumulative Turkish inflation exceeded 100% over the previous three years.

Turkish subsidiaries of GCC banks saw net monetary losses of USD 2.5 bn in 2024, down slightly from net losses of USD 2.7 bn in 2023, as inflation averaged 60% over the last year.

Despite the improved operating conditions, GCC banks’ Turkish exposures are seen as a credit-negative, with Fitch deducting one notch from the “domestic operating environment scores for the Viability Ratings (VRs) of Burgan Bank, Emirates NBD, QNB and KFH to reflect exposures to weaker international markets,” the note reads.


SHUTTING DOWN THE RUMOR MILL- Kuwait’s GFH quashes market chatter of potential Shuaa tie-up: Kuwait-listed Bahraini investment bank GFH Financial Group shut down rumours about a potential merger with Dubai-based investment platform Shuaa Capital, according to a bourse disclosure (pdf). The firm said the pair were not engaged in any talks, negotiations or agreements on the matter, and that the information was “incorrect.” The statement came out following unverified chatter online, which had been circulating on social media for days.

Based on somewhat of a true story: The two firms briefly explored a merger back in 2017, but those talks were dropped, after failing to both agree on acquisition terms and secure initial regulatory approvals, and have not since reopened.

PSA-

Fancy visiting Armenia this summer? The country will implement no-visa travel for citizens and residents of Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries effective 1 July, according to a press release. The policy allows stays of up to 90 days within any 180-day period for tourism, leisure, or business purposes.

The details: The visa waiver applies to passport holders from all six GCC states (the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, and Oman) and extends to foreign residents holding valid GCC residency permits with at least six months' validity. Armenia previously introduced individual visa exemptions for UAE in 2017, as well as for other GCC countries.

HAPPENING TODAY-

#1- The China Home Life Expo is on its final day at the Dubai World Trade Center. The event will showcase a wide range of Chinese consumer products including building materials, textiles, consumer materials, and will connect manufacturers and buyers from across the region.

#2- The International Appliances and Electronics Show is also wrapping up today at the Dubai World Trade Center. The exhibition showcases the latest advancements in home appliances and consumer electronics, featuring product launches, technology showcases, and networking chances.

#3- Economy Minister Abdulla bin Touq Al Marri is currently leading a UAE delegation of over 50 representatives from government institutions, businesses, and startups to tech conference and exhibition Viva Technology in Paris that runs until Saturday. The event will bring together 3.2k investors and 13.5k startups.

REMEMBER- The UAE is heavily involved in France’s tech sector. Abu Dhabi’s MGX and Nvidia have partnered with French AI leaders to build Europe’s largest AI data center campus near Paris, after the Emirates signaled plans to invest USD 30-50 bn in French AI and data infrastructure.

HAPPENING NEXT WEEK-

UAE's president to attend G7 summit: President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan will be attending the G7 summit due to be held in Canada from Sunday, 15 June until Tuesday, after receiving an invitation from Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney, state news agency Wam reports. The summit is set to discuss international peace and security, the digital transition, and global economic growth.

THE BIG STORY ABROAD-

THIS JUST IN- Israel attacked Tehran just a few hours ago in a major escalation of regional tensions, which Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said targeted the country’s nuclear and military sites. This comes days before another planned round of nuclear talks between Iran and the US was set to take place in Oman, after the US sent Iran a proposal that involves restrictions on its nuclear program, including on enriching uranium. The head of Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, General Hossein Salami, along with other officials and nuclear scientists, are suspected to have been killed in the attack, according to Iranian state TV.

Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz declared a special state of emergency and said Israel’s strike was “preemptive” and that he expects retaliation from Iran. Netanyahu said the operation “will continue for as many days as it takes to remove this threat.” The US said it was not involved in the attack.

Market reax: Oil futures soared 10% on the news, with Brent Crude futures climbing to USD 76.48 a barrel.

The story is grabbing headlines everywhere: Bloomberg | CNBC | Reuters | Financial Times | AP

Elsewhere, an Air India crash in Ahmedabad, India killed over 240 passengers after crashing before heading on its way to London. The Boeing 787 crash — which is the deadliest aviation crash in more than a decade — left only one known survivor. Boeing’s shares fell 4.8% yesterday. (Bloomberg | Reuters | FT | AP |

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OIL WATCH-

Fitch Ratings revised its 2025 outlook for the global oil and gas sector to deteriorating from neutral, according to a statement. The agency pointed to reduced economic prospects following US tariffs, a quicker-than-expected rollback of Opec+ voluntary cuts, and accelerating output from non-Opec+ producers as key reasons for the downgrade.

The ratings agency slashed its oil price assumption for 2025 to USD 65/bbl, down from USD 70 in April, though it left its medium-term and mid-cycle price forecasts unchanged.

Geopolitical risk remains a wild card for oil markets, Fitch said. The agency flagged the potential risk of price spikes from further sanctions targeting Russia, Iran, or Venezuela, as well as the conflict between Israel and Iran.

Fitch now expects global oil demand to grow by 800k bbl/d in 2025, down from earlier projections of over 1 mn bbl/d. Opec+’s spare capacity stood at 5.7 mn bbl/d as of May, highlighting that the market will remain oversupplied this year due to faster supply growth, the agency added.

