Private market investors in the Middle East have historically paid intermediaries to access deal flow, often waiting weeks for introductions that may never materialise. On 28 April 2026, Dubai-based FinBursa launched a mobile app designed to eliminate that friction entirely.
The platform connects investors directly with founders raising capital—no brokers, no success fees, no third-party aggregators skimming data. Startups, private companies, and fund managers list opportunities themselves. Investors browse anonymously.
It’s the first dedicated private markets discovery app built specifically for the MENA region.
FinBursa’s model hinges on what the company calls “direct source integrity.” Company founders, owners, and authorised fundraisers post their own rounds. No one else touches the listing. The app doesn’t charge success fees, a departure from traditional wealth management and brokerage models where intermediaries can claim 2% to 5% of completed deals.
For investors, privacy sits at the core. No personal data gets shared until they choose to make contact. No unsolicited pitches land in inboxes. The app positions itself as a tool for high-net-worth individuals who value discretion—a significant consideration in markets where capital moves quietly and relationships matter.
Ismail Badereldine, co-founder and chief executive of FinBursa, framed the launch as a structural shift. “Real democratization means giving investors the tools to act, not just to explore through layers of brokers and fees,” he said. “For the first time, investors can discover, evaluate, and connect directly with capital seekers, anonymously, at zero cost, and entirely on their own terms. We are not just modernising access to private markets; we are rebuilding it from the ground up.”
The app digitises what used to require phone calls, email chains, and PDF decks sent through wealth advisers. Investors can watch video pitches, access secure data rooms, and triage opportunities from their phones. FinBursa claims this compresses timelines that previously stretched across weeks into days—or hours.
Behind the consumer-facing app sits an AI-powered infrastructure that FinBursa has been running for institutional clients across MENA and internationally. The company, headquartered in Dubai International Financial Centre, describes its broader platform as an integrated suite covering deal management, investment CRM systems, fundraising tools, and virtual data rooms. The mobile app extends that technology to individual investors for the first time.
The launch arrives as Dubai positions itself as a fintech hub, attracting venture capital and technology firms seeking regulatory clarity and regional access. Private markets in the Gulf have traditionally operated through tight networks—family offices, sovereign wealth funds, and established wealth managers controlling deal flow. Digital platforms that bypass those gatekeepers face the challenge of building trust in markets where reputation and personal relationships historically governed transactions.
Founders and capital seekers can list fundraising rounds at no cost, gaining visibility with qualified investors immediately. The company argues this creates alignment: no incentive to push deals that don’t fit, no pressure to close transactions that aren’t ready. Whether that model attracts sufficient deal flow to keep investors engaged remains an open question.
For competitors—traditional brokers, wealth platforms, and global networks like AngelList or SeedInvest—the zero-fee model presents a direct challenge. If FinBursa gains traction, it could pressure incumbents to rethink fee structures or risk losing clients willing to self-direct their private market allocations.
The app launched on both iPhone and Android on 28 April. Early adoption metrics weren’t disclosed, nor did the company reveal how many institutional clients currently use its platform or how many deals have been listed since launch.
What’s clear: the bet is that private market investors—particularly in the Middle East—want control, speed, and anonymity more than they want hand-holding. Whether enough of them will trade the comfort of intermediaries for the autonomy of a mobile app will determine if FinBursa’s model reshapes access or remains a niche alternative.
By year-end, the answer should be visible in the data—if the company chooses to share it.
