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10 Graphs You Need To See To Understand Egypt's Startup Ecosystem These modern-day dynasties are creating solutions that don't just serve Egypt, but reverberate across continents.

By Ashok Raman

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Today's Egypt is illuminated by startups spanning all sectors, from e-commerce and fintech to healthtech. These modern-day dynasties are creating solutions that don't just serve Egypt, but reverberate across continents.

The original face of this revolution was Fawry, a fintech player that listed on the Egyptian Stock Exchange in 2019, and subsequently reached a billion dollar valuation one year after listing. The new official face of this unicorn revolution in Egypt might be MNT-Halan though, Egypt's latest unicorn, birthed in early 2023.

Here are 10 graphs that will help you better understand the current state of the Egypt startup ecosystem:

1. Egypt ranked third in terms of the number of funding deals signed in the MENA (excluding israel)

Source: Lucidity Insights

Egypt usually ranks second behind the UAE in terms of the number of deals inked in the MENA; however, 2023 has been a difficult year, and Egypt ranked third behind both the UAE and Saudi Arabia. Morocco was the only other country in the MENA (excluding Israel) that had more than 10 deals inked in 2023, as the venture capital (VC) winter set in across the world.

2. Egypt was third (in value) across the MENA for the past three years

Source: Lucidity Insights

The UAE has consistently witnessed funding over US$1 billion for the past three years, and has maintained a top-two position, along with Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabian startups received the most funding in 2023 on the back of Tabby, a fintech solution offering customers to make purchases and pay for those in instalments. Egypt has been consistently ranking third in terms of funding value, with 2023 seeing the lowest in the past three years.

3. Egypt averaged 189 deals per year, prior to 2023's 65 deals
Source: Lucidity Insights

Egypt's tech ecosystem has consistently witnessed the signing of over 165 deals, annually, since 2019. Average ticket-sizes were low in 2019-2020, hovering at about $600,000 per deal. In 2021, everything jumped upwards: 200 deals were inked in a single year, the average check size jumped to $3 million, and Egypt went from a $100 million per year funding market, to startups raising $607 million in a single year. In 2022, Egypt continued to see growth- fundraising $810 million across 212 deals, with average check sizes growing again to $3.8 million.

4. Cairo came in third place in the MENA's startup ecosystem rankings in 2022
Source: Lucidity Insights

While Cairo contributed to Egypt's startup ecosystem getting ranked first in North Africa, the country ranked third in the MENA startup ecosystem, behind Tel Aviv and Dubai, but ahead of Riyadh. The ecosystem has created $8.3 billion worth of exits and startup valuations from the second half of 2020 to 2022.

Startup Genome is the world-leading policy advisory and research organization for public and private organizations committed to accelerating the success of their startup ecosystem. For its Startup Genome Global Startup Ecosystem Report 2023, the rankings were based on a weighted average of a number of factors which calculate performance, funding, market reach, connectedness, talent and experience and knowledge. The factors use exits, estimated startup valuations, funding volumes, investor quality and activity, number of meetup group activities, number of accelerators and incubators, tech companies with secondary offices, talent quality and availability across science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) and life sciences, access to tech talent and cost, along with the patents and research publications.

5. Average round sizes have been increasing over the past three years in Egypt
Source: Lucidity Insights

Based on the number of deals that disclose a funding value, the average round size has been consistently increasing; however, the growth is more pronounced in early-stage funding such as with angel, pre-seed and seed rounds of funding. Growth stage funding has been consistently increasing across both Series A and Series B rounds of funding. 2023 has been an abysmal year for many countries as startup funding has dried up, which is apparent with the number of deals having significantly dropped from the highs of 2021 and 2022.

