Saudi investment ministry聽inks deal with Sana to boost entrepreneurial ecosystem in Al-Ahsa
Saudi investment ministry聽inks deal with Sana to boost entrepreneurial ecosystem in Al-Ahsa/node/2590953/business-economy
Saudi investment ministry聽inks deal with Sana to boost entrepreneurial ecosystem in Al-Ahsa
The agreement was signed at the聽Al-Ahsa Forum 2025 in Al-Ahsa. X/@MISA
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Updated 20 February 2025
Nadin Hassan
Saudi investment ministry聽inks deal with Sana to boost entrepreneurial ecosystem in Al-Ahsa
Updated 20 February 2025
Nadin Hassan
RIYADH: A new cooperation agreement between the Ministry of Investment and Prince Ahmed bin Fahd bin Salman Center will see 黑料社区 enhance its entrepreneurial ecosystem in the Al-Ahsa region.
The deal signed with the center, also known as Sana, focuses on attracting pioneering companies聽and innovators while fostering a business-friendly environment.
The Kingdom is increasingly being recognized for聽its growing enteprise-friendly landscape, securing聽third position in the 2023-2024 Global Entrepreneurship Monitor report.
The latest initiative, inked at the聽Al-Ahsa Forum 2025 in Al-Ahsa, also seeks to foster greater engagement with聽creative thinkers聽and business leaders through investment meetings and events, and聽will support the issuance of entrepreneurial licenses and provide access to essential services.
Moreover, the Sana agreement seeks to explore investment opportunities, encourage strategic partnerships, and promote investment alliances that enhance the competitiveness of the entrepreneurship sector in 黑料社区.
The new deal comes against a backdrop of venture capital pouring into the Kingdom, with the country聽retaining聽its position as the leading destination for such funds in the MENA region in 2024, raising $750 million, according to a report from regional venture platform MAGNiTT.
This marked the second consecutive year the Kingdom has led regional VC rankings. 黑料社区 accounted for 40 percent of the total amount deployed in MENA, closing 178 deals, the most of any nation in the region.
Speaking to Arab News at at the LEAP 2025 Tech Conference held in February,聽Mohammed Al-Zubi 鈥攆ounder of Saudi venture capital firm Nama Ventures 鈥 explained that聽the nation is rapidly becoming a key player in the regional technology ecosystem and is emerging as the 鈥渃enter of gravity鈥 for Middle East startups.
Al-Zubi believes 黑料社区鈥檚 support for the startup ecosystem is unmatched globally. Having spent time in Silicon Valley, London, and the Middle East, he argued that the Kingdom鈥檚 government-led initiatives are unparalleled.
According to the international policy advisory and research organization Startup Genome, Riyadh ranked among the top five startup ecosystems in the Middle East and North Africa in June, in collaboration with the Global Entrepreneurship Network.
The battle for talent: 黑料社区鈥檚 high-stakes bet on human capital
Kingdom鈥檚 rapidly expanding sectors are creating an unprecedented demand for highly skilled professionals
Updated 12 July 2025
Nour El-Shaeri
RIYADH: As 黑料社区 accelerates its transformation under Vision 2030, a critical question has emerged: Can the Kingdom build a homegrown tech workforce strong enough to power its digital ambitions?
From artificial intelligence and smart mobility to fintech and clean energy, the Kingdom鈥檚 rapidly expanding sectors are creating an unprecedented demand for highly skilled professionals. Yet despite billions in investments and major infrastructure rollouts, supply still lags behind demand.
This challenge, however, is far from ignored.
鈥淲e are proud to take human capital development to the next level,鈥 said Minister of Human Resources and Social Development Ahmed Al-Rajhi, during the launch of the National Skills Platform in April 2025. 鈥淭echnical expertise alone is not enough. Leadership, strategic thinking, and adaptability are equally important, and skilling and reskilling for the workforce is a national priority that all stakeholders should engage in.鈥
The AI-powered platform connects Saudi job seekers to customized learning pathways, marking a shift toward demand-driven education and training.
