Gulf institutions and sovereign wealth funds have shifted their approach to venture capital, treating it as a core strategic holding rather than an alternative asset class, according to analysts and sector practitioners as of May 4, 2026. Long viewed as a misunderstood portfolio component, venture capital is gaining institutional backing across the Middle East with investors increasingly treating it as a structured, long-term allocation rather than speculative investment.
SC Ventures, the venture building arm of Standard Chartered bank, confirmed it has continued deploying capital during the Iran war, with collaborations across Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. “For SCV it’s not a pause moment, it is a conviction moment,” said Gautam Jain, operating member at SC Ventures. “The real question is not, ‘Should I invest in VC?’, it is ‘Can I afford to leave it until it’s too late?’.”
Jain noted that capital is becoming more concentrated globally, particularly in artificial intelligence and digital asset infrastructure. “This is no longer an early stage experiment. This is capital chasing inevitability. Venture capital is evolving from finding the next big thing to getting access before [everyone else].”
Sovereign wealth funds are capitalizing on regional demand for fintech. Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala backed Tabby in a $200 million Series D (2024), while Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) invested in buy-now-pay-later platform Tamara ($340 million Series C). PIF has also backed Jada Fund of Funds and Sanabil Investments, which support global venture capital firms such as Founders Fund and Andreessen Horowitz.
Family offices often act as limited partners in regional VC funds and co-invest alongside sovereign investors. Additional institutional activity includes:
Venture capital is characterized by a wide spread between top-performing funds and the rest of the market, making strong fund managers critical. Over a 10-year period, top-performing fund managers can deliver more than twice the returns of median ones. “We have seen that the top 5 percent of managers generate north of 45 percent in annual returns, whereas median managers’ returns are approximately 13 percent,” Jain said.
Dubai Future District Fund, a billion-dirham fund of funds, is doubling down on backing regional managers to diversify capital allocation and signal confidence in the local market to global investors. “Fund managers are the most effective way to ensure the ecosystem has sustained dry powder and continues to deploy through cycles,” said Nader Al Bastaki, managing director of Future District Fund. “For us, it’s not about slowing down. It is about scaling how we reinforce the liquidity question and confidence in the market.”
According to Jain, venture capital is often misunderstood as an asset class focused on averages. “VC isn’t about averages, it is about outliers. One company can return an entire fund, everything else just fills the space. If you miss the winners, you underperform, if you catch one you redefine your returns.”
MENA VC funding was up 31 percent in the first quarter of 2026, according to data insights firm Magnitt. However, Magnitt warned that first quarter data primarily reflects deals made before the Iran war began, with the real impact expected to show in the third and fourth quarters.
About half of MENA capital came from international investors last year, with higher concentration in the UAE. That number is already down 26 percent in the first quarter, with US investors driving the steepest retreat. “Uncertainty is the devil of decision making,” said Philip Bahoshy, CEO of Magnitt. “At a time of uncertainty for investors, it slows that next investment round, that potential M&A transaction.”
Exit timelines remain a pain point in the region. Exits used to take around seven years but have now stretched to nine or 10 years. Of 12 tech-backed IPOs in the region, only four have delivered positive returns over a 12-month period, highlighting the lengthening exit window.
Bahoshy emphasized the importance of continued seed-stage investment despite market volatility. “The next generation of growth is driven by continuing to fuel the top of that [VC] funnel. Seed investments, accelerator programmes, angel investors that may be impacted by the volatility in the public market – they all need to continue to deploy in this asset class, which remains attractive,” Bahoshy said.