du Ventures Launches $50 Million Fund to Back UAE Fintech, AI and Cybersecurity Startups

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UAE telecommunications company du has announced the launch of du Ventures, a US$50 million corporate venture fund that will invest in early and growth-stage technology companies across the Middle East and North Africa region, with a strategic focus on fintech, artificial intelligence and cybersecurity.

The fund, launched by Emirates Integrated Telecommunications Company (EITC) — du’s parent — marks the telecom’s formal entry into the corporate venture capital space. It joins a growing cohort of GCC corporates using captive venture arms to access emerging technology rather than acquiring companies outright or building capabilities in-house from scratch.

Strategic Rationale

Du’s decision to establish a dedicated venture fund reflects a structural shift in how large GCC telecoms are approaching growth beyond core connectivity revenues. Mobile penetration across the UAE has effectively reached saturation, and both du and its principal competitor Etisalat — now trading as e& — have been investing heavily in enterprise services, cloud infrastructure, payments and digital platforms to build revenue streams that are not dependent on subscriber growth.

A corporate venture fund gives du a financial stake in adjacent sectors that also generate commercial co-development opportunities. Fintech startups, for instance, often require telecoms infrastructure for mobile payments, identity verification and customer onboarding — areas where du can offer both distribution and technical integration that traditional venture capital firms cannot match.

Focus Areas

Fintech is the first of du Ventures’ three stated investment pillars. The UAE fintech ecosystem has grown rapidly since the Central Bank of the UAE and the Dubai Financial Services Authority introduced regulatory sandbox frameworks in the early 2020s. The number of licensed fintech companies operating in the country exceeded 500 by the end of 2025, according to industry data, with particular density in the payments, embedded finance and open banking segments.

Artificial Intelligence is the second focus. The UAE has made AI infrastructure investment a national priority, with the Abu Dhabi AI company G42 and the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority’s technology portfolio both anchoring large language model and enterprise AI capability-building at scale. Du Ventures’ investment in AI-focused startups will likely concentrate on applied enterprise AI — companies building AI tools for specific industry verticals such as healthcare, logistics, financial services and government — rather than foundational model development, where competition from well-capitalised US and Chinese players is intense.

Cybersecurity is the third pillar, and arguably the most strategically urgent for du. As the company’s enterprise business has grown, so has its exposure to clients in government, critical national infrastructure and financial services — sectors where cybersecurity is a purchasing priority and where the performance of du’s managed security services directly affects customer retention and regulatory compliance.

UAE Corporate Venture Landscape

Du Ventures enters a corporate venture space in the UAE that has become increasingly active. Abu Dhabi-based Mubadala Ventures, Hub71’s anchor capital, e&’s venture arm and ADNOC’s dedicated innovation investment programme are all actively backing technology startups. The common thread is that GCC companies with large balance sheets and strategic infrastructure positions are increasingly using venture capital as a tool to stay at the frontier of technology disruption rather than waiting for technology to arrive through traditional procurement channels.

For startups, the availability of multiple well-resourced corporate venture investors in a single market creates meaningful options. Du Ventures brings telecom distribution reach; e&’s venture arm brings a broader pan-African and South Asian footprint; Hub71 and Mubadala Ventures bring connections to Abu Dhabi’s sovereign capital apparatus. Founders with genuine product-market fit across enterprise technology in the GCC now have access to a venture ecosystem that, while smaller than Riyadh or Tel Aviv in absolute terms, offers a distinctive combination of strategic value-add and proximity to government decision-makers.

Deal Flow and Selection

Du Ventures has not disclosed detailed investment criteria beyond the three focus sectors, but the $50 million fund size suggests ticket sizes in the $1 million to $5 million range for initial investments, with reserves for follow-on rounds into portfolio companies that demonstrate commercial traction within the du ecosystem. The fund is expected to make its first investments before the end of 2026, with portfolio announcements anticipated at GITEX Global, scheduled for October in Dubai.

For entrepreneurs with businesses operating in fintech, AI or cybersecurity with a GCC go-to-market strategy, du Ventures represents a new source of capital and distribution at a moment when the UAE’s corporate venture community is maturing rapidly. The fund’s launch is a further indicator that the UAE’s technology investment ecosystem has moved well beyond its early dependence on international venture capital flowing into free zone sandboxes — it is increasingly characterised by domestic capital, domestic commercial partnerships and domestic regulatory support working in alignment.

Also Read: Abu Dhabi’s Hub71 2026 Cohort: 40 Startups Raise $200 Million | Saudi Arabia’s Digital Riyal CBDC Pilot Expands to New Sectors

Hassan Al Rashidi
Hassan Al Rashidi
World Desk Editor covering international affairs with Gulf relevance.

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