On the natgas front: Fitch expects prices to remain supportive for producers, helping offset some of the revenue pressure from lower oil prices. US oil producers are slashing capex and output plans in response to price signals, with natural gas-focused upstream players set to benefit as lower oil output will reduce associated gas production, potentially supporting natural gas prices.

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BUDGET WATCH

Gov’t assets, revenues, and expenditures rose in 2024

Gov’t revenues and spending were up last year: The Federal National Council (FNC) approved the Union’s final consolidated financial statements for FY 2024, providing additional insights over the UAE’s main sources of operational revenues as well as the government’s total expenditures during the period, state news agency Wam reported.

Remember: The UAE federal government’s consolidated revenues came in at some AED 533.4 bn in 2024, marking a 2.4% decrease from the previous year, when revenues came in at AED 546.6 bn. Tax revenues were the main driver of the government’s overall revenues for the year, reaching AED 366.4 bn — representing 66% of the UAE’s total revenues in 2024. Tax revenues were up by 15.5% from 2023, when they came in at AED 307 bn.

Last year’s operating revenues — coming in at AED 74.5 bn, according to Emarat Al Youm were up 12.5% y-o-y. The first included returns from investments, deposits, and dividends from government-owned companies (comprising AED 8 bn), and interest from deposits and treasury bills (AED 4.5 bn), Wam quotes Financial Affairs Minister Mohamed bin Hadi Al Hussaini as saying. The second group included revenues from federal services fees, the most notable of which included certificate attestation fees (AED 1.1 bn), wireless device permit fees (AED 1.1 bn), commercial agency and business activity licensing fees (AED 850 mn), medical treatment fees (AED 650 mn), and medical institutions licensing and practice permits (AED 508 mn), among others.

Actual expenditures totaled AED 63.7 bn, distributed across various sectors that included — but were not limited to — salaries and wages (AED 24 bn), defense and security (AED 15.6 bn), and social affairs (AED 10.6 bn). Healthcare spending also exceeded AED 7 bn, while around AED 9.5 bn was allocated to education. Expenditures were also up 9.5% y-o-y.

The federal government’s total assets amounted to around AED 446.4 bn by the end of the year, up 14% y-o-y. This included government investments worth AED 240.1 bn distributed among major national institutions such as the Emirates Investment Authority (AED 165.5 bn), the Central Bank of the UAE (AED 37.4 bn), Emirates Development Bank (AED 6.4 bn), Etihad Rail (AED 6.5 bn), as well as investments in bonds (AED 20.9 bn).

The government plans to spend more this year: The Federal National Council approved the UAE's largest national budget to date back in November, totaling AED 71.5 bn for both revenues and expenditures for 2025, while also integrating the Union General budget with the budgets of independent federal entities.

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ENERGY

Abu Dhabi’s SCFEA awards three Adnoc-led production concessions

More barrels incoming: Abu Dhabi’s Supreme Council for Financial and Economic Affairs (Scfea) has awarded three separate production concession agreements to Adnoc and its partners, covering both onshore and offshore blocks across the emirate, according to a press release.

The first agreement covers onshore block 4, located north of Abu Dhabi. Adnoc will hold a 60% stake, with the remaining 40% awarded to Japan’s JODCO Exploration, a subsidiary of Inpex Corporation. Inpex has operated the block since 2018, uncovering multiple oil, condensate, and gas reservoirs via wells drilled from 2021, according to a press release (pdf).

The second agreement covers offshore block 2, awarded to a consortium comprising Adnoc with a 60% stake, Eni Abu Dhabi with a 28% stake, and PTTEP MENA with 12%. The block lies west of the Ghasha field and focuses on conventional gas resources. Eni, leading exploration, struck between 1.5-2 tn cubic feet of raw gas in the first well in 2022, with additional deeper-reservoir findings boosting estimates to up to 3.5 tcf.

For offshore block 5, located near the Zakum field and targeting conventional oil, Adnoc will hold a 60% share, while Pakistan International Oil Limited (PIOL) will own the remaining 40%. Pakistani Oil and Gas Development Company — part of a Pakistani consortium that formed PIOL — wrapped up the drilling of two appraisal wells in the block in November last year.

Why is Adnoc locked in at 60%? In Abu Dhabi, rights to explore for and produce oil and gas are typically granted through concessions to Adnoc and selected international partners — either directly to the concession holders, who are bound by a JV agreement, or to jointly owned project companies. Adnoc retains at least a 60% interest in each concession, while international partners can hold up to 40%, ensuring national control over resources, according to legal solutions firm LexisNexis (pdf).

Block after block: Last month, Scfea awarded an oil exploration concession to US-based hydrocarbon exploration firm EOG Resources for the unconventional Onshore Block 3 — spanning some 3.6 sq km in Al Dhafra — with Adnoc overseeing activities as well as retaining the option to join a subsequent production concession.

