• 9 months ago
Noor Sweid, the founder and managing partner of Global Ventures, says that a quarter of her firm's portfolio companies are EBITDA positive. In this interview from the Forbes 30/50 Summit in Abu Dhabi with Forbes senior editor Maggie McGrath, Sweid points out that a historic lack of capital in the region where she invests has forced startups to become more capital efficient, making it easier to for them scale.

0:00 Introduction
0:29 Noor Sweid On Investing In The Middle East & Africa
2:23 Noor On Looking For Innovative Tech Solutions
4:08 Asking Questions For The Next Level Of Healthcare Industry To Emerge
6:13 How Can Companies Be More Capital Efficient? Noor Sweid Explains
7:12 What Noor Sweid Looks For When Investing In A Company?
7:58 What Is The State Of The Global Economy Right Now?

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Transcript
00:00 Noor Swade, thank you for coming to the Forbes 3050 Summit.
00:03 Thank you for inviting me.
00:04 You are a venture capitalist who said on stage today that a quarter of your portfolio, which
00:10 is mostly seed in Series A, is EBITDA positive.
00:15 And that stat made your fellow panelists kind of do a double take, like I watched her head.
00:20 How did you do that?
00:21 And do you happen to know the metrics in terms of how many other firms in the venture community
00:26 can boast the same statistic?
00:29 I don't know, but I think that no one else can boast the same statistic.
00:32 So I know it's really shared theirs.
00:35 But I think that what we're doing is pretty amazing.
00:38 I won't take credit for it.
00:39 It's the founders.
00:40 So we invest across the Middle East and Africa in Series A. The lack of capital in the venture
00:45 ecosystem historically has meant that founders are just more capital efficient to start with.
00:51 And to quantify that for you, last year, our entire ecosystem had $2.6 billion of venture
00:56 funding.
00:57 That's all of MENA, all deals, all year.
00:59 The year before was record at $3 billion.
01:02 But that's the size of our ecosystem.
01:03 So as a result, when founders start companies and they think about how do I build this,
01:08 their first port of call is not just to raise tens of millions of dollars, because that
01:11 doesn't really exist.
01:13 And even if they do raise that, they're not going to burn through it so quickly, because
01:17 they don't know if they can raise it again.
01:18 So part of it is just the adversity advantage that founders have when they are in such an
01:23 ecosystem.
01:24 And part of it is we are a B2B investor mainly.
01:27 So the business models we back are more capital efficient and can scale more quickly with
01:32 less money, which means, again, you can work to break even.
01:36 But the founders that do come in, not at break even, not at profitability, we work with very,
01:40 very closely to make sure that they are streamlined, they are quick to scale, and that they scale
01:45 with very strong unit economics.
01:47 Is there a common theme in what you're doing with those companies that are not cash flow
01:51 positive?
01:52 What's the business development that you're working on with them to get there?
01:56 Well, I think it's high level growth, so triple digit growth on its top line, but also margin
02:01 expansion on a very much bottom line, not just gross profits, but net profits, EBITDA.
02:06 Those things matter.
02:07 So we never had the grow at any cost mindset.
02:10 For us, it's always been great high level growth, but also make money on a gross level
02:16 and sometimes on a net level.
02:17 So it's not the ethos of the firm, it's more the ethos of the ecosystem.
02:21 And we just happen to be investing in this ecosystem.
02:23 Just happen to be investing in the ecosystem.
02:25 But you also told me that you look for innovative tech solutions.
02:28 So you have a lens that is strategic, it sounds like.
02:33 We are very strategic and we are thematic.
02:35 So as a former operator, so I've grown, scaled, IPO'd one company, sold another private equity
02:41 firm.
02:42 So we can look under the hood and understand operations very well.
02:45 And I think that's important for an investor to know how to do that.
02:49 And then you couple that with a strategic lens and a macro lens and the part of the
02:52 world we're sitting in as an emerging market, a very high growth market.
02:56 And the question that we end up always asking is, what are the cutting edge technologies
03:02 available in the world that can be applied here that solve problems for hundreds of millions
03:07 of people?
03:08 And this part of the world, the Middle East and Africa, 1.9 billion people, half under
03:12 the age of 30, 85% digital penetration, but you don't have, for example, financial infrastructure.
03:20 So in 2018, we were 85% unbanked or underbanked.
03:24 So you could easily build fintechs and not encounter incumbents.
03:28 And that enabled the fintech companies to grow.
03:30 So we've invested in what just became the first fintech unicorn in the region.
03:34 We did their series A four years ago, and their EBITDA is in the tens and tens of millions
03:39 of dollars.
03:40 It's a four-year-old company, but scaled well.
03:44 And then you take a look at health care, and same problem.
03:47 You have one doctor per 1,000 people.
03:49 Europe has four and a half doctors per 1,000 people, as does the US.
03:52 The real honest truth is we'll never have enough doctors.
03:55 So the question is, how do you use health tech to overcome that gap?
03:59 And now that health tech exists in that way, you can do that.
04:01 And again, no incumbents, no legacy infrastructure.
04:05 So you get to a point where these companies scale very quickly and sometimes profitably.
04:09 Today we're looking at the same questions.
04:11 Which industry five years from now is massively different to five years ago?
04:14 Where can you use technology to affect hundreds of millions of lives?
04:17 That becomes your TAM.
04:18 And for us, the answers are supply chain tech.
04:21 So we think that in this part of the world, we import most things.
