EGYPT · MARKETS
Key Facts
—The plan: Hassan Allam Holding is studying public listings for selected real-estate and infrastructure subsidiaries — on Gulf exchanges, Cairo’s EGX, or both.
—Parent stays private: Chairman and chief executive Hassan Allam says the holding company itself will not list; no venue or timeline has been set.
—Where he said it: The remarks came on the sidelines of the BMG Economic Forum at the London Stock Exchange, per Billionaires.Africa and Zawya.
—The group: One of the Middle East and North Africa’s largest private builders: more than 50,000 employees across roughly 18 subsidiaries.
—The logic: Gulf bourses sit next to the sovereign funds driving its order book; the EGX offers a home listing as Cairo works to revive its capital market.
—The backdrop: The family group has flirted with going public before — and Egyptian peers are lining up listings at home and abroad.
Hassan Allam Holding, one of Egypt’s largest private construction groups, is weighing public listings for some of its real-estate and infrastructure subsidiaries on Gulf exchanges, the Egyptian bourse, or both — while the family-owned parent stays private, its chief executive says.
One-stop reference
Company Intelligence
Every listed company in Latin America — financials, ownership and structure for 1,450+ companies across 26 exchanges, in one place.
Browse the directory →
Hassan Allam’s listing plan, in outline
Chairman and chief executive Hassan Allam told reporters the group is studying listings for selected units rather than the holding company itself. He set no timeline and named no venue.
The choice of words was deliberate: studying, not preparing. But for a group of this size even the study is market news, because it defines which assets the family is willing to share with outside investors.
The candidates are the group’s real-estate and infrastructure businesses. The remarks came on the sidelines of the BMG Economic Forum at the London Stock Exchange, according to Billionaires.Africa.
An empire built on concrete
Hassan Allam Holding has grown into one of the largest privately owned corporations in the Middle East and North Africa. It employs more than 50,000 people across roughly 18 subsidiaries spanning engineering, construction, utilities, logistics and property development.
The family business traces its roots to 1936, surviving nationalisation eras and comebacks to become a fixture of Egyptian construction. The current generation has professionalised it into a diversified contractor with international reach.
The group’s fingerprints are on Egypt’s biggest build-out in generations, from power and water works to the showcase projects of the New Administrative Capital. It has also expanded hard into Saudi Arabia and the wider Gulf, including work on Riyadh’s Diriyah giga-project.
Why the Gulf, why Cairo
The two venues answer different questions. Gulf exchanges offer proximity to the customers and sovereign funds now driving the group’s growth, plus deep pools of capital hunting infrastructure exposure.
The Egyptian Exchange offers a home listing at a moment when Cairo is pushing to revive its capital market and privatise state assets. A marquee family group choosing the EGX would be a vote of confidence the government would prize.
Egypt’s macro backdrop has turned friendlier for such plans. Gulf investment waves and a steadier currency have pulled foreign buyers back toward Egyptian assets after years of devaluation pain.
Gulf bourses, for their part, are riding a listings boom, with sovereign-linked and family businesses floating at valuations Cairo cannot yet match. That premium is a hard argument to ignore.
A funding channel, not an exit
Listing subsidiaries while keeping the parent private is a way to raise growth capital without surrendering family control. Minority investors get a slice of specific cash flows; the Allams keep the group.
It is the structure Gulf family conglomerates have used for a generation, and increasingly the template across the region. The holding stays a family matter; the operating companies learn to live with quarterly scrutiny.
The group has flirted with going public before — a plan floated in 2021 to list a stake in the parent never reached market. Structuring the units first suggests the family has settled on a more surgical route to outside capital.
The wider Egyptian corporate scene is moving the same way. Peers are weighing offerings at home and in the Gulf as valuations recover from the devaluations that battered Cairo’s market.
What to watch
Venue, sequence and timing are all open: a Gulf listing first would signal where the group sees its future revenue; an EGX debut would anchor it at home. A dual track is explicitly on the table.
Execution will decide whether this stays talk. But a family construction empire preparing its units for public markets says something about where Egyptian capital thinks the next decade’s money is: infrastructure, and lots of it.
For investors, the offer would be rare exposure to the Gulf-financed build-out of the region — data centres, utilities, housing — through an operator rather than a fund. That scarcity, more than any timeline, is what makes the studying worth watching.
Frequently asked questions
What is Hassan Allam Holding planning?
The group is studying public listings for selected real-estate and infrastructure subsidiaries, on Gulf exchanges, the Egyptian Exchange, or both. The family-owned parent company would stay private.
Has a timeline or venue been decided?
No. Chairman and CEO Hassan Allam said no timeline has been set and no venue chosen; the group is weighing Egypt, Gulf markets, or a combination.
How big is Hassan Allam Holding?
It is one of the largest privately owned corporations in the Middle East and North Africa, employing more than 50,000 people across roughly 18 subsidiaries in engineering, construction, utilities, logistics and property.
Why would it list units in the Gulf?
Gulf exchanges sit close to the sovereign funds and clients driving the group’s growth and offer deep capital pools, while a Cairo listing would support Egypt’s push to revive its own market.
LatAm Markets: Live Signals → — real-time movers, turnover leaders and FX across Latin America.
The Rio Times · Power Map
See who really holds power in Latin America
Click to open the Power Map →
View original source — Rio Times ↗