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DEBT WATCH

ICBC lists USD 1.72 bn green bond on Nasdaq Dubai

ICBC is now Nasdaq Dubai’s largest green bond issuer: The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) listed three green bond tranches worth USD 1.72 bn on Nasdaq Dubai yesterday under its USD 20 bn global medium-term note program, according to a joint statement (pdf). The listing makes ICBC the largest green bond issuer on Nasdaq Dubai, with its total green bond listings on the stock exchange hitting USD 5.6 bn.

The breakdown: The Chinese state-owned lender sold CNY 3 bn (c. USD 418.1 mn) worth of green bonds maturing in 2028 and carrying a 2% interest rate through its Dubai branch. ICBC’s Hong Kong branch issued USD 1 bn in floating-rate notes, while its Singapore branch issued USD 300 mn at a fixed rate of c. 4.13%, both of which will also mature in 2028.

Zooming out: The value of debt instruments listed on Nasdaq Dubai climbed to USD 136 bn following the new listings, including USD 40 bn in bonds and USD 17 bn in green bonds, according to the release. Total ESG-linked issuances on the exchange have now topped USD 29 bn.

More where that came from: The UAE and Saudi Arabia are expected to lead sustainable bond issuances in the region this year, with total volumes forecast at USD 18-23 bn. Notable transactions so far this year include Aldar Properties securing the region’s largest sustainable loan for a real estate developer, with a AED 9 bn sustainability-linked revolving credit facility, and DP World listing the MENA’s first corporate blue bond on Nasdaq Dubai with a value of USD 100 mn. Ittihad International Investment also secured a USD 450 mn sustainability-linked revolving credit facility (RCF), whilst Dubai Islamic Bank (DIB) launched a sustainability-linked finance facilities framework, the first of its kind for any Islamic bank globally.

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INVESTMENT WATCH

Investment platform Stake launches real estate development fund in Saudi

Dubai-based real estate investment platform Stake launched a private real estate development fund in Saudi, Asharq Business reports. The fund is being rolled out through its app, opening up Riyadh-based investments for both local and international investors.

Who’s involved? The fund is being launched in partnership with Tharawat Financial, who will act as fund manager, Rasf Investment (developer), and Mawan Real Estate (project manager).

The details: The fund will offer investments in a mixed-use development spanning 60k sqm in Riyadh’s upscale Al Malqa district. The site will include a hotel, serviced apartments, commercial office space, and retail outlets.

Background: Stake previously said it plans to invest SAR 1 bn in Saudi real estate in 1H 2025. Reports indicated the platform was in talks with Al Rajhi Seventh to acquire a commercial property in North Riyadh as the fund’s initial asset. Stake has also partnered with Mulkia Investment to manage future funds in the country.

Since launching in 2021, Stake has facilitated over AED 1 bn in property transactions and more than 250k investments across over 420 properties in Dubai, Arabian Business reports. The platform enables fractional real estate ownership starting from AED 500 and is the first Capital Market Authority-regulated tool that allows international investors to access the Saudi real estate market. It is backed by major institutional investors including Mubadala Investment Company, Aramco’s Wa’ed Ventures, Al Jomaih Holding Group, and Middle East Venture Partners (MEVP).

Looking ahead, Stake plans to introduce more investment products across Dubai and Riyadh in the coming six months, with an eye on scaling investor participation, according to Co-CEO Rami Tabbara.

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INVESTMENT WATCH

UAE’s Shaiva Group and Taranis Capital invest AED 902 mn in five Telangana-based companies

UAE’s Shaiva and Taranis invest over AED 900 mn in India: UAE-based tech and real estate holding company Shaiva Group and fintech-focused investment firm Taranis Capital have committed INR 21.3 bn (c. AED 909 mn) to five companies based in India’s Telangana state, The Economic Times reports, citing a state government release. The investments are expected to create over 5k jobs within the state, though it’s not clear how much each firm will be investing in the Indian companies.

The investment targets:

More ahead: Telangana IT Minister Duddilla Sridhar Babu said the firms have also expressed interest in investing an additional INR 240 bn (c. AED 10.3 bn) over the next three years in biotech, AI, data centers, defense, energy, fintech, and public infrastructure.

About Taranis: Taranis Capital focuses on ethical fintech investments, backing companies with strong governance standards, fair labor practices, and high social responsibility, according to its website. Alongside capital, the firm provides hands-on advisory in areas like marketing, global expansion, and product development.

About Shaiva: Led by Amit Varma (LinkedIn) and Sumit Arigapudi (LinkedIn), Shaiva Group is a holding company that specializes in technology and real estate, and offers platform integration, design services, and real estate advisory.

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MOVES

Hamad Al Mazrouei tapped as undersecretary for Abu Dhabi’s Department of Economic Development

Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan issued a resolution appointing Hamad Sayah Al Mazrouei (LinkedIn) as undersecretary of Abu Dhabi’s Department of Economic Development, state news agency Wam reports. Al Mazrouei is currently CEO of the Registration Authority at the ADGM, where he previously also headed up the Human Resources department.

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UAE IN THE NEWS

Luxury brands are turning their focus to Abu Dhabi

Vogue Business is spotlighting Abu Dhabi’s growing appeal as a luxury retail and cultural destination, as global brands including Louis Vuitton, Piaget, Valentino, and Prada increase their presence in the capital through temporary exhibitions and brand activations — many backed by the Abu Dhabi Investment Office (ADIO). “Abu Dhabi is entering a defining era for luxury,” said head of Abu Dhabi Retail Noora Al Foulathi.