04:25 So if you're going to start manufacturing, and if you're going to start thinking about
04:27 supply chains, what are the best technologies in the world for that?
04:30 And can you implement them here, where again, there are no incumbents?
04:33 And the other area that we really like and where we're investing is agritech.
04:37 So if you think about food security in this part of the world, we still import about 80
04:41 or 90% of our food.
04:42 So if you want to think about how do you grow food, how do you feed your people five years
04:46 from now, things like vertical farming will be ubiquitous.
04:50 Whereas five years ago, they were proof of concept.
04:52 So how do you enable those technologies to scale in these markets?
04:54 So when you think about the lack of incumbents and legacy, enabling new companies using that
04:59 technology to enter markets, solve real problems for hundreds of millions of people, and then
05:04 sell, that's what we get behind.
05:07 That's a lot of opportunity.
05:09 And do you think the global investment community has woken up to that opportunity?
05:14 Goodness, I hope not.
05:16 Because if they have, then you'll have this massive influx of capital.
05:20 You'll have valuation inflation.
05:22 Whereas right now, because of the lack of capital, we're able to invest that multiple
05:26 that make a lot of sense.
05:28 If everyone just suddenly wakes up and comes in here, then the valuations go up, the multiples
05:32 stop making sense, and our investors stop making as much on their returns as they do.
05:38 As it stands now, our fund one, which is a 2018 vintage, sits at a 0.8 DPI, which puts
05:45 it in the top decile performance in the world for that vintage.
05:48 We've had a few exits, but none of our winners.
05:51 But we had a few exits in 2021.
05:53 But the ability to come in at regional multiples and then help a lot of these companies scale
05:58 globally to about a dozen companies that have more revenues in the US than the region.
06:02 So once they do that, then these companies can demand international multiples.
06:07 And that multiple arbitrage is hugely beneficial to us and our investors.
06:10 It stops existing if everybody just finds out about the region.
06:13 So we should stop this interview now.
06:15 It would be in your financial interest if we did that.
06:17 I was going to ask, because you said on stage that the entrepreneurs in this region are
06:21 more capital efficient and have always had to be more capital efficient.
06:25 Can you explain what that means?
06:27 So the lack of capital or the small size of our ecosystem means that there's a lack of
06:31 capital for founders and specifically strategic networked capital.
06:35 And so as a result, when founders raise a million dollars, they will spend that in a
06:39 very particular way where they can do so much more with it than the same founder building
06:44 the same product somewhere else.
06:46 So a lot of times when international investors come and do our follow ons, they're properly
06:51 surprised at how much has been built with so little funding.
06:55 They've always been more capital efficient because of the lack of capital in this region.
06:59 And we say in the States that women and people of color are usually more capital efficient
07:04 founders than their white male counterparts because they are relatively underfunded by
07:09 comparison.
07:10 Same principle applies here.
07:12 Same principle applies here.
07:15 What's the opportunity then for you or for global investors when we look at capital efficiency?
07:20 So I think there's a lot to learn from the founders in the region.
07:22 I think especially as interest rates started to rise globally, the investor, the founders
07:27 here kind of shrugged their shoulders and said, yeah, this has been our life forever.
07:29 So we never had 0% interest rates.
07:32 So I think that the adversity advantage that they built over time is something international
07:36 founders will learn from.
07:37 I think investors have started to look more globally.
07:40 We have seen a huge influence of investors into the region over the last two years compared
07:44 to five years ago.
07:45 So for us as a firm, half our capital comes from the US and Europe.
07:49 And it's people that understand this is a gross market, they want to participate and
07:53 they want to invest.
07:54 So I think there's a huge opportunity here right now as this market grows very quickly.
07:58 So when we talk about the economic situation globally, obviously it's different region
08:02 to region.
08:04 And in the United States, we've been talking a lot about the flood of capital that we saw
08:09 in about 2021 during the pandemic.
08:11 And then there was the pullback and 2023 didn't feel so good to a lot of VCs and entrepreneurs.
08:18 I've heard some sources say that 2024 will feel better.
08:21 What's your take on the state of the market right now?
08:24 I think it does feel better than 2023.
08:26 The region lags in its economic cycles about nine to 12 months behind the US.
08:30 So whereas the US and the other markets struggled in 2022, that was our record year of funding
08:35 at $3 billion.
08:37 Compare that with when I started the firm six years ago, the ecosystem was $400 million.
08:43 So it's grown about eight times.
08:45 Last year was $2.6 billion.
08:47 So we lag on the down and we lag on the up cycle.
08:50 So I reckon that this year might be a great year for us, but it means that definitely
08:53 next year is going to be fantastic.
08:56 Well that's a good hopeful note to end on.
08:58 Any other predictions or advice for the VCs and founders watching this video?
09:04 I think build companies that tackle problems in a different way.
09:08 Don't try to think outside the box.
09:10 Let me imagine there is no box and think, here's a massive problem.
09:15 And what are the best technologies that exist in the world today?
09:17 And how can I apply those to solve these massive problems?
09:20 Noor, thank you so much for sitting down with Forbes.
09:22 Thank you for having me.
09:22 Thank you.
09:23 [END]

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