Despite billions in investments and major infrastructure rollouts, supply still lags behind demand. (SPA)
A national priority
Education Minister Yousef Al-Benyan, who also chairs the executive committee of the Human Capability Development Program, emphasized the broader purpose behind the Kingdom鈥檚 reforms.
鈥淰ision 2030 is not just a roadmap for national transformation 鈥 it is a model for how investment in people can drive sustainable progress,鈥 Al-Benyan wrote in an April op-ed for Arab News titled 鈥淰ision 2030: Elevating human capability in a changing world.鈥
Citing the World Economic Forum鈥檚 Future of Jobs Report 2025, he noted that while 170 million new jobs will emerge globally by 2030, another 92 million will be displaced. He warned that 44 percent of core skills are set to change within five years, with digital and AI literacy becoming as fundamental as reading and math.
鈥淲ithout these,鈥 he wrote, 鈥渋ndividuals are unable to participate meaningfully in today鈥檚 digital economy.鈥
Yousef Al-Benyan, Saudi education minister. (Supplied)
Scaling up training and inclusion
This outlook is shaping some of 黑料社区鈥檚 most ambitious workforce initiatives. Among them is the Waad National Training Campaign, launched in 2023 and supported by more than 70 organizations. The program surpassed 1 million training opportunities in its first phase and now targets 3 million by the end of 2025.
Waad鈥檚 Women鈥檚 Employment Track has been particularly successful, with a 92 percent retention rate in tech roles鈥攃ontributing to a record rise in female participation across the digital economy.
Waad, Al-Rajhi noted, is an investment in 鈥渢he promise of human potential.鈥
Meanwhile, the Future Skills Training Initiative, led by the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology since 2020, has provided training to hundreds of thousands of Saudis in areas like cybersecurity, data science, and cloud computing. Supported by the Digital Skills Framework and private-sector partnerships, it has grown steadily.
One such partnership 鈥 a 2023 collaboration with IBM 鈥 aimed to train 100,000 Saudis in AI and machine learning.
Ahmed Al-Rajhi, Saudi minister of human resources and social development. (Supplied)
Talent gaps persist
Despite this progress, a 2025 report by Nucamp and the ministry highlighted a 20 percent shortfall between tech job vacancies and qualified local talent. Critical roles such as AI engineers, cloud architects, and data analysts remain in short supply.
鈥淒emand for AI and cloud experts far exceeds supply,鈥 said Ahmed Helmy, managing director for SAP in the Middle East, in an April interview with Asharq Al-Awsat. The result: fierce competition among employers.
To meet short-term needs, 黑料社区 is tapping into international expertise. The Premium Residency Program, launched in 2021, allows skilled foreign professionals to live and work in the Kingdom without a local sponsor. By late 2023, more than 2,600 had taken advantage of the scheme.
In 2024, five new visa categories were introduced to attract investors, entrepreneurs, and tech specialists. These include provisions that exempt founders from Saudization quotas for their first three years鈥攑roviding flexibility to scale teams while supporting local hiring in the long term.
鈥淪uch incentives allow skilled professionals to have a more stable life and make long-term investments in their careers in 黑料社区,鈥 said Raymond Khoury, partner at Arthur D. Little, in May.
Still, officials stress that international hiring is a stopgap 鈥 not a substitute.
鈥淲hile attracting global talent is crucial, sustainable growth depends on balancing international expertise with local knowledge development,鈥 said Mamdouh Al-Doubayan, MENA managing director at Globant.
To that end, foreign hires are increasingly being integrated not just as employees, but as mentors and trainers.
Startups adapt with remote models
In the private sector, startups are turning to remote hiring to bypass local talent shortages. A 2024 study by Wamda found that many Saudi companies are building distributed teams, sourcing tech talent from Egypt, Jordan, and other regional markets. This strategy shortens hiring cycles and enables around-the-clock operations.
