After four blockbuster years, the Middle East’s initial public offering boom is losing steam as valuations come under scrutiny and listings roar back in the US and Asia. In recent months, the Gulf’s listing volumes have fallen to their lowest since the pandemic, investors have become markedly more selective, and the region’s once-reliable first-day pop has faded.
Lulu Group is based in the UAE and counts numerous malls in India – Kozhikode District- Facebook
The change in sentiment was on show this week as Saudi Arabia’s EFSIM Facilities Management canceled plans for an up to $89 million listing on the kingdom’s main exchange. Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund has also slowed work on several planned first-time share sales, Bloomberg News has reported. Those moves come as the benchmark Tadawul index has dropped nearly 12% this year.
The Gulf had been a rare bright spot in recent years, buoyed by government privatisations and a push to deepen local capital markets. But lower oil prices have started to cloud the Middle East’s growth outlook, particularly in Saudi Arabia. Meanwhile, as IPO activity fired back up elsewhere, a region that thrived in a global listings drought suddenly faced competition.
The most striking shift this year was the sharp drop in IPO volumes across the Gulf, with regional listing proceeds more than halving from $13 billion to under $6 billion in 2025. In the UAE, listings slowed dramatically after the soft debuts of Lulu Retail Holdings PLC and Talabat Holding PLC late last year left investors more cautious. Dubai-based online classifieds platform Dubizzle Ltd. postponed its first-time share sale, a rare example of a pulled deal in the country. Oman, which had briefly outpaced London in IPO volumes in 2024, also saw activity dry up.
In Saudi Arabia, the EFSIM deal was pulled in part due to generally weaker market demand, people familiar with the matter said. Still, the kingdom’s IPO proceeds held steady compared to last year at roughly $4 billion, helping the kingdom reclaim its title as the Gulf’s busiest listing venue. But most deals came from the private sector as the government eased off on large privatisations.
“Government IPOs are large tickets, this year the market was not for this,” said Mostafa Gad, head of investment banking at EFG Hermes, one of the leading arranger of share sales in the Gulf. “Postponing the big ones was a very wise idea.”
The shift in sentiment was evident in deal size as well. Last year produced three IPOs nearing $2 billion after strong orderbooks allowed Talabat and Lulu to upsize their offerings late in the process, even though that enthusiasm didn’t carry into trading. In 2025, there was just one billion-dollar deal from low-cost carrier Flynas, and only four transactions topped $500 million.
Investors pushed toward smaller, simpler stories with clearer financials, “Anything above $500 million starts to get difficult,” said Gad, “People are not willing to navigate through a lot of complexity.”
If UAE IPOs slowed, follow-ons filled the gap. Secondary share sales in the emirates climbed toward $5 billion, overtaking IPO proceeds for the first time. Much of that activity came from Abu Dhabi government-backed shareholders trimming stakes to boost free floats, liquidity and index weightings.
Even Qatar, which has largely missed the Gulf-wide share sale boom, saw rare activity: Ooredoo’s multi-million-dollar stake sale by Abu Dhabi Investment Authority became the country’s most significant ECM event in years. Saudi follow-on volumes were more muted than last year, which was dominated by the government’s $12 billion sell-down in oil major Aramco.
Another defining shift came in performance. The 30% plus first-day jumps that had become a feature of Gulf listings started to crack in late 2024 and evaporated in 2025. In Saudi Arabia, the average listing gain turned negative, and only two of the kingdom’s ten largest IPOs now trade above offer. Broader market weakness didn’t help – Saudi equities were among the worst performers in emerging markets this year, dragged down by softer oil prices and concerns that this could dampen government spending.
Demand has also suffered in recent listings. Riyadh developer Al Ramz’s institutional investor books were only 11 times covered earlier this month, a far cry from the triple-digit oversubscription levels that were the norm months ago.
IPOs in the UAE fared better, but signs of fatigue appeared there too. Even contractor Alec Holdings PJSC – state-backed and the kind of deal that historically delivered a strong debut – traded tepidly on day one and is up a modest 3%. Dubai and Abu Dhabi’s main stock indices overall performed relatively well, but instant double-digit listing gains were no longer a given.
For some, that’s a welcome correction. “Everyone will adjust to the idea that not all IPOs will perform 30–40% on day one,” Gad said. “We’re becoming a mature market.”
