Dubai Stock Markets to Merge Amid Debt Woe

December 31, 2009
by MEVentures

MEV was quoted in the following story “Dubai Stock Markets to Merge Amid Debt Woe“  in the Wall Street Journal:

Analysts welcomed DFM’s move on Nasdaq Dubai, expressing delight at the prospects of greater pools of activity. “The DFM and the Nasdaq Dubai merger should improve much needed liquidity for Dubai, and help investors become somewhat more comfortable with investing in Dubai,” said Faisal Ghori, Principal at Middle East Ventures.

Dubai Gets Aid to Pay Off Debt

December 16, 2009
by MEVentures

MEV was quoted in the following story “Dubai Gets Aid to Pay Off Debt” in the Wall Street Journal:

Getting fresh cash from Abu Dhabi to alleviate some of the debt burden of Dubai World and its subsidiaries is a “great step forward for Dubai, the U.A.E. and the region,” said Faisal Ghori at Middle East Ventures. “It assuages investors’ concerns for the solvency of Dubai World.” What now remains to be seen is how Dubai World, and the government of Dubai will restructure their respective remaining liabilities, he said. “It also makes clear—to some extent—that Abu Dhabi will support Dubai in its pending liabilities.”

Dubai Stocks Decline; Debt Relief Wanes

December 16, 2009
by MEVentures

MEV was quoted in the following story “Dubai Stocks Decline; Debt Relief Wanes” in the Wall Street Journal:

“Repayment of the Nakheel sukuk has moved Dubai from the precipice,” said Faisal Ghori, Principal at Middle East Ventures. “While the Nakheel sukuk has now been paid what now remains to be seen is how Dubai, and Dubai World will handle their remaining liabilities.”

Arabian Bytes

October 20, 2009

MEV provides analysis in Monocle magazine’s article, Arabian bytes.

The rocky crags of Jordan may be better known for Petra and the Dead Sea than they are for technology start-ups, but Amman, Jordan’s capital, is on the edge of a tech boom as the internet takes off in the Middle East.

“Jordan is ripe with talent, as its entrepreneurs are tech-savvy, cutting edge, and are blessed to be forced to focus on competing in regional and global markets as the local market is small,” says Emile Cubeisy, managing director of IV Holdings, a venture capital firm.

The greatest success so far for Jordan has been Yahoo!’s acquisition, this summer, of the Amman-based internet firm maktoob.com. The high profile buy-out is expected to lead the way for a wave of western investment in the city’s nascent internet industry.

Jordan began investing in ICT (information and communication technologies) 10 years ago and it’s gone from having virtually zero internet access in 1999, to having one of the region’s highest internet penetration rates today, at 26 per cent, according to the Jordanian Ministry of ICT. Funds have been pumped into universities, a corporate park and a start-up incubator and Princess Sumaya University for Technology, in Amman, is now the Middle East’s leading technical university.

The ICT sector is also contributing meaningfully to Jordan’s economy, with revenues of $2.1bn (€1.4bn) in 2008. Nowhere in the Arab world does ICT contribute so significantly to economic growth as it does in Jordan. It’s a case of having decided to make the best of its lot. Located between “Iraq and a hard place”, as King Abdullah II puts it, the country has one of the smallest populations in the region (6.3 million) and one of the lowest GDPs per capita ($5,100/€3,470). By no stretch of the imagination is Jordan a wealthy Arab nation. But its strategy of making up in ­brainpower for what it lacks in hydrocarbon reserves is just beginning to pay off. Watch this space.

Egypt Survives Econ Storm But Big Challenges Loom

September 29, 2009
tags: ,
by MEVentures

MEV was quoted in the following story “Egypt Survives Econ Storm But Big Challenges Loom” in Zawya Dow Jones.

“Egypt has one of the most robust economies in the region, buoyed by the largest population,” said Faisal Ghori, principal at Middle East Ventures based in Washington D.C. “This over the years has translated into a real and meaningful economy, driven by real consumer
demand.”