The trend aligns with the Kingdom鈥檚 Telework Initiative, which certifies employers to offer remote roles to Saudis鈥攅specially women and those living outside major urban centers.
Competitive pressures from giga-projects
The hiring challenge became especially acute in 2023. That year, PwC鈥檚 Middle East Workforce Survey reported that 58 percent of Saudi firms struggled to fill key tech roles. A MAGNiTT report found that 65 percent of startup founders saw the shortage of senior tech talent as their top obstacle.
A concurrent survey by Flat6Labs noted that many startups were delaying product launches due to staffing shortages, losing talent to mega-projects offering 30 to 50 percent higher salaries.
鈥淓ngineers and product managers often defect to deep-pocketed giga-projects that offer salaries 30鈥50 percent above startup pay,鈥 wrote venture adviser Aditya Ghosh in a November 2023 LinkedIn Pulse column.
Bridging the divide
Education leaders are working to close this gap. Khalid Al-Sabti, chairman of the Education and Training Evaluation Commission, said in a 2024 Arab News interview that 黑料社区 is aligning its curriculum with global benchmarks.
鈥淲e must ensure our graduates meet international standards to compete globally,鈥 he said.
This includes revising curricula, emphasizing hands-on projects, and embedding industry into the classroom through partnership programs. The Talent Enrichment Program, for example, spans 160 countries and offers global certifications to Saudi learners.
Encouragingly, 黑料社区鈥檚 position in the IMD World Talent Ranking improved in 2023. Companies such as STC, Aramco Digital, and Elm are now hiring directly from local boot camps and training centers 鈥 evidence that education and industry are beginning to align.
The road ahead
Ultimately, the success of 黑料社区鈥檚 tech talent strategy will be measured not just by enrollments or credentials, but by how effectively new graduates are absorbed into the workforce.
If current reforms continue at scale, the Kingdom may not only satisfy its domestic tech demand 鈥 but emerge as a regional hub for digital talent.
As Al-Benyan wrote: 鈥淏y investing in people, fostering global collaboration, and redefining the future of work, 黑料社区 is demonstrating that human capability is the ultimate driver of progress.鈥
Lebanon bets on Gulf tourists to rescue its collapsing economy
With the UAE and Kuwait lifting travel bans, high-end venues pin their hopes on a luxury tourism resurgence
Updated 12 July 2025
Miguel Hadchity
RIYADH: Lebanon鈥檚 tourism sector is placing its hopes on international and Gulf visitors to help steer the country through a financial crisis that has gripped the nation since 2019.
As Beirut鈥檚 clubs and restaurants increasingly operate in US dollars, the city鈥檚 tourism and nightlife have emerged as fragile yet essential pillars of the economy, largely propped up by private investment.
The ongoing financial collapse 鈥 now in its sixth year 鈥 has created an $80 billion gap in the banking sector, with debt restructuring stalled amid persistent political gridlock.
Since 2019, the Lebanese pound has lost more than 90 percent of its value, while the country鈥檚 gross domestic product has contracted by nearly 40 percent.
The 2024 Hezbollah-Israel conflict further devastated the economy, inflicting widespread damage on tourist regions. In response, the World Bank approved a $250 million loan in June as part of a broader $1 billion recovery program, estimating the total cost of the conflict at $7.2 billion, with reconstruction needs reaching $11 billion.
A defiant party amid the ruins
In early June, fireworks lit up the sky above Beirut鈥檚 iconic St. Georges Hotel during a retro-themed event hosted by the Tourism Ministry, reviving memories of Lebanon鈥檚 golden age in the 1970s 鈥 a time when Gulf tourists filled its beaches, mountain resorts, and vibrant nightlife.