Why not Dubai? “It’s less rushed, more curated, and that appeals to a luxury audience that values authenticity and cultural grounding,” said Mariam Al Badr, VP of brand, marketing, and communications at Abu Dhabi Airports.

Retail and infrastructure are expanding in parallel: Zayed International Airport’s new terminal now houses brands such as Hermès and Bottega Veneta, and Al Maryah Island’s lifestyle and retail hub, The Galleria, has added 82 new stores over the past 18 months.

More to come: Abu Dhabi’s profile in regional retail is set to rise further, with Shoptalk launching its first luxury-focused event, Shoptalk Luxe, in the city in 2026, while brands like Piaget are also eyeing deeper engagement in the capital to tap into client demand.

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ALSO ON OUR RADAR

Edge, Italy’s Leonardo to build tech center in Abu Dhabi

DEFENSE-

Edge and Leonardo to launch a JV: Edge Group and Italian multinational company Leonardo, which specializes in aerospace, defence and security, inked an MoU to establish a joint venture to build a tech center in Abu Dhabi, Edge announced in a press release (pdf). The advanced tech center will serve as a global hub for advanced defense technologies.

The details: The tie-up will focus on systems for naval, air, missile, and counter-drone platforms, and integrate technologies such as naval C2 and BMD systems, C-UAS, maritime airborne capabilities, optronics, and high-performance computing for missile applications.

Background: Edge and Leonardo signed a collaboration agreement at IDEX 2025 in February, targeting joint development across air, naval, cyber, and counter-drone systems.

TECH-

#1- TII’s Falcon-HI available with Nvidia NIM: Abu Dhabi’s Technology Innovation Institute (TII) is rolling out its Falcon-H1 model as a production-ready Nvidia NIM, unlocking fast deployment for enterprises building agentic systems and multilingual assistants, according to a press release. TII launched Falcon-H1 in May along with Falcon Arabic, a large language model trained on native datasets spanning Modern Standard Arabic and regional dialects.

SOUND SMART- What is Nvidia NIM? Short for Nvidia inference microservice, Nvidia NIM is a containerized deployment format that lets developers plug large AI models directly into production on Nvidia-related infrastructure. It handles heavy lifting tasks like auto-scaling, hardware optimization, and latency management, and can expedite weeks of development work into minutes.

#2- Dubai’s Yango taps Serbia’s data center for servers: Dubai-based tech company YangoGroup has signed an MoU to host its own server infrastructure at Serbia’s State Data Center in Kragujevac, with the site expected to go live later this year, Arabian Business reports. The center will be Yango’s main infrastructure site, and its service will go online through a single-tenant framework — meaning that Yango’s servers will be isolated from others in the facility.

Why Serbia? The group cited Serbia’s geographic location, energy and cost efficiency, and data center-friendly regulatory environment as main factors in selecting Kragujevac.

#3- EasyLease forms AI mobility partnership with BigBear.ai and Vigilix: International Holding Company’s mobility solutions subsidiary EasyLease partnered up with NYSE-listed AI solutions company BigBear.ai and UAE-based firm Vigilix to develop AI-powered solutions for mobility, asset management, logistics, and smart infrastructure, according to a press release (pdf).

The details: BigBear.ai will customize and localize its AI solutions for the sectors, whilst Vigilix will head up the regional expertise and strategy, and ADX-listed EasyLease will provide operational leadership.

HEALTHCARE-

Dubai to see emirates’ first proton therapy center by 2028: The Dubai Health Authority approved Yas Healthcare’s plan to establish the country’s first dedicated proton therapy center in the emirate, according to a Dubai Media Office statement. Yas Healthcare, a subsidiary of Das Holding, will lead the project, and the National Cancer Centre Singapore will be a technical and clinical consultant.

More details: Construction on the facility is set to begin in 2026 and wrap up by late 2028. It will offer advanced, low-toxicity cancer treatment that spares healthy cells, and is particularly good for treating children and complex tumor cases.

M&A WATCH-

#1- Hoko acquires Everdome to boost AI-content venture: UAE-based creative agency Hoko has acquired Emirati metaverse company Everdome to support the rollout of HumAIn Assets, its new platform combining AI, human creativity, and Web3 tools for content production, according to a statement (pdf). Under the agreement, Everdome’s token and leadership team will integrate into the venture, which is currently in its testing phase. The transaction value wasn’t disclosed.

#2- Harish Fabiani secures Dubai business center for AED 115 mn: Spanish-Indian entrepreneur Harish Fabiani acquired Richman House Business Center and 20k sq ft of commercial space in Dubai’s Business Bay for AED 115 mn, according to a press release.

The next steps: The acquisition marks Fabiani’s entry into business center operations, and the entrepreneur is set to launch his flexible workspace platform under the Richman House brand. The building contains 60 office spaces and adds to Fabiani’s Emirati portfolio, which includes the Thuraya Telecom Tower in Dubai — currently undergoing expansion upgrades following its December acquisition. Fabiani previously said he was aiming to double his portfolio to AED 1 bn over the next year and was looking to a commercial REIT listing.

