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The Top Digital Threats Facing Organizations in the Region

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Top threats

    • Of nearly 30,000 critical risk alerts identified by Help AG in 2023, the dominant threat categories were found to be Credential Theft (49%) and Brand Abuse (39%), while Data Leakage and Phishing represented 10% and 1.5% of use cases respectively.
    • Cyberthreats majorly impacted the Education (36%), Aviation (29%), and Healthcare sectors (15%), which represented a combined 80% of targeted organizations in the GCC.
    • Organizations in the Government (8%), Investment (7%), and Banking and Finance (4%) sectors followed, as transactions in these sectors became increasingly digitized.
    • There was a 42% jump in Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attacks in 2023, with Help AG recording 213,434 attacks of this nature.
    • The longest DDoS attack lasted for over 5 days, while the largest attack by bandwidth logged in at a record-breaking rate of 461.5 Gigabits per second (Gbps).
    • 40% of DDoS attacks targeted the Government sector in 2023, followed by 29% for the Telecoms sector, 9% for Aviation, and 5% for Oil & Gas.
    • The Financial and Telecoms sector experienced the largest DDoS attacks by volume, logging in at 461.5 Gbps and 302.2 Gbps, respectively.
    • Trends in cybersecurity investment
    • In 2023, cyber defense investments doubled amid the continuing digital transformation surge, with GCC enterprises and governments exhibiting growth in:

    Cybersecurity Estate Consolidation: 100+% growth in technology and vendor relationships consolidation.

    Managed Cyber Defense: Investment skyrockets due to the increasing complexity of the digital threat landscape.

    Cybersecurity Advisory: 2x growth in investments due to the growing regulatory compliance requirements.

    DDoS Protection: Complementing classic DDoS protection with adaptive solutions.

    • Investments spanned preventative, detective, responsive, and predictive controls.
      • Multi-factor authentication implementations rose by 16%, while patch management processes saw a 13% increase, highlighting critical efforts to thwart threat actors and maintain system integrity.
      • Implementation of web application firewalls increased by 9%, and identity access management also grew by 9%, indicating a strengthening of web and identity security frameworks.
      • Privileged access management saw a 10% increase, enhancing security for critical server access, and dedicated data activity monitoring rose by 15%, reflecting growing concerns over data privacy and protection.

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    Middle East M&A Activity Surges 260% Despite Market Volatility, Driven by Strategic Diversification and Digital Transformation

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    Middle Eastern mergers and acquisitions (M&A) have demonstrated remarkable resilience and strategic focus, with deal values surging 260% to $53 billion in the first nine months of 2025 compared to the same period last year. This exceptional growth comes despite experiencing its lowest levels since the COVID shock earlier in the year, according to BCG’s annual Global M&A Report 2025 released today. The region’s performance is driven by a select group of experienced dealmakers making disciplined, strategic investments amid continued global market volatility.

    Samuele Bellani Managing Director and Partner

    Monthly data reveals that Middle East M&A activity over the past three years has consistently exceeded historical averages, recovering strongly from the pandemic dip. BCG’s M&A Sentiment Index, a forward-looking indicator of deal activity, shows increasingly positive sentiment across all sectors, with confidence reaching its highest levels in technology and energy. While Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia recorded a 6% increase in aggregate deal value, the region continues working to surpass its 10-year average.

    “The Middle East’s M&A landscape in 2025 reflects a sophisticated approach to capital deployment, where strategic diversification meets digital ambition,” said Samuele Bellani, Managing Director & Partner at BCG. “We’re witnessing experienced dealmakers making highly disciplined investments that simultaneously strengthen traditional energy capabilities while building new pillars of economic growth in technology and industrial services.”

    M&A Energy Sector Consolidation Drives Regional M&A Leadership

    Energy transactions remained the cornerstone of Middle Eastern M&A activity throughout 2025, as state-backed entities pursued aggressive domestic consolidation while simultaneously expanding their international footprint through strategic acquisitions. A landmark $13.4 billion acquisition reinforces the UAE