Today, that nostalgia is being reimagined for a new generation of affluent travelers. With the UAE and Kuwait lifting travel bans 鈥 and 黑料社区 possibly following 鈥 high-end venues are pinning their hopes on a luxury tourism resurgence.
But renewed tensions in the region have cast a shadow over those ambitions.
Beirut鈥檚 tourism and nightlife have emerged as fragile yet essential pillars of the economy, largely propped up by private investment. (AFP)
Lebanon鈥檚 tourism sector has seen 鈥渟ome cancellations in hotels, (flight) tickets, and car rentals,鈥 Laura Lahoud, Lebanon鈥檚 tourism minister, told Arab News in an interview, acknowledging the impact of regional tensions.
鈥淲e are surely affected by the current situation in the Middle East, same as all the region. But if Lebanon remains neutral and does not take sides 鈥 as the president and prime minister are insisting 鈥 we can save the season,鈥 Lahoud added.
Her optimism hinges on a fragile ceasefire between Iran and Israel. 鈥淗opefully, it will go back to normal,鈥 she said, while emphasizing that festivals and events remain untouched, except for the Beiteddine Festival, where 鈥減erformers are from the US.鈥
The dollar hustle
While Lebanon鈥檚 currency has collapsed, poverty has tripled, and the banking sector remains frozen, a parallel economy is flourishing in Beirut鈥檚 upscale neighborhoods like Gemmayzeh and Mar Mikhael.
Security is part of the appeal. Army patrols have become more visible in tourist areas, and Hezbollah banners along the airport road have quietly given way to billboards promoting 鈥淎 New Era for Lebanon.鈥
But the real driver is privatization. With the state largely incapacitated, private investors 鈥 mostly dealing in US dollars 鈥 are fueling a boom in luxury tourism, pouring money into beach clubs, rooftop lounges, and curated VIP experiences that operate outside the formal economy.
鈥淭he private sector has always been a main driver,鈥 said Lahoud, defending the government鈥檚 role as a facilitator rather than a funder. 鈥淥ur role is to guide, organize, and direct investment into new sectors, new regions, and new ideas.鈥
Laura Lahoud, Lebanon's minister of tourism. (Supplied)
Yet, some argue this model is unsustainable.
鈥淭he dollarized tourism economy has a negative impact on domestic tourism,鈥 warned Jassem Ajaka, an economist and professor at the Lebanese University.
鈥淧rices become high for residents, especially if pricing is applied equally to tourists and locals. This is unsustainable because the dollar is not the country鈥檚 official currency,鈥 he explained in an interview with Arab News.
Geopolitical gambles
The stakes could not be higher. Lebanon鈥檚 agricultural and industrial sectors lie in ruins.
Once accounting for 20 percent of GDP, tourism has emerged as the fastest route toward restoring ties with Gulf countries and reviving the economy.
President Joseph Aoun has made outreach to the Gulf a top priority, traveling to 黑料社区, Qatar, and the UAE to present Lebanon as 鈥渙pen for business.鈥
Lahoud emphasized that rebuilding tourist confidence in Lebanon 鈥渋s the main objective.鈥
She outlined plans to achieve this through comprehensive government reforms, coordinated airport improvements, streamlined visa processes for GCC families, shorter checkpoint delays, and the promotion of year-round tourism across all sectors.
鈥淏efore some Gulf countries removed the travel ban, Arab tourists were limited to Egyptians, Iraqis, and Jordanians,鈥 said Jean Abboud, president of the Association of Travel and Tourist Agents in Lebanon.
鈥淒emands from Gulf countries were growing steadily, especially from the Emirates, Kuwait, and Qatar. But due to the current conflict between Iran and Israel, everything has changed,鈥 he told Arab News.
The fallout is immediate. 鈥淲e, as tour operators nowadays, avoid including the south in our programs due to the unexpected problems,鈥 Abboud added.
Lahoud stated that the ministry is collaborating closely with all industry groups to create unique visitor experiences in Lebanon. She added they plan to develop long-term policies and digital tools to support both city and countryside activities, and encourage vital small and medium investments across all regions.