Private equity firm TPG Inc. is considering options for APM Monaco, including a possible stake sale or an initial public offering of the jeweler, according to people familiar with the matter.
APM Monaco
TPG is working with an adviser and may start a dual-track process early next year, the people said, asking not to be identified discussing private information. The US investment firm is aiming to fetch a valuation of at least $2 billion for the company in a deal, one of the people said.
Deliberations are preliminary and TPG might decide to keep the asset for longer, the people added.
A representative for TPG declined to comment.
A TPG-led consortium acquired a 30% stake in APM Monaco in 2019, and in 2021 documents were submitted for a Hong Kong IPO that never materialized. The following year, the group started sounding out potential interest in its stake, Bloomberg News reported, though TPG said at the time it didn’t plan to sell.
European private equity firm Trail and China Synergy, an investment firm backed by TPG and China international Capital Corp., were also part of the investor group that bought the stake in APM Monaco six years ago.
TPG had $286 billion in assets under management as of the end of September. The US buyout firm invested in APM Monaco through its Asia-focused private equity platform.
APM operates about 500 jewelry stores globally, according to its website.
Caleres on Tuesday reported a 6.6% uptick in sales to $790.1 million for the third quarter, on the back double-digit growth in the American footwear firm’s brand portfolio.
Caleres
The St. Louis-based company said brand portfolio segment sales surged 18.8%, thanks to the recently acquired Stuart Weitzman brand. Without the acquisition, which was announced in February, sales increased just 4.6% on last year.
Elsewhere, Famous Footwear sales decreased 2.2%, with comparable sales down 1.2% for the three months ending November 1.
During the quarter, net earnings fell to $2.4 million, or earnings per diluted share of $0.07, compared to net earnings of $41.4 million or earnings per diluted share of $1.19 in the prior-year period.
“Caleres delivered third quarter sales results that were ahead of our internal expectations, highlighted by organic sales growth in our brand portfolio segment, strong lead brands performance, sequential improvement in trends at Famous Footwear, and accelerated e-commerce momentum in both segments of our business,” said Jay Schmidt, president and chief executive officer at Caleres.
“With the recent addition of Stuart Weitzman, our brand portfolio now drives nearly half our sales and more than half our operating earnings. As we expected, we experienced pressure on our earnings from tariffs and near-term acquisition dilution, however, the fundamentals of our business are improving.”
Caleres acquired footwear brand Stuart Weitzman from luxury heavyweight Tapestry in February for just $105 million. The cash deal was completed this summer.
Groupe Dynamite on Tuesday posted strong third-quarter results, reporting double-digit sales growth and increasing its full-year guidance.
Groupe Dynamite lifts 2025 outlook after Q3 revenue surge. – Dynamite
Revenue for the quarter rose 40.3% to $363.0 million from $258.8 million a year earlier, driven by a 31.6% increase in comparable store sales and contributions from new locations. Online revenue grew 43.3% to $63.2 million.
The Canadian fashion retailer behind the Dynamite and Garage brands posted net earnings of $41.1 million, up 101.7% from a year earlier, with diluted earnings per share rising to $0.71 from $0.38.
Operating income surged 90.3% to $120.1 million, while adjusted EBITDA rose 67.5% to $146.1 million.
“Our teams once again demonstrated the strength of our values-led culture. What we delivered this quarter across product, stores, and digital reflects the intention, discipline, and agility that continue to set us apart. We’re well into our journey to elevate and premiumize both brands, and the customer response remains strong,” said Stacie Beaver, president and chief operating officer.
“Operationally, our real estate strategy continues to be a core pillar, with 17 gross openings year-to-date positioning us for sustained, high-quality traffic. On digital, we’re encouraged by the 40 basis points increase in e-commerce penetration in Q3 2025, as we enhance our platforms to support richer storytelling and more seamless experiences. With a solid foundation, real momentum, and teams who move fast and stay aligned, we enter Q4 confident in our ability to raise performance, strengthen brand experiences, and deepen our community connections.”
Looking ahead, the company increased its fiscal 2025 outlook and now expects comparable store sales growth of 25.5% to 27.5%, up from 17% to 19%.
The company said its outlook remains subject to risks, including tariffs, real estate delays, weather disruptions, changes in consumer demand and IT or supply chain issues.