Saudi Arabia’s fintech Tamara secures $150 mln facility from Goldman Sachs
Saudi financial technology company Tamara secured a $150 million debt facility from Goldman Sachs Group Inc, defying a funding slowdown in the global venture capital sector.
Founded less than three years ago, Tamara has emerged as one of the Gulf region’s leading “buy now, pay later companies,” having now raised $366 million in debt and equity. It counts a subsidiary of Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund and Checkout.com, one of Europe’s most valuable startups, among its investors.
For the latest headlines, follow our Google News channel online or via the app.
Tamara will use Goldman’s $150 million “receivables warehouse facility — which it says is a first in the Middle East — to fund expansion across product lines in shopping, payments and banking,” according to a statement on Thursday.
The Riyadh-based startup has a customer base of 6 million and more than 350 employees spread across offices in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Germany and Vietnam.
Tamara facilitates payments for thousands of merchants, including brands like IKEA and H&M. It continues to see significant potential for growth in the region, where credit card usage lags more mature markets.
Regionally, the firm competes with the likes of Dubai-based Tabby — which has also attracted significant foreign capital, including from investors such Sequoia Capital India. A $58 million funding round earlier this year valued the startup at almost $700 million.
Tamara’s valuation has not been disclosed.
The Goldman facility comes at a time when startups around the world are battling headwinds including rising interest rates.
The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank sent further shock-waves through the sector.
“The fintech sector is undergoing a rapid transformation and has received significant global investment in recent years,” said Abdulmajeed Alsukhan, Tamara’s chief executive and co-founder.
“The GCC, especially Saudi Arabia, continues to exhibit strong growth despite the global macroeconomic slowdown,” he said.
Read more:
Silicon Valley Bank collapse pushes hundreds to shift to JPMorgan and other US banks
Saudi ‘buy now pay later’ startup Tamara closes biggest seed round ever in Kingdom
Saudi consumers expected to spend more on online shopping in 2022
-
Saudi buy now, pay later firm Tamara says it raised $100 million
Gulf buy now, pay later (BNPL) firm Tamara said on Monday it raised $100 million in a second round of fundraising from investors including Sanabil ... Business -
Checkout.com leads $110million round for Saudi ‘buy now pay later’ startup Tamara
Checkout.com is leading a $110 million funding round for Saudi Arabia-based startup Tamara in one of the Middle East’s largest-ever startup ... Economy -
Saudi ‘buy now pay later’ startup Tamara closes biggest seed round ever in Kingdom
Saudi Arabia-based startup Tamara closed a $6 million seed investment round led by venture capital firm Impact46 on Wednesday. The round is the ... Economy