Risky bet
鈥淥ver the past couple of years, I鈥檝e noticed a shift toward a younger crowd 鈥 but interestingly, they鈥檙e spending more,鈥 says Marco Khadra, ambassador at Factory People, a Beirut-based group organizing many of the country鈥檚 major music festivals.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a clear appetite for nightlife, even among younger demographics,鈥 Khadra told Arab News.
But security concerns loom large. 鈥淪ome people, including international acts, have felt Beirut isn鈥檛 safe, and that affects bookings and attendance,鈥 Khadra admitted, adding: 鈥淧erception plays a big role in this industry.鈥
German electronic music record label Keinmusik performing in one of the Factory People's clubs in Beirut in 2023. (Factory People photo)
For bartenders like Lynn Abi Ghanem, who left Beirut for the Gulf, the sustainability of this boom is questionable. 鈥淣ot in the long run,鈥 she said of the shift toward Gulf tourists. 鈥淭ourists come for a short time, but it鈥檚 the locals who keep bars running all year. Without them, things feel off and won鈥檛 hold up.鈥
The staffing crisis is another weak link. 鈥淭here are a lot of talented workers who aren鈥檛 paid what they deserve,鈥 Abi Ghanem added. 鈥淚f things don鈥檛 change, many will keep leaving.鈥
A mirage of recovery?
Hotels have reported occupancy rates of 80 percent ahead of the summer season, while flights are operating at near capacity with expatriates and Gulf tourists. Yet Lebanon鈥檚 recovery remains precarious.
鈥淓ven though tourism鈥檚 contribution to the gross domestic product increased after the crisis to about 30 percent, this was due to the economic contraction,鈥 explained Ajaka.
鈥淲e cannot say the sector has recovered because recovery depends on political stability and investment inflows.鈥
For now, the party continues, sustained by Gulf investment and the relentless drive of Beirut鈥檚 nightlife entrepreneurs.
But as Ajjaka conceded: 鈥淭he biggest enemy of tourism is any security obstacle.鈥 And in a country where crisis is the only constant, the stakes have never been higher.
Startup Wrap 鈥 黑料社区 leads MENA startup activity as UAE crowns new unicorn聽
New unicorn emerges in UAE amid mixed funding trends across MENA
Updated 12 July 2025
Nour El-Shaeri聽
RIYADH: 黑料社区 continued to dominate startup momentum while the UAE saw a new unicorn emerging amid mixed funding trends across the region at the beginning of July.
Digital freight platform TruKKer, headquartered in the Kingdom, has raised $15 million in private credit investment from Ruya Partners through its Ruya Private Capital I fund.
The funding will be used to support the company鈥檚 expansion across regional markets, advance its proprietary artificial intelligenceI-enabled logistics platform, and further consolidate its position in the freight tech space.
Founded in 2016, TruKKer operates in nine countries and connects over 60,000 transporters with more than 1,200 enterprise clients through its real-time freight marketplace.
Digital freight platform TruKKer has raised $15 million in private credit investment from Ruya Partners through its Ruya Private Capital I fund. (Supplied)
The new capital follows a $100 million pre-IPO round in 2022 led by Bahrain鈥檚 Investcorp, signaling continued investor confidence in the platform鈥檚 scaling potential across the Middle East and North Africa.
Tarmeez Capital raises strategic round to accelerate sukuk innovation
Saudi fintech startup Tarmeez Capital has raised a strategic round led by Tali Ventures, the corporate venture capital arm of stc group.
Launched in 2022 by Nasser Al-Saadoun, Tarmeez Capital aims to democratize sukuk issuance, offering a digital platform that it says can process transactions at seven times the speed of traditional methods.
The platform currently supports over 180,000 users and is focused on enhancing access to Islamic financial instruments.
