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Middle East Financial Investment Company
Middle East Financial Investment Company launched in Riyadh in 2012, securing a license from the Saudi Capital Market Authority to operate as an arranging,...
Middle East Financial Investment Company
Middle East Financial Investment Company launched in Riyadh in 2012, securing a license from the Saudi Capital Market Authority to operate as an arranging, managing, and advising entity. The firm was founded by Saudi financiers aiming to capture the investable asset pools created by the kingdom's post-global-financial-crisis regulatory modernization and the early stages of Vision 2030's capital-market deepening. MEFIC's platform spans three principal disciplines: asset management running discretionary portfolios and mutual funds, investment banking handling debt structuring and private placements, and principal investments deploying balance-sheet capital into real estate and private equity. The firm sources deal flow across Saudi Arabia and the broader GCC, with a preference for mid-market industrial, healthcare, and consumer-sector companies. Publicly filed mandate documents and the firm's own materials cite capabilities in managing Saudi-listed equity strategies, fixed-income products, and Shariah-compliant structures. Headcount and assets under management are not publicly disclosed by the firm, though its CMA license type and the breadth of marketed services suggest a mid-sized operation by Saudi standards. MEFIC is among a cohort of Saudi independents that expanded during the 2012–2016 window as regulators encouraged non-bank financial institutions. The firm does not maintain a prominent public-facing investment-track-record page, distinguishing it from larger regional peers like Jadwa Investment or Al Rajhi Capital. MEFIC's structural identity turns on its bundled license: it acts simultaneously as an arranger and an allocator. This allows the firm to originate structured debt products and place them through its own managed portfolios — a model that compresses fees for local family offices and institutions but concentrates conflicts-of-interest management inside a single regulated entity.
General information
Firm type
Bank / Wealth / Trust
Year founded
2012
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
Middle East
Country
Saudi Arabia
City
Riyadh
Corporate office
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
What licenses does MEFIC hold, and who regulates it?
MEFIC is licensed by the Saudi Capital Market Authority under a full-service permit that authorizes dealing, arranging, managing, advising, and custody activities within Saudi Arabia. The firm's operations, including fund structuring and discretionary portfolio management, are subject to CMA conduct-of-business regulations.
Does MEFIC manage public funds accessible to retail investors?
Yes. MEFIC operates mutual funds targeting Saudi equities, fixed income, and diversified portfolios, according to its CMA filings. The firm publishes fund fact sheets and NAV updates through the Saudi Stock Exchange (Tadawul) fund-reporting system for the products it offers to the public.
How does MEFIC's investment-banking arm interact with its asset-management business?
MEFIC's structure allows its arranging arm to originate private-placement and debt-structuring opportunities, which the asset-management arm can then assess for inclusion in managed discretionary portfolios or institutional mandates. This creates an internally sourced deal pipeline that reduces external placement-agent dependence.
What sectors does MEFIC target in its private-equity activities?
The firm's disclosed focus areas include mid-market industrial, healthcare, and consumer-facing companies in Saudi Arabia and the GCC. Public commentary from the firm and its regulatory filings emphasize domestic opportunities aligned with the non-oil GDP diversification targets of Vision 2030.
Does MEFIC structure Shariah-compliant products?
Yes. MEFIC markets itself as a provider of Shariah-compliant investment and financing solutions, including equity funds screened according to AAOIFI standards and Murabaha-based debt-arrangement structures that are overseen by the firm's appointed Shariah board.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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