logo
#

Latest news with #FaresBardeesi

Sukna launches MENA's first open-ended, Sharia-compliant direct financing fund
Sukna launches MENA's first open-ended, Sharia-compliant direct financing fund

Zawya

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Zawya

Sukna launches MENA's first open-ended, Sharia-compliant direct financing fund

Sukna Capital has received official approval from the Saudi Capital Market Authority (CMA) to launch the Sukna Fund for Direct Financing. SFDF is KSA's first open-ended, Sharia-compliant direct lending fund, marking a regulatory milestone for non-bank financing in MENA. As a CMA-licensed alternative asset investment platform, Sukna is now authorized to offer institutional investors access to a vehicle providing non-dilutive, scalable financing for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) seeking accelerated growth without equity dilution. Unlike traditional private credit vehicles, the open-ended fund structure enables investors to enter and exit at regular intervals, offering periodic liquidity with no long lock-up periods. For SMEs, this unlocks access to asset-backed capital while enabling founders to retain complete ownership and avoid the limitations of equity financing. Fares Bardeesi, CEO of Sukna, described the launch as a pivotal step in expanding institutional credit access for underserved sectors across the region. With over two decades of experience in corporate finance and private investments, the CEO has led more than $6.50 billion in transactions across real estate, technology, and healthcare. As a co-founder of Sukna Ventures and the architect behind Sukna's evolution into structured private debt, he emphasized the urgent need to close funding gaps for both traditional and innovation-led SMEs. 'As of Q3 2024, SME lending in Saudi Arabia is estimated to be SAR 329.23 billion—just 9.1% of total bank credit—well below the Vision 2030 target of 15% to 20%,' Bardeesi noted. He added: 'SFDF is designed to address that gap through institutional, regulator-aligned capital solutions tailored to the needs of high-potential businesses across sectors.' This announcement comes at a pivotal moment, as the Middle East's tech and startup landscape undergoes rapid transformation, while traditional funding structures have not kept pace with founders' evolving needs. Waleed Alballaa, Managing Partner of Sukna Ventures and member of the Fund's Investment Committee, said: 'The tech and startup ecosystem has matured significantly, but financing structures simply haven't caught up. We designed SFDF to meet founders where they are—with the right capital, at the right time, and without the red tape.' Waleed brings his unique, founder-centric perspective to the fund, shaped by over two decades at the intersection of technology, operations, and venture capital across Silicon Valley and Saudi Arabia. His deep technical foundation is complemented by a decade dedicated to venture capital, during which he was instrumental in launching multiple investment vehicles and serving on the boards of several prominent technology companies. His holistic experience gives him a firsthand understanding of the capital gaps that can hinder high-growth companies. The launch of SFDF builds on the success of Sukna Ventures, the firm's technology-focused investment arm, known for backing bold, high-growth startups in mobility, logistics, and digital marketplaces. Sukna also leverages proprietary technology to streamline loan origination, risk assessment, portfolio monitoring, and investor reporting, ensuring a transparent and scalable experience for both borrowers and institutional capital partners. All Rights Reserved - Mubasher Info © 2005 - 2022 Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (

Sukna Capital's Fares Bardeesi on launching Saudi's first open-ended direct lending fund for SMEs, startups
Sukna Capital's Fares Bardeesi on launching Saudi's first open-ended direct lending fund for SMEs, startups

Gulf Business

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Gulf Business

Sukna Capital's Fares Bardeesi on launching Saudi's first open-ended direct lending fund for SMEs, startups