#3- Lottery.com to acquire UAE-based Nook for USD 2.5 mn: US-based Lottery.com has signed an amended stock purchase agreement to acquire 90% of Dubai-based Nook Holdings for USD 2.5 mn, according to a press release. The transaction is expected to close by 30 June. The move will see Nook, which offers business support services for sports-focused firms, rebranded under the sports.com platform and serve as the group’s launchpad for the Middle East.

AI-

UAE’s Cntxt + Actualize to launch Arabic-speaking voice agent: UAE-based AI infrastructure and data governance firm Cntxt AI and voice automation platform Actualize have partnered to roll out an Arabic-language voice agent that understands and interacts in regional dialects in real time, according to a press release. The product is already live for public testing.

How it works: The voice agent combines Cntxt’s Munsit Arabic speech-to-text engine with Actualize’s automation backend, and will put to use in situations like auto-confirming bookings, call routing, order and payment follow-ups, government portals, and real-time transcription.

ICYMI- Cntxt AI also signed an MoU with autonomous AI agent platform Beam AI in late May to provide AI agent solutions for GCC governments and corporations.

CAPITAL MARKETS-

China’s Haitong initiates coverage on Adnoc listed firms: China-based financial institution Haitong International has initiated coverage of all six Adnoc-affiliated companies on the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange, and rated each one “outperform,” state news agency Wam reports. The UAE’s energy system growth, AI adoption, robust domestic consumption, and decarbonization momentum, and strong company assets, were cited as reasons behind the rating.

The six firms covered: Haitong expects Adnoc Distribution, Adnoc Drilling, Adnoc Gas, Adnoc Logistics and Services, Borouge, and Fertiglobe to outperform industry peers over the next 12-18 months, and assigned an average price upside of 26% from current levels.

REAL ESTATE-

UEM Edgenta forms Dubai property management JV: Malaysia’s UEM Edgenta Berhad’s subsidiary has established a joint venture with Dubai's 21 Estates Group to provide property management services in the UAE, according to a press release. The new company, named DuaSatu, will focus on master developments in Dubai, including Expo City Dubai properties.

The details: UEM’s Dubai-based property management subsidiary, Kaizen, signed the agreement with 21 Estates, an Expo City Dubai subsidiary. Services will include owners' association management, leasing, and real estate advisory for Dubai projects with potential global expansion.

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PLANET FINANCE

PE and VC activity in MENA took a hit last year, but momentum looks strong for 2025 -Pitchbook

Dealmaking in the Middle East took a slight hit last year, though bright spots still emerged across both venture capital and private equity, according to PitchBook’s latest MENA private capital breakdown report (pdf). Exits remained on the low side, with combined PE and VC-backed exit value in MENA dropping 42% y-o-y, while volume was down 16%. IPO appetite also waned, though select names braved public markets, including Arabian Mills in Saudi and the UAE’s NMDC Energy and Talabat.

Total private market fundraising also fell last year to USD 13.4 bn across 56 funds, with PE commanding the lion’s share.

PRIVATE EQUITY-

Total PE transaction value hit USD 13.7 bn across 147 plays in 2024, crossing the USD 10 bn mark for the fifth year in a row despite shedding 19.2% y-o-y in value. Of this, USD 3.7 bn across 43 buyouts were recorded in 4Q alone, with transaction value climbing nearly 30% q-o-q.

Fewer fund closures, bigger checks: Private equity funds in the region pulled in USD 9.5 bn last year, a three-fold increase compared to the previous year, despite a sharp drop in the number of fund closures. Mubadala Capital’s USD 3.1 bn MIC Capital Partners IV fund and the USD 5.2 bn Future Fund Oman headlined the year.

PE exits plunged 46.1% to their weakest level since 2019 at USD 7.4 bn, but things picked up in 4Q, with exits during the quarter accounting for nearly 72% of full-year exit value, which could signal some momentum in the exit pipeline this year.

Tech continued to draw outsized attention: IT-related PE investments rose 14.7% y-o-y to USD 1.4 bn, buoyed by standout transactions like Arcapita and DGPays’ USD 385 mn acquisition of Mashreq’s NeoPay. Oman also emerged as a bright spot, notching two of the region’s largest transactions, including Apollo’s USD 600 mn acquisition of 50% of Vale Oman Distribution Center.

Cross-border interest propped up the numbers: MENA-based investors were involved in USD 56.7 bn worth of European PE transactions last year, marking an all-time high, led by Adnoc’s USD 16.3 bn proposed takeover of Germany’s Covestro. The numbers point to MENA players’ growing interest in broadening their geographical footprint, even as foreign limited partners (LPs) ramped up activity here.

Who’s pulling the strings? Sovereign wealth funds, namely UAE’s Mubadala Investment Company, the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) were among the most active regional players in non-MENA PE transactions over the last seven years. Bahrain’s Investcorp and Tunisia’s Africinvest rounded out the top five.