The company plans to use the funds to expand its retail sukuk offerings and support 黑料社区鈥檚 Vision 2030 initiative, particularly in driving financial inclusion across the population.
Saudi fintech startup Tarmeez Capital has raised a strategic round led by Tali Ventures, the corporate venture capital arm of stc group. (Supplied)
Rekaz raises $5m seed round to expand SaaS for service SMBs
Riyadh-based Software-as-a-Service company Rekaz has secured $5 million in seed funding to scale its operating system for service-based small and medium-sized businesses.
The round was led by COTU Ventures, with participation from Impact46, Shorooq Partners, Numrah Capital, and several angel investors.
Founded in 2017 by Abdulrahman Al-Omran and Abdulaziz Al-Kharashi, Rekaz provides an integrated platform that includes scheduling, subscription management, payments, and customer engagement tools for businesses such as gyms, salons, clinics, and home service providers.
The company plans to channel the new capital into deepening AI functionality, expanding across the Gulf Cooperation Council markets, and accelerating product development.
Jahez Group acquires 76.56% stake in Qatar鈥檚 Snoonu for $245m
黑料社区-listed Jahez Group has signed a definitive agreement to acquire a 76.56 percent stake in Snoonu, a leading Qatari e-commerce and delivery company, for $245 million.
The transaction includes $225 million for a 75 percent equity stake in existing shares and a $20 million capital injection for a newly issued 1.56 percent stake.
The acquisition marks Jahez鈥檚 formal entry into the Qatari market and is expected to enhance operational synergies across logistics, on-demand delivery, and e-commerce across the GCC.
Snoonu, now valued at over $300 million, will continue to operate under its own brand, led by founder and CEO Hamad Al-Hajjri, who retains a 23.44 percent stake in the company.
Huspy raises $59m series B to expand in Europe and 黑料社区
UAE and Spain-based property tech platform Huspy has raised $59 million in a series B round led by Balderton Capital, with participation from Peak XV, ExBorder Partners, and Turmeric Capital, as well as BY Ventures, Dara Management, and KE Partners.
The company plans to expand into six new cities in Spain and launch operations in 黑料社区 in 2025.
Founded in 2020 by Jad Antoun and Khalid Ashmawy, Huspy facilitates over $7 billion in annual real estate transactions across its markets.
It supports real estate agents and mortgage brokers with a suite of digital tools, offering high commissions and automation in property transactions.
The round represents a reaffirmation of confidence by previous investors Balderton Capital and Peak XV.
XPANCEO raises $250m to achieve unicorn status
UAE-based deep tech company XPANCEO has raised $250 million in series A funding at a valuation of $1.35 billion, according to a press release.
The round was led by Opportunity Venture, which also led the company鈥檚 $40 million seed round.
XPANCEO is developing a multifunctional smart contact lens that integrates augmented reality, health monitoring, night vision, and optical zoom into a lens thinner than a human hair.
XPANCEO founders Valentyn Volkov and Roman Axelrod. (Supplied)
The funding will accelerate commercialization efforts, global expansion of R&D and product teams, and regulatory and pilot testing.
The company, founded by physicist Valentyn Volkov and Roman Axelrod, is aiming to replace multiple personal devices with a single wearable form factor.
BlueFive Capital closes founding round at $120m valuation
UAE-based investment firm BlueFive Capital has completed its Founding Shareholders Circle round, achieving a valuation of $120 million.
The round attracted 25 founding shareholders, including members of prominent GCC royal families, global institutional investors, and financial leaders from North America, Europe, and Asia, according to a statement.
Founded in late 2024 by former Investcorp co-CEO Hazem Ben-Gacem, the firm has already amassed $650 million in assets under management.
BlueFive Capital aims to connect institutional capital with high-growth, underrepresented markets, with a global presence across London, Abu Dhabi, and Riyadh, as well as Singapore and Beijing.