Image: Supplied Targetting sectors such as fintech, sustainability and AI, the fund addresses a critical gap in the region's capital stack by providing structured credit solutions based on commercial traction rather than collateral alone. The fund is being led by a seasoned team, including Fares Bardeesi, a former senior banker, and Waleed Alballaa, ex-STV founding partner and co-founder of Riyadh Angel Investors. In this interview, the firm's CEO Fares Bardeesi outlines their investment strategy, timing, and how this fund aligns with Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 ambitions. Congratulations on securing regulatory approval. Can you walk us through the vision behind launching the region's first open-ended direct lending fund, and why now is the right time for such a product in Saudi Arabia? The CMA's regulatory approval represents a pivotal moment, not just for our fund, but for the entire regional financing landscape. We're honoured by their confidence and leadership in enabling this innovation. Our vision is to create a new institutional pathway for yield and growth capital that reflects the realities of today's economy: digital, fast-moving, and underserved by traditional financing models. The timing is critical. While the tech and startup ecosystem has matured significantly, financing structures have not kept pace — particularly when it comes to flexible, non-dilutive credit. Alternative credit is necessary to support the scaling of innovative businesses, bridge liquidity gaps for VC funds, and reinforce long-term ecosystem sustainability. How will this fund fill the existing funding gap for startups and SMEs in Saudi and the wider Middle East, particularly when it comes to non-dilutive financing options? The regional capital stack has long been polarised — companies either dilute equity or take on rigid, collateral-heavy bank loans. Our fund introduces a third path: structured, non-dilutive capital aligned with commercial momentum, not just balance sheet size. We underwrite based on receivables, recurring revenue, scalability potential, and real operating data — unlocking access to credit for high-growth businesses that traditional lenders often overlook or pledge against misaligned collateral. Whether it's a SaaS business bridging working capital or a VC fund managing capital call timing, we structure debt around business models — not bureaucracy. Fintech, AI, and sustainability are mentioned as focus areas — how did you prioritise these sectors, and what criteria will guide your investment decisions within them? They are not the only focus — we target all high-growth SMEs led by dynamic, innovative founders. Our underwriting is based on verifiable traction: recurring revenue, contract visibility, customer retention, or transaction volume. We structure every facility around growth, governance, and repayment discipline. For example, fintech is enabling financial inclusion, AI is transforming productivity, and sustainability is becoming a strategic imperative. But these sectors are often misunderstood or incompatible with legacy credit models. Our prioritisation reflects both institutional responsibility and market momentum. These sectors are not just innovation-driven — they are redefining the region's economic infrastructure. With your team's collective experience, spanning $6.5bn in transactions and early-stage VC leadership, how will this background shape the fund's approach to risk, deal structuring, and startup engagement? Our experience gives us a dual lens that few lenders possess: credit discipline and tech fluency coupled with deep founder empathy. We know how to structure facilities that balance investor protection with commercial flexibility, from performance-based triggers to collateralised repayment waterfalls. Just as importantly, we know how to engage early, even when companies don't yet meet traditional credit thresholds. This allows us to design solutions across stages — whether for a venture-backed startup scaling to growth or a cash-flowing SME. Ultimately, we bring institutional standards to market segments that need both capital and partnership. Given the open-ended structure of the fund, how do you plan to balance flexibility for borrowers with long-term returns for investors? The open-ended structure is one of the fund's greatest strengths — and also one of its core responsibilities. It enables continuous capital raising and deployment, while offering periodic liquidity to investors. We manage this through matched-duration lending, strong credit governance, and real-time portfolio monitoring. Each facility is structured with clear triggers, backed by assets or contractual flows, and aligned with actual business cycles. For borrowers, this means responsive access to credit tailored to operational needs. For investors, it means exposure to income-generating, collateral-backed assets — delivered with institutional-grade oversight. It's a rare balance of flexibility and discipline, and one the market is ready for. In what ways do you see Sukna Capital and this fund contributing to Saudi Arabia's broader goals under Vision 2030—particularly in diversifying the economy and empowering entrepreneurship? Vision 2030 is about building an ecosystem where innovation, private capital, and entrepreneurship intersect — and that's exactly where Sukna Capital is focused. As of Q3 2024, SME lending in Saudi Arabia stood at SAR 329.23bn — just 9.1 per cent of total bank credit — well below the Vision 2030 target of 15–20 per cent. Our fund is designed to help close that gap by introducing structured, non-dilutive financing aligned with regulatory frameworks and commercial realities. This fund enables startups and SMEs to scale without premature equity dilution or inflexible debt. It also provides institutional investors with access to a new, income-generating asset class — deepening local markets and reducing dependency on imported capital. The fund is more than a financing solution. It's a strategic tool for economic diversification, entrepreneurship, and long-term resilience.

Sukna unveils MENA's first open-ended, Sharia compliant direct financing fund
Sukna unveils MENA's first open-ended, Sharia compliant direct financing fund

Zawya

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Zawya

Sukna unveils MENA's first open-ended, Sharia compliant direct financing fund

Riyadh, Saudi Arabia – Sukna Capital has received official approval from the Saudi Capital Market Authority (CMA) to launch Sukna Fund for Direct Financing. SFDF is KSA's first open-ended, sharia compliant direct lending fund—marking a regulatory milestone for non-bank financing in MENA. As a CMA-licensed alternative asset investment platform, Sukna is now authorized to offer institutional investors access to a vehicle providing non-dilutive, scalable financing for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) seeking accelerated growth without equity dilution. Unlike traditional private credit vehicles, the open-ended fund structure enables investors to enter and exit at regular intervals, offering periodic liquidity with no long lock-up periods. For SMEs, this unlocks access to asset-backed capital while enabling founders to retain complete ownership and avoid the limitations of equity financing. Fares Bardeesi, CEO of Sukna, described the launch as a pivotal step in expanding institutional credit access for underserved sectors across the region. With over two decades of experience in corporate finance and private investments, Fares has led more than USD 6.5 billion in transactions across real estate, technology, and healthcare. As a co-founder of Sukna Ventures and the architect behind Sukna's evolution into structured private debt, he emphasized the urgent need to close funding gaps for both traditional and innovation-led SMEs. 'As of Q3 2024, SME lending in Saudi Arabia is estimated to be SAR 329.23 billion—just 9.1% of total bank credit—well below the Vision 2030 target of 15 to 20 percent,' he noted. 'SFDF is designed to address that gap through institutional, regulator-aligned capital solutions tailored to the needs of high-potential businesses across sectors.' This announcement comes at a pivotal moment, as the Middle East's tech and startup landscape undergoes rapid transformation, while traditional funding structures have not kept pace with founders' evolving needs. Waleed Alballaa, Managing Partner of Sukna Ventures and member of the Fund's Investment Committee, underscored the importance of timing: 'The tech and startup ecosystem has matured significantly, but financing structures simply haven't caught up. We designed SFDF to meet founders where they are—with the right capital, at the right time, and without the red tape.' Waleed brings his unique, founder-centric perspective to the fund, shaped by over two decades at the intersection of technology, operations, and venture capital across Silicon Valley and Saudi Arabia. His deep technical foundation is complemented by a decade dedicated to venture capital, during which he was instrumental in launching multiple investment vehicles and serving on the boards of several prominent technology companies. His holistic experience gives him a firsthand understanding of the capital gaps that can hinder high-growth companies. The launch of SFDF builds on the success of Sukna Ventures, the firm's technology-focused investment arm, known for backing bold, high-growth startups in mobility, logistics, and digital marketplaces. Sukna also leverages proprietary technology to streamline loan origination, risk assessment, portfolio monitoring, and investor reporting, ensuring a transparent and scalable experience for both borrowers and institutional capital partners. About Sukna Capital Sukna Capital is a CMA licenced Saudi investment platform that provides investors curated access to alternative asset classes including Venture Capital, Direct Financing, Real Estate and Private Equity. For more information, please visit

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store