ON
← Back to feed
AEEconomy2 days ago

Gulf region set for postwar IPO boom, says HSBC Menat chief executive

HSBC's CEO for the Middle East, North Africa, and Turkey, Selim Kervanci, predicts a postwar IPO boom in the Gulf region, citing the recent US-Iran agreement as a catalyst for renewed investment and market activity. He notes that the region experienced a period of uncertainty due to conflict, which slowed merger and acquisition activity and new listings. With the prospect of a permanent agreement, HSBC anticipates increased equity capital market transactions in the fourth quarter.

HSBC has a pipeline of 45 mergers and acquisitions and initial public offering mandates across the Gulf and Europe's biggest lender expects listing activity to resume in the fourth quarter, following the signing of the US-Iran agreement to end the war.

It will take at least a quarter for investor sentiment, equity capital market activity and the deal flow to recover as peace is restored in the oil-rich region, said Selim Kervanci, HSBC's chief executive for the Middle East North Africa and Turkey.

“It really depended on the [US-Iran] deal and with the prospect of a [permanent] agreement now, we expect the market to open up in the fourth quarter for the ECM [equity capital market] transactions,” he told The National in an interview.

Mr Kervanci, who recently hosted the four-day HSBC GCC Exchanges Conference in London, said the region had gone through an extremely uncertain period over the past four months, which stemmed the flow of mergers and acquisitions as well as new listings on regional bourses.

After the barrage of US-Israeli bombing of Iran and Tehran’s retaliatory strikes on its Arab neighbours halted in early April, peace in the region has teetered on a fragile ceasefire.

The war delivered an unprecedented shock to global energy markets and severely disrupted business activity across the region. Global oil markets and the regional stock markets, which sank sharply during the early days of the war in March, swung with war-driven headlines that added to the uncertainty.

“Unfortunately, uncertainty did not help investors form a valuation perspective,” Mr Kervanci said. “That was the main obstacle in ECM transactions coming to the market.”

However, with the framework agreed between the US and Iran to end one of the worst geopolitical conflicts in the Middle East in decades, the regional equity markets are bracing for a leg-up.

Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange, the second-largest Arab bourse after Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul, as well as the Dubai Financial Market, jumped to their highest in three months on Wednesday after the 14-point memorandum of understanding between the US and Iran was unveiled.

Selim Kervanci, chief executive of HSBC Menat. Photo: HSBC Info

The framework includes an end to hostilities on all fronts, including Lebanon, and the opening of the Strait of Hormuz, which will ease economic pressure on regional economies once hydrocarbon exports scale back up to prewar levels.

US President Donald Trump and his Iranian counterpart Masoud Pezeshkian have already signed the deal, which also includes lifting the blockade of Iranian ports and a $300 billion investment commitment for Iran if it continues to follow the peace process.

Mr Trump, however, has said although the US is ceasing hostilities, its military campaign will resume if Iran does not comply with the peace deal.

Stronger than before

Mr Kervanchi said there is optimism that peace will prevail in the region and the uncertainty that has clouded markets in the first half of the year will dissipate.

Top official of the gulf stock exchanges, capital markets regulators, senior executives from some of the biggest listed firms in the region and global institutional investor, who congregated in London for the HSBC conference, expect the regional equity markets, new listing, and M&A activity to bounce back to even stronger levels than before the war, he said.

Mohammed Fannouch, left, Menat co-head of investment banking at HSBC, moderating a panel of chief executives from Gulf bourses at the lender's GCC Exchanges Conference in London. Photo: HSBC Info

HSBC pipeline

IPO activity has been in a state of flux in 2026, which had been slated as the year of recovery for new listings in the broader Middle East. With war breaking out at the end of February, the markets failed to realise the promised momentum.

Mutlaq Al Ghowairi Contracting Company (MGC), which had been scheduled to list its shares on Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul market, pulled its IPO plans at the last minute after consulting with its financial advisers, the company said in a June 9 statement.

Middle East IPOs last year slumped to their weakest level since 2020, hit by lower oil prices , geopolitical risks and weak post-listing performances

Firms across the wider region raised $7.1 billion from 61 listings in 2025, compared to $13.1 billion in 2024. The total amount raised in 2025 was the lowest since 2020 when companies pulled in $22 billion, according to financial data platform Dealogic.

However, Mr Kervanci said HSBC's IPO deals pipeline, mostly from the Arab world's two largest economies – Saudi Arabia and the UAE – remains intact despite the war-driven lull.

Companies from food, consumer, retail and technology sectors have delayed, not cancelled, their plans. These firms are primed for listing on the regional bourses, awaiting a window and the right valuations to tap capital markets for funds to drive growth, he said.

“The region has once again proven its resilience, which is seen as a compe…

Read the full article at The National
Source document: Interview with Selim Kervanci, HSBC's CEO for MENAT

1 reports

The NationalState / PublicCenter2 days ago
Gulf region set for postwar IPO boom, says HSBC Menat chief executive

HSBC's CEO for the Middle East, North Africa, and Turkey, Selim Kervanci, predicts a postwar IPO boom in the Gulf region, citing the recent US-Iran agreement as a catalyst for renewed investment and market activity. He notes that the region experienced a period of uncertainty due to conflict, which slowed merger and acquisition activity and new listings. With the prospect of a permanent agreement, HSBC anticipates increased equity capital market transactions in the fourth quarter.

Bias read (Center): The article presents economic predictions based on geopolitical developments without overtly favoring any political side. It quotes HSBC executives and discusses market expectations neutrally, focusing on financial implications rather than taking a stance on the US-Iran agreement or regional policy.

Official sources cited

  • organisation Interview with Selim Kervanci, HSBC's CEO for MENAT

Go to the primary sources (1)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • organisationInterview with Selim Kervanci, HSBC's CEO for MENAT