Icogz raises $1.4m pre-seed to enhance AI-driven BI platform
UAE-based business intelligence startup icogz has raised $1.4 million in pre-seed funding from angel investors in the UAE and India.
Founded in 2018 by Amit Tripathi and Vrutika Dawda, the platform uses proprietary algorithms to mine intelligence from corporate data and deliver actionable insights.
The company plans to use the capital to further develop its AI engine, Aryabot, and scale go-to-market efforts across MENA and Southeast Asia.
BioSapien extends pre-series A to over $8m
Health tech startup BioSapien, based in the UAE and the US, has extended its pre-series A round to over $8 million.
The latest funding was led by Globivest, joining existing backers Global Ventures, Golden Gate Ventures, and Dara Holdings.
Founded in 2018 by Khatija Ali, BioSapien鈥檚 flagship product, MediChip, is a 3D-printed, slow-release drug delivery platform that can be affixed to tissue to minimize systemic side effects.
The new capital will support R&D, product development, and regulatory expansion.
Nawy acquires majority stake in SmartCrowd to expand GCC presence
Egypt-based real estate tech startup Nawy has acquired a majority stake in Dubai鈥檚 SmartCrowd, a regulated fractional property investment platform.
The acquisition follows Nawy鈥檚 recent $52 million series A round and signals the company鈥檚 entry into the GCC market.
SmartCrowd, regulated by the Dubai Financial Services Authority, claims to have facilitated over $110 million in transactions and distributed more than $40 million in investor returns.
The acquisition expands Nawy鈥檚 service offerings to include fractional ownership and positions the company as a full-stack proptech platform for the MENA region.
Startup funding in MENA falls 82% in June amid investor caution
Startup funding across the MENA region fell sharply in June, dropping 82 percent month on month to $52 million across 37 deals.
The figure also marks a 55 percent decline compared to June 2024. Notably, 40 percent of the capital came through debt instruments, reflecting cautious investor sentiment amid global macroeconomic uncertainty, according to Wamda鈥檚 monthly report.
The UAE reclaimed its position as the region鈥檚 top-funded market, with 13 startups raising $37 million 鈥 over 70 percent of total capital.
Egypt, which led in May, dropped to second with $6.2 million raised across six deals.
Tunisia followed, buoyed by a single $3.5 million seed round for water tech startup Kumulus. 黑料社区 saw a dip, raising only $3 million across six deals.
Fintech remained the leading sector, accounting for 74 percent of total capital across 10 deals.
Clean tech followed due to the Kumulus deal, while Web3 attracted $2 million across two rounds. Seed stage startups led early-stage activity, raising $10.6 million, while pre-seed rounds totaled $5 million. Only one series A deal was recorded, worth $100,000.
Startups with B2B models secured 78 percent of funding, while B2B2C and B2C startups lagged.
Mixed-gender founding teams captured 45 percent of capital but accounted for only four deals. Women-led startups raised just $223,200.
Global Markets 鈥 stocks fall, gold gains after Trump sets tariff sights on Canada
Updated 11 July 2025
Reuters
SYDNEY/LONDON: Global stocks fell on Friday after US President Donald Trump ramped up his tariff war against Canada, leaving Europe squarely in the firing line, sparking a modest investor push into safe havens like gold, while bitcoin hit a new record high.
The Canadian dollar fell after Trump issued a letter late on Thursday that stated a 35 percent tariff rate on all imports from Canada would apply from August 1, adding the EU would receive a letter by Friday.
The US president, whose global wave of tariffs has upended businesses and policymaking, floated a blanket 15 percent or 20 percent tariff rate on other countries, a step up from the current 10 percent baseline rate.
This week he surprised Brazil, which has a trade surplus with the US, with duties of 50 percent, and hit copper, pharmaceuticals and semiconductor chips.
Aside from pockets of volatility in target currencies, stocks or commodities, markets have offered little in the way of reaction to the onslaught, leaving the VIX volatility index at its lowest since late February.
