$50 Million Growth-Debt Fund Launched for MENA Tech Startups & SMEs

A new funding vehicle has been launched by Sukna Capital (Saudi Arabia) in partnership with U.S. growth‐debt specialist Partners for Growth (PFG). The mechanism: deploy up to US$50 million to support high-potential technology companies and small‐medium enterprises (SMEs) across the MENA region. 
Key features include:

  • Providing working-capital linescontract financingterm loans, and other tailored debt structures—not equity.
  • Aiming for “institutional‐quality credit” to allow founders to scale without giving up control. 
  • The fund is structured via a Saudi regulated, Sharia-compliant lending vehicle managed by Sukna. 

A Strategic Shift in the MENA Funding Landscape

This move is significant for several reasons:

  • Until now, much of MENA’s tech financing has been concentrated in venture equity rounds. The introduction of growth debt marks a diversification of financing instruments.
  • For example, in the first half of 2025, VC funding in Saudi Arabia alone reached approximately US$860 million, more than doubling year-on-year. 
  • Founders scaling past seed/Series A often face a “valley of death” if they don’t want to dilute ownership—growth debt helps fill that gap.
  • The regional ecosystem is signalling maturity: local players embracing debt‐based capital, alongside global partners bringing experience and product structures.

Why This Fund Matters for Founders & SMEs

For tech entrepreneurs and SME operators in the region, this fund opens new opportunities:

  • Equity preservation: Access to capital without giving up equity means founders can retain strategic control and upside.
  • Flexible instruments: Tailored term loans or working capital lines fit different growth trajectories—from early scaling to contract fulfilment.
  • Regional reach: The fund is aimed at across MENA (not just Gulf-States), offering breadth for growth-oriented firms.
  • Sharia-compliance: The lending vehicle is designed to comply with Sharia standards, which matters in many regional jurisdictions.

Implications for the Ecosystem: Risks and Opportunities

Opportunities

  • Acceleration of proven business models: Debt funding allows companies with scale potential to accelerate sooner, rather than waiting for the next equity round.
  • Maturation of capital markets: Growth debt signals that the ecosystem is becoming more nuanced—venture capital, debt, hybrid instruments all co-existing.
  • Increased investor confidence: With larger institutional players deploying credit, it may drive more rigorous underwriting, stronger governance, improved outcomes.

Risks & Considerations

  • Debt service burden: Growth debt requires repayment—companies must have predictable cash flow or contract structure to service the debt.
  • Risk of default: In nascent markets, the risk of SME or startup failure remains high—credit investors must be disciplined.
  • Market concentration: If the fund focuses too heavily on one geography or sector, it could lead to over-exposure.

What This Suggests for the Coming 12–24 Months

  • We can expect more debt-based vehicles entering the MENA market, driven by global investors seeing risk‐adjusted returns.
  • Startups that have moved past seed rounds and are near revenue scaling will increasingly opt for debt rather than equity to maintain control.
  • Regional governments and regulatory bodies may more actively support such instruments (e.g., through guarantees or enabling frameworks) to deepen the capital pool.
  • Strategic sectors—fintech, deep tech, healthtech, enterprise SaaS—will likely be early beneficiaries of this fund and similar products.
  • Founders should prepare: demonstrate predictable revenue streams, contract backlogs, clear unit economics and a plan for servicing debt.

Key Facts Table

ItemDetail
Fund SizeUp to US$50 million deployment planned.
InvestorsSukna Capital (Saudi) + Partners for Growth (U.S.)
TargetHigh-potential tech companies + SMEs across MENA, particularly in innovation/technology sectors.
Instrument TypeWorking capital lines, contract financing, term loans, tailored financing (not equity).
Regional ContextSaudi’s VC funding in H1 2025 roughly US$860 million; 56 % of all MENA VC deals in that period went through Saudi.

Editor’s Note

At Startups MENA, we are committed to showcasing strategic capital flows and structural shifts shaping the region’s innovation ecosystem. The launch of this new growth-debt facility is not just another fund—it signals a maturation of financing options that allows technology companies in the Middle East and North Africa to scale without diluting equity. In partnering with a Saudi open­ended lender and a U.S. venture‐debt specialist, the initiative underscores a defining theme: the next era of MENA tech will be built on tailored credit as much as venture equity.
— The Startups MENA Editorial Team

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