Episode Description

We’re joined by Hassan Haider, founder and managing partner at Plus VC, one of the most active early-stage VCs in the Middle East and NorthAfrica (MENA), with nearly 100 investments since2020 and the #1 ranked venture investor in the region (according to Forbes).

 From pre-seed investing across MENA to the evolution of regional stock markets and secondary exits, Hassan brings a front-row view of how the region’s startup ecosystem has transformed—and where it’s headed next. As a pioneer of early angel networks and a long-time ecosystem builder in Bahrain, he breaks down what’s working, what’s not, and what founders need to thrive in MENA’s rapidly maturing tech scene.

 We dive into:

-Why MENA is one of the best startup investment opportunities globally

-What differentiates successful founders in the region 

-Why regional VCs avoid multi-stage plays and focus early

-How to navigate regulatory setups, capital scarcity, and cross-border expansion

-Exits in MENA: Fromsecondaries to IPOs on the Saudi Exchange

-What the rise ofAI, crypto, and sovereign capital means for the region’s future

Key Takeaways from the Episode:

1.⁠⁠MENA’s StartupEcosystem Has Reached an Inflection Point:

Governments, corporates, and investors are now actively building a robust tech infrastructure. Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE are emerging as regional tech hubs with improving regulatory support and liquidity pathways.

2.⁠⁠Execution >Pedigree:

In a region where signals like elite universities don’t always apply, Plus VC backs founders who get things done. The strongest predictor of success is a “bias towards execution,” not resumes.

3.⁠⁠Valuations Are Low,Returns Are High:

While the total VC capital is still small compared to the West (~$3B across all of MENA),early-stage funds in the region are consistently outperforming global medians, with many aiming for 3–5x returns.

4.⁠⁠Secondary Exits AreThriving:

Unlike the US, where secondaries are restricted, MENA has an active secondary market. Later-stage investors often buy out seed investors, allowing early funds to lock in strong multiples well before IPO.

5.⁠⁠IPOs on LocalExchanges Are Growing:

Saudi Arabia and theUAE are now viable IPO markets for startups, often offering better liquidity and valuation premiums than NASDAQ. Companies are lining up for public listings across the region.

6.⁠⁠Startups AreExpanding Globally:

From food delivery startups like Kcal (Kcal Extra) to SaaS players like Gameball and Appetito, MENA-born companies are increasingly going global, not just serving the region.

7.⁠⁠Not Just Copycats:

While some startups are local versions of global models, many others are building unique products tailored for MENA or solving global problems from within the region.

8.⁠⁠AI & CryptoAdoption in MENA is Growing:

From Arabic LLMs like DXWand to early investments in Rain (crypto exchange backed by Coinbase),MENA is developing its own innovation layers while leveraging global open-source models.

9.⁠⁠Challenges Remain –Especially Capital Availability:

Despite sovereign wealth, there’s still limited local LP participation in regional funds. Much capital still flows to the US or goes into traditional sectors like real estate.

10.⁠⁠What Makes StartupsFail in MENA:

The most common reasons? Lack of execution or inability to raise follow-on funding in non-mainstream sectors. Hassan emphasizes: fundraising ≠ success—building a viable business does.

Timestamps:

(00:00) –Introduction to Hassan and Plus VC

(01:20) – Pre-seed in MENA vs the West: Why the definitions differ

(02:30) – How involved Plus VC is with 100+ portfolio companies

(05:25) – What PlusVC looks for in a founder: Execution > pedigree

(08:10) – Evolution of the MENA startup ecosystem over 15 years

(11:20) – How exits happen: secondaries, IPOs, and growing liquidity

(13:45) – Regulatory environment and setting up in the MENA region

(18:10) – Are startups just Western clones or globally competitive?

(19:20) – Examples of MENA startups going global (Kcal, Gameball, Appetito)

(21:00) – Regional expansion and why localization matters

(23:00) –Challenges: capital scarcity and early-stage risk in MENA

(25:45) – Fund returns in MENA vs Silicon Valley

(29:30) – Plus VC’s approach to AI startups and LLM integrations

(30:15) –Open-source AI models and building Arabic LLMs

(32:35) – The role of PIF, G42, and strategic AI trade deals

(33:00) – Crypto ecosystem in MENA: Rain, regulation, and adoption

(33:30) – 2040vision: What MENA’s startup ecosystem will look like

(34:30) – Final advice to MENA founders: focus on value creation, not hype