In Europe, the STOXX 600, which has risen 2.2 percent this week, fell 0.7 percent. Futures on the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq fell 0.6 percent, pointing to a retreat from this week鈥檚 record highs at the open later.
鈥淭he market is becoming a bit numb to these (tariff) announcements, and perhaps it鈥檚 not until we see hard data showing an impact that we (will) start to see the market reacting,鈥 City Index strategist Fiona Cincotta said.
鈥淥bviously, we鈥檙e getting more information through that does bring with it an element of clarity. Because there is so much uncertainty, there is still this idea that Trump could be open to negotiation, nothing feels 鈥榝inal鈥 still,鈥 she said.
The dollar rose 0.3 percent against the Canadian dollar to $1.3695. The euro, which has lost nearly 1 percent in value since the start of July, was down 0.2 percent at $1.1683.
Earlier in the week, Trump pushed back his tariff deadline of July 9 to August 1 for many trading partners to allow more time for negotiations, but broadened his trade war, setting new rates for a number of countries, including allies Japan and South Korea, along with a 50 percent tariff on copper.
Joseph Capurso, head of international economics at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, said the tariff rate of 35 percent on Canada was not as bad as feared because most of the imports are still subject to exemptions under the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement.
鈥淣ow the tariff rate on imports from the EU ... That鈥檚 what we don鈥檛 know as yet,鈥 Capurso said. 鈥淚f you get something similar to (the US-China trade war in April), that鈥檚 going to be very destabilising.鈥
Wall Street indexes posted record closing highs on Thursday as AI chip maker Nvidia made history, bagging a market valuation above $4 trillion.
Gold rose for a third day in a row, up 0.6 percent to $3,342 an ounce, bringing gains for July so far to 1.2 percent. Treasuries got less of a safe-haven boost, as investor concern about the fragility of long-term US government finances prompted a selloff that pushed yields up.
Benchmark 10-year yields rose 3 basis points to 4.38 percent, adding to Thursday鈥檚 rise on the back of data that showed jobless claims unexpectedly fell last week.
The yen, which also typically behaves like a safe-haven, has been steadily weakening as the prospects dim for a US-Japan trade deal. The dollar was up 0.4 percent on Friday at 146.76 yen , set for a weekly gain of 1.6 percent, the biggest this year.
Bitcoin jumped 3.8 percent to $117,880, the highest on record.
Investors will be watching second-quarter corporate earnings next week to gauge the impact of Trump鈥檚 tariffs from April 2. JPMorgan Chase is due to release results on Tuesday, essentially kicking off the reporting period.
World oil market may be tighter than it looks, IEA says
Updated 11 July 2025
Reuters
VIENNA: The world oil market may be tighter than it appears despite a supply and demand balance pointing to a surplus, the International Energy Agency said on Friday, as refineries ramp up processing to meet summer travel demand.
The IEA, which advises industrialized countries, expects global supply to rise by 2.1 million barrels per day this year, up 300,000 bpd from the previous forecast. World demand will rise by just 700,000 bpd, it said, implying a sizeable surplus.
Despite making those changes, the IEA said that rising refinery processing rates aimed at meeting summer travel and power-generation demand were tightening the market and the latest supply hike from OPEC+ announced on Saturday had not had much effect.
鈥淭he decision by OPEC+ to further accelerate the unwinding of production cuts failed to move markets in a meaningful way given tighter fundamentals,鈥 the agency said in a monthly report.
鈥淧rice indicators also point to a tighter physical oil market than suggested by the hefty surplus in our balances.鈥
Earlier this week, ministers and executives from OPEC nations and bosses of Western oil majors said the output increases are not leading to higher inventories, showing that markets are thirsty for more oil.
Next year, the IEA sees demand growth averaging 720,000 bpd, some 20,000 bpd lower than previously thought, with supply growth rising by 1.3 million bpd, also implying a surplus.