Sector-focused strategies also gained traction, with our friends at EFG Hermes closing a USD 300 mn Saudi Education Fund targeting private schools, and real estate funds bouncing back with USD 1.2 bn raised led by Cenomi Centers and GIB Capital’s SAR 1 bn Real Estate Fund. The trend signals a shift toward fewer, larger vehicles with clearer mandates, as the region positions itself to absorb and deploy capital at scale.

VENTURE CAPITAL-

On an annual basis, VC activity declined 33% y-o-y to USD 2.8 bn across 678 transactions, amid a tougher funding environment and more cautious investor sentiment. The UAE led regional activity, accounting for over 30% of transactions, while Saudi Arabia posted a 41.6% increase in transaction count to 143 in 2024. Meanwhile, regional VC fundraising rose 49.7% y-o-y to USD 1.8 bn.

Similar to the PE side of things, 4Q marked a positive end to a lackluster year: Mena-based VCs closed USD 1.2 bn in transaction value during 4Q 2024 — the highest quarterly total since 4Q 2023 — according to PitchBook’s 2025 Mena Private Capital Market Review. A major contributor was the USD 500 mn round raised by Turkish martech platform Insider, led by US-based General Atlantic.

Who are the most active players? Since 2018, the most active global VC investors in Mena include 500 Global (232 deals), Flat6Labs (111), and Wamda Capital (73). Mena-based investors have also been active abroad: VentureSouq (272), Kube VC (259), and Morningstar Ventures (201) have been among the most prominent in international VC transactions. In 2024, MENA investors participated in a record USD 41.2 bn in North American VC transaction value.

LOOKING AHEAD-

The 2025 outlook for PE in MENA is broadly bullish, underpinned by deepening regional capital markets, expanding multi-asset strategies, and an ongoing push by governments to position the region as a global investment magnet. Still, geopolitics could throw a wrench in momentum potentially weighing on global risk appetite.

Private market fundraising more generally in the region is projected to surge over USD 20 bn in 2025, supported by the growth of fund managers seeking several asset classes, expanding regional tech hubs, and the greater use of private capital markets. The region’s favorable tax and business policies are projected to attract capital, with fundraising set to be driven by local and international LPs and sizable government capital.

MARKETS THIS MORNING-

Asian markets and Wall Street futures both reacted negatively to news of renewed regional tensions, with most Asian markets in the red and futures down despite Oracle’s strong full-year earnings propping up the S&P 500 earlier in the day.

ADX

9,694

-1.1% (YTD: +2.9%)

DFM

5,467

-2.3% (YTD: +6.0%)

Nasdaq Dubai UAE20

4,478

-2.3% (YTD: +7.5%)

USD : AED CBUAE

Buy 3.67

Sell 3.67

EIBOR

4.2% o/n

4.4% 1 yr

TASI

10,841

-1.5% (YTD: -10.1%)

EGX30

32,512

-1.3% (YTD: +9.3%)

S&P 500

6,045

+0.4% (YTD: +2.8%)

FTSE 100

8,885

+0.2% (YTD: +8.7%)

Euro Stoxx 50

5,361

-0.6% (YTD: +9.6%)

Brent crude

USD 69.36

-0.6%

Natural gas (Nymex)

USD 3.54

+1.4%

Gold

USD 3,416

+0.4%

BTC

USD 106,148

-2.5% (YTD: +12.4%)

Chimera JP Morgan UAE Bond UCITS ETF

AED 3.65

0.0% (YTD: +2.4%)

S&P MENA Bond & Sukuk

144.25

+0.1% (YTD: +3.1%)

VIX (Volatility Index)

USD 18.02

+4.4% (YTD: +3.9%)

THE CLOSING BELL-

The ADX fell 1.1% yesterday on turnover of AED 1.9 bn. The index is up 2.9% YTD.

In the green: Abu Dhabi Ship Building Co. (+3.7%), E7 Group PJSC Warrants (+3.7%) and Abu Dhabi National Co. for Building Materials (+2.9%).

In the red: Aram Group (-5.7%), Waha Capital Company (-5.1%) and Eshraq Investments (-5.1%).

Over on the DFM, the index fell 2.3% on turnover of AED 1.0 bn. Meanwhile, Nasdaq Dubai was down 2.3%.

CORPORATE ACTIONS-

Emirates REIT’s shareholders approved a final dividend of USD 7 mn for 2024, at a rate of USD 0.02193 per ordinary share, according to a disclosure to Nasdaq Dubai. Dividends will be paid on or before 30 June to the shareholders on the register as of 4 June 2025.

Dubai Investments will extend its partnership with xCube as its liquidity provider on the DFM, according to a disclosure (pdf). Dubai Investments tapped xCube initially last June and said the firm noted an uptick in trading volumes over the past year.

11

DIPLOMACY

UAE, Pakistan talk economic, diplomatic ties

UAE, Pakistan talk strengthening bilateral ties: UAE President Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan met with Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif in Abu Dhabi, and discussed strengthening ties across economic, investment, and development sectors, as well as on regional and global peace efforts.

Sharif praised the UAE’s role in promoting global stability and diplomatic engagement, and thanked the country for its ongoing support to Pakistan, including development assistance.