Related: A New Report By Lucidity Insights In Partnership With Entrepreneur Middle East Takes A Deep Dive Into Egypt's Startup And Investor Ecosystem

6. Egypt's startup funding was bucking the global VC winter trend, and then H1 2023 happened

Source: Lucidity Insights

As of H1 2023, VC winter is apparent with noticeably smaller funds raised for each of these startup ecosystems, except Egypt. Israel still leads with $1.83 billion raised in H1 2023, but is on a crash course, as this is 80% lower than H1 2022's $9.4 billion. The UAE fundraised 16% less this H1 2023, with $590 million versus last year's $699 million by this time. Saudi Arabia raised 10% less, with $528 million raised, versus last year's $584 million. Egypt, on the other hand, has raised 40% more this year than last year, having raised $432 million in H1 2023 versus $307 million in H1 2022. However, considering 2023 full year performance tells a different story as final figures for Egypt stand at $503 million implies that H2 2023 only saw another $71 million in funding. Given that $400 million is accounted for by MNT-Halan, the overall scenario goes to show that investors have been cautious in their investment approach in the country.

7. Egypt's largest funding rounds are all fintech and e-commerce players
Source: Lucidity Insights

Fintech and e-commerce dominate the largest funding rounds in Egypt, with MNT-Halan having the two largest equity funding rounds. MNT-Halan has gone onto raise an additional $150 million including debt financing. The third largest is also a fintech player, Paymob, which is a digital payments enabler for enterprises to accept payments online and in-store.

8. Fintech was by far the largest sector in 2023 for both deal count and value
Source: Lucidity Insights

Fintech startups dominated the funding landscape in Egypt during 2023. This is mainly on the back of funding received by MNT-Halan, which totaled $400 million in 2023, in equity and debt funding. Fintech, invariably was also the highest in terms of deal count, followed by e-commerce. Healthcare was the third largest in terms of deal count; however, the second largest for funding value, at $26 million. Healthcare funding was led by Yodawy, an online pharmacy marketplace and insurance benefits manager, which raised $16 million in February 2023, and Chefaa, a healthcare startup focused on medicine and non-medicine delivery. 2023 has seen a major slowdown as Egypt has been grappling with the economic crisis, impacting startup funding as well.

9. Egypt produced Africa's first unicorn and more
Source: Lucidity Insights

Egypt tech ecosystem has seen Fawry's market capitalization touch $1 billion after it listed on the Egyptian Exchange in August 2019. Egypt eventually did have a unicorn in MNT-Halan, when it achieved that status after raising up to $400 million in equity and debt financing, in February 2023.

10. Egypt had a record eight exits in 2022
Source: Lucidity Insights

Looking at the number of exits of VC-backed startups in the Egyptian tech ecosystem, we see that the market is still in the nascent stages, but it's gaining momentum. In 2022, Egypt had a record eight exits. In comparison with other Middle Eastern and African nations, Israel had a record 86 exits in 2021, the UAE had a record 15 exits in 2021, Turkey had a record 10 exits in 2023, and South Africa had a record eight exits in 2023.

Read the full special report, Investing in Egypt's Startup Ecosystem, here.

This article was originally published on Lucidity Insights, a partner of Entrepreneur Middle East in developing special reports on the Middle East and Africa's tech and entrepreneurial ecosystems.

Related: Igniting Innovation: Qatar's Startup Ecosystem Is A Rising Hub For Entrepreneurial Growth In The Middle East

Ashok Raman is a storyteller who uses numbers as his medium. He loves to crunch data, analyze it, and investigate deeper questions until the stories begin to emerge on their own. Ashok comes from a finance and consulting background, having worked in the strategy consulting and private equity fields across the Middle East and Emerging Asia for over 15 years, prior to becoming a business writer. When it comes to tech stories, Ashok has a penchant for startups in the fintech, B2B software-as-a-service, artificial intelligence, and machine learning spaces. He loves writing about venture capital, mergers and acquisitions, and the general investor landscape of startup ecosystems. Ashok holds a bachelor’s of science in electrical engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology, as well as a diploma in finance.
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