Swvl, an Egyptian ride-sharing startup based in Dubai, has announced that it is going public through a merger with a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC). According to The Wall Street Journal, the mobility company is merging with Queen’s Gambit Growth Capital, a SPAC founded by a group of female CEOs early this year (which claims to be the first women-led SPAC). Victoria Grace, the company’s CEO, is the founder of Colle Capital, a venture capital firm based in New York.
“We have succeeded in executing our business plan in some of the most challenging emerging markets, where inefficiencies in infrastructure and related mass-transit systems represent a universal problem, and have now reached a critical inflection point where we are ready to share our expertise and technology with the rest of the world,” Mostafa Kandil, the co-founder and CEO of Swvl, said.
“Queen’s Gambit is an ideal partner, who shares our core values and is committed to helping accelerate Swvl’s long-term growth plans. With their partnership, as a public company, we will expand our daily commuting offerings and enterprise TaaS services that remove barriers to seamless mobility for the populations that need it most. In doing so, we will create even greater value for all stakeholders and continue innovating best-in-class technology solutions that improve the universal, daily struggle of mobility for so many,” he added.
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Here Is What You Need To Know
- SWVL and Queen’s Gambit Growth Capital have signed a formal agreement for a business combination, according to the announcement, which would result in Swvl becoming a publicly traded company on NASDAQ after the proposed deal is completed. The company will trade under the ticker code ‘SWVL.’
- Swvl will be the second Middle Eastern business to go public using the SPAC route. Anghami, an Abu Dhabi-based music streaming platform, stated earlier this year that it intends to go public by merging with Vistas Media Acquisition Company, a SPAC.
- A SPAC, sometimes known as a blank-cheque corporation, is founded to obtain funds through an IPO in order to purchase and publicize an existing company. It will be the first Egyptian-born technology company to list on NASDAQ (or outside Egypt), as well as the second Egyptian technology company overall (Fawry being the first one).
- According to the report, Queen’s Gambit Growth Capital raised $300 million when it was founded in January and another $45 million afterwards through underwriters’ overallotment option. Swvl’s purchase will also involve a $100 million PIPE (private investment in a public firm) from a consortium of investors including Agility, Luxor Capital, and Zain Group. Swvl will now have $445 million in additional capital to invest in its growth and expansion.
“When forming Queen’s Gambit, I was squarely focused on assembling a team of highly successful and strategically-minded women with unparalleled global relationships, to identify and then grow a disruptive platform that solves complex challenges and empowers underserved populations. In Swvl, we have found each of those things and more. Having established a leadership position in key emerging markets, we believe Swvl is ready to capitalize on a truly global market opportunity,” Victoria Grace, Queen’s Gambit Founder & Chief Executive Officer, said.
A Look At What SWVL Does
Swvl, which was founded in 2017 by Mostafa Kandil, Mahmoud Nouh, and Ahmed Sabbah, began as a bus-hailing service in Egypt, allowing users to travel inside a city by booking seats on fixed-route buses. Later, the service was expanded to Kenya and Pakistan, and the company’s headquarters were relocated to Dubai. In several markets, the company now offers intercity travel, car-based ride-sharing, and corporate services. Swvl produced $26 million in annual gross revenue, according to its SPAC presentation, with a negative EBITDA of $29 million (which means the company lost $29 million). It stated that by 2025, it hopes to increase its yearly gross revenue to $1 billion.
Swvl services both consumers and businesses in its major countries of Egypt, Kenya, and Pakistan through Daily, Travel, and Business solutions, however it solely serves businesses in some of the new regions it has just entered, such as Jordan and Saudi Arabia. Swvl’s transportation-as-a-service business offering allows schools, universities, and corporations to create customized transportation alternatives for their students or employees using Swvl’s software and fleet. In the next five years, the company wants to be in 20 countries on five continents.
The Cairo-based business has raised over $100 million to date, including an unannounced fundraising round earlier this year. Vostok New Ventures Global, Beco Capital, Raed Ventures, Sawari Ventures, MSA Capital, Silicon Badia, and Oman Technology Fund are among its prior investors. Its most recent public investment round was a $42 million Series B-2 round in 2019, following which it surreptitiously raised another $20 million in early 2020.
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Mostafa had previously worked as a market launcher for the Middle East’s largest ride-hailing company. Swvl co-founders Mahmoud Nouh (COO) and Ahmed Sabbah (CTO) both departed the company to start their own businesses in October 2019 and March 2021, respectively.
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Charles Rapulu Udoh
Charles Rapulu Udoh is a Lagos-based lawyer who has advised startups across Africa on issues such as startup funding (Venture Capital, Debt financing, private equity, angel investing etc), taxation, strategies, etc. He also has special focus on the protection of business or brands’ intellectual property rights ( such as trademark, patent or design) across Africa and other foreign jurisdictions.
He is well versed on issues of ESG (sustainability), media and entertainment law, corporate finance and governance.
He is also an award-winning writer