12

MY MORNING ROUTINE

My Morning Routine: Bilal Abou-Diab, co-founder and CEO at Vault Wealth

Bilal Abou-Diab, co-founder and CEO at Vault Wealth: Each week, My Morning Routine looks at how a successful member of the business community starts their day — and then throws in a couple of business questions for fun. Speaking to us this week is Bilal Abou-Diab (LinkedIn), co-founder and CEO at Vault Wealth. Edited excerpts from our conversation below.

I’m Bilal Abou-Diab, co-founder and CEO at Vault. I’ve been in the UAE since 2010, and I’ve built my entire career in financial services, mostly at HSBC where I managed a team and advised high-net-worth clients, and oversaw roughly half a bn USD in assets. I’m a CFA charterholder, and somewhere along the way, I became a husband, a father, and a man who’s very serious about his Google Calendar color codes.

We started Vault three years ago with my co-founder Sami Abdul-Hadi (LinkedIn). I didn’t grow up dreaming of becoming a startup founder. Honestly, entrepreneurship wasn’t on my radar. I spent over eight years in HSBC, and I thought I’d stay there. Both of us were working in wealth management, and over time we became deeply aware of a structural problem in the way financial advice was being delivered in the region. Vault was born to solve this problem: to help people allocate their savings in a way that actually aligns with their goals, not someone else’s sales quota.

We asked ourselves: If we could solve this problem from scratch, how would we do it? What started as a thought experiment snowballed into a business. We built a plan, got backing, got licensed, and slowly brought it to life. We built Vault to be the kind of company we wish had existed when we were clients ourselves.

Vault is a wealth platform that combines the best of human advisors with the best of digital experience. What makes us different is that our structure and incentives are actually aligned with the client. That’s what sets us apart. We aren’t pushing products. We’re offering plans.

There’s an important part of our mission: empathy. When you’ve worked hard to build wealth, managing it becomes more complicated, not less. We believe people with wealth deserve thoughtful, unbiased guidance — just like anyone else — and that belief drives everything we do.

Fintech is evolving quickly, and the thing I find most exciting is the rise of specialist platforms. In the past, you relied on one massive bank to do everything for you: savings, loans, trading, ins., investments. But now, tech has made it easier for people to pick best-in-class tools for each need. You’ll go to one platform for your mortgage, another for your card, another for your investments.

At Vault, I’m involved across almost every function. Advisory is core — I work closely with our client advisory team and meet directly with clients as well. I also collaborate with marketing, product, investor relations, compliance, and operations. Every month has its own focus, and I try to stay close to the things that matter most. But we have incredible people leading each area, so my job is often to connect the dots and remove roadblocks.

The hardest part of founder life is context-switching. One hour I’m deep in a strategy discussion, the next I’m reviewing legal documents, and then I’m suddenly fielding a call about a product glitch. It’s a mental workout. You need systems to stay focused.

My mornings start early, thanks to my two daughters. I usually spend some time with them, do the school drop-off, then head into the office. Once I’m at work, I focus on planning the day: Which tasks will add the most value? What meetings are essential? What can be moved? I live by my calendar. It’s not just for calls, I block out time for emails, projects, and even 15-minute admin tasks.

I color-code everything in Google Calendar, including a color for things I probably shouldn’t have spent time on (that’s yellow — I used to see a lot of yellow; now, thankfully, much less). It’s helped me cut down distractions and spend more time where it counts.

When it comes to catching up on the news, I’m a podcast person. I use commute time to stay current. My favorites — Odd Lots from Bloomberg, FT News Briefing, and Ones and Tooze by Adam Tooze are regulars. For written content, I use Superhuman, which filters all my news subscriptions into one folder so I can catch up without being buried in email clutter.

I also try to walk whenever I can. I use an Oura Ring to track activity, and one of my hacks is to turn one-on-one meetings with team members into walking meetings. It helps with health, focus, and energy, all at once.

There’s no such thing as a “typical” workday for me, but there is structure. I have regular cadences with each team — some weekly, some bi-weekly, some every two days. Then everything else goes on the calendar: tasks, deliverables, even family time. That balance matters.

When I do have downtime, you’ll probably find me at the beach. I love the sea — it’s one of the reasons I love the UAE so much. I might also spend time with my family.

As for books, I’ve been deep into history lately. The Silk Roads: A New History of the World by Peter Frankopan is one I highly recommend — it’s sweeping and brilliant. Another one is Destiny Disrupted: A History of the World Through Islamic Eyes by Tamim Ansary. For finance, I mostly stick to newsletters and CFA Institute material these days.

One piece of advice I always go back to is something my father always says: “You have two ears and one mouth.” I try to live by that. Listening to partners, our community, our clients, really allows us to add much more value than speaking sometimes. The more you listen, the more you understand, and the better decisions you make.


11-13 June (Wednesday–Friday): China Home Life Expo, Dubai World Trade Center.

11-13 June (Wednesday–Friday): International Appliances and Electronics Show, Dubai World Trade Center.

11-14 June (Wednesday-Saturday): Viva Technology, Paris.

15-17 June (Sunday-Tuesday): G7 summit, Canada.

