The National - News

NEW FUND WILL SEEK EARLY STAGE COMPANIES

▶ $25m debut has strong backing to support all of its future endeavours

- MICHAEL FAHY

A new Abu-Dhabi venture capital company completed the first closure of its $25 million debut fund.

Access Bridge Ventures’ fund is being backed by Mubadala Capital, Saudi Venture Capital Company and a number of other investors, including “several prominent family offices”, the company said. It will invest in early stage businesses across the Middle East, North Africa and Pakistan, according to co-founder and managing partner Issa Aghabi.

“We’ve developed a spectacula­r network of stakeholde­rs over the years – be it investors, entreprene­urs we’ve supported and helped [or] government and sovereign stakeholde­rs we’ve worked with in the past,” Mr Aghabi told The National.

Mr Aghabi was previously head of the Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n’s venture capital investment­s and funds in the region. Before that, he was head of investment­s at Abu Dhabi’s media zone authority TwoFour 54. He co-founded the fund with Rakan Alrashed, who was previously part of a Saudi Arabian investment company that focused on start-ups and SMEs. The pair have also teamed up with Dubai private equity firm CedarBridg­e Capital Partners.

The venture space in the Mena region is becoming increasing­ly active. Last year, there were 243 funding institutio­ns in the region, up from 235 a year earlier, according to the 2021 Emerging Venture Markets Report due to be published by Magnitt this week.

It defines funding institutio­ns as venture capital companies, angel networks, corporate venture companies, accelerato­rs and other entities that take equity stakes in start-ups.

Some of the funds establishe­d over the past 12 months include the Dh535 million ventures fund that is part of Abu Dhabi’s Ghadan 21 initiative and the Dh1.1 billion Alpha Wave Incubation Fund aimed at businesses from India and South-East Asia.

“There is cash available [and] there are people investing in the value chain. Is there enough? It depends on what market you are looking at,” Mr Aghabi said.

Some countries are well served, but others such as Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon and Pakistan are not, he argued. Even in the UAE, some parts of the market are paid more attention than others.

“We’ve identified a key gap in the market, which is early stage … pre-Series A,” Mr Aghabi said. The greater availabili­ty of venture capital in the region means the most active funds are generally doing bigger deals, he emphasised.

“They can’t afford to waste their time on seed [funding rounds], because when you are a large fund you need to spend that money in a finite period of time,” he said. “Bigger cheques make more sense.”

He anticipate­s the average initial investment from his company’s fund for Access Bridge Ventures to make an initial investment will be around $ 500,000, although “we can go lower”, he said. Those that thrive are also likely to receive follow- on funding. Access Bridge Ventures is seeking investment­s in a range of sectors including FinTech, health tech, educationa­l technology, software as a service and others.

The first fund will reach final closure within the next 12 months and could be larger than the initial $25m target, depending on investor appetite, Mr Aghabi said.

He expects the fund will be fully invested over a four-year period, although exits could take up to four more years to realise. Having CedarBridg­e as a partner will bring “a different propositio­n”, he said, adding a focus on achieving successful exits and on governance. “I wanted that push from experience­d investors in this space to bring that discipline to venture capital,” he said.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund estimates that micro, small and medium-sized enterprise­s make up 96 per cent of all registered businesses in the Mena region and provide about half of the total jobs in the region. The Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n estimates a total financing gap to MSMEs in the region of up to $240bn.

Access Bridge Ventures will be based at Abu Dhabi Global Market.

The region’s greater availabili­ty of venture capital means active funds do bigger deals

 ?? Getty ?? Etihad Towers in Abu Dhabi. Mubadala Capital and Saudi Venture Capital are among Access Bridge Ventures’ backers
Getty Etihad Towers in Abu Dhabi. Mubadala Capital and Saudi Venture Capital are among Access Bridge Ventures’ backers

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