17 June (Tuesday): Global South Economic Forum (GSEF), Anwar Gargash Diplomatic Academy, Abu Dhabi.

17-18 June (Tuesday–Wednesday): Middle East Event Show, Dubai World Trade Center.

17-18 June (Tuesday-Wednesday): US Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee meeting.

17-18 June (Tuesday-Wednesday): Abu Dhabi Infrastructure Summit, Abu Dhabi Energy Center.

17-19 June (Tuesday-Thursday): Big 5 Construct Egypt, Egypt International Exhibition Center Cairo, Egypt.

24-25 June (Tuesday-Wednesday): EVCharge Live Middle East, Dubai World Trade Center.

24-25 June (Tuesday-Wednesday): Solar & Storage Live, Dubai World Trade Center.

24-25 June (Tuesday-Wednesday): Mobility Live Middle East, Dubai World Trade Center.

24-25 June (Tuesday-Wednesday): Middle East Rail, Dubai World Trade Center.

27 June (Friday): Islamic New Year.

Signposted to happen sometime in 2H 2025:

  • Closing of XRG's acquisition of Covestro

JULY

6-7 July (Sunday-Monday): BRICS Summit, Rio de Janeiro.

29-30 July (Tuesday-Wednesday): US Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee meeting.

SEPTEMBER

1-6 September (Monday-Saturday): Dubai Fashion Week, Dubai Design District.

8-10 September (Monday-Wednesday): DigiHealth exhibition, World Trade Center, Dubai.

8-19 September (Monday-Wednesday): WHX-Tech Expo, Dubai World Trade Centre.

12-14 September (Friday-Sunday): The International Real Estate and Investment Show, Abu Dhabi.

16-17 September (Tuesday-Wednesday): US Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee meeting.

24-25 September (Wednesday-Thursday): Mohammed Bin Rashid Leadership Forum, Mohammed Bin Rashid Center for Leadership Development, Dubai.

24-25 September (Wednesday-Thursday): Dubai World Congress for Self-Driving Transport, Dubai.

OCTOBER

1-2 October (Thursday-Friday):World Green Economy Summit (WGES), Dubai World Trade Centre.

30 September - 2 October (Tuesday-Thursday): The Water, Energy, Technology, and Environment Exhibition (WETEX), Dubai World Trade Centre.

3-16 October (Friday-Thursday): Dubai Home Festival.

7-9 October (Tuesday-Thursday): The International Symposium on the System of Radiological Protection, the Ritz-Carlton Abu Dhabi, Grand Canal.

9-15 October (Thursday-Wednesday): IUCN World Conservation Congress, Abu Dhabi.

14-16 October (Wednesday-Friday): Global Future Councils, Dubai.

22-24 October (Wednesday-Friday): World Investment Conference, Expo Centre Sharjah.

27-29 October (Monday-Wednesday): Future Hospitality Summit, Madinat Jumeirah, Dubai.

27-29 October (Monday-Wednesday): Asia Pacific Cities Summit, Dubai Exhibition Center.

28-29 October (Tuesday-Wednesday): US Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee meeting.

NOVEMBER

12-17 November (Wednesday-Monday): RoboCup Asia-Pacific, Khalifa University, Abu Dhabi.

15-17 November (Saturday-Monday): Myplant & Garden Middle East Green Expo, Dubai Exhibition Centre, Expo City.

17-21 November (Monday-Friday): Dubai Airshow 2025, Al Maktoum International Airport, Dubai.

18-19 November (Tuesday-Wednesday): Dubai Future Forum, Museum of the Future, Dubai.

DECEMBER

1-3 December (Monday-Wednesday): Eid Al Etihad (UAE National Day).

1-5 December (Monday-Friday): The World Congress of Neurosurgery, Dubai World Trade Center.

7-14 December (Sunday-Sunday): Asian Youth Para Games, APC headquarters, Dubai.

8-9 December (Monday-Tuesday): BTC Mena Conference, Adnec, Abu Dhabi.

8-10 December (Monday-Wednesday): BRIDGE media summit, Abu Dhabi.

9-10 December (Tuesday-Wednesday): US Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee meeting.

18-23 December (Thursday-Tuesday): Games of the Future, Adnec, Abu Dhabi.

Signposted to happen sometime in 2025:

  • The Middle East Electric Vehicle Show, Expo Center Sharjah.
  • e& will complete Adnoc’s private 5G network.
  • Executive Committee Meeting (EXCOM 2025) conference of the World Smart Sustainable Cities Organisation (WeGO)
  • The International Civil Aviation Organization’s Global Implementation Support Symposium, Abu Dhabi.
  • Universal Postal Congress 2025, Dubai.

Signposted to happen sometime in the fall of 2025:

  • ICOM General Conference 2025, Dubai

Signposted to happen sometime in 2026:

Signposted to happen sometime in October 2026:

  • Abu Dhabi Space Week, Abu Dhabi.

Signposted to happen sometime in 2027:

  • Abu Dhabi’s solar and battery energy facility, combining 5.2 GW of solar capacity and 19 GWh of battery storage, is set for commissioning.

Signposted to happen sometime between 2027 and 2029:

  • The commissioning of the seventh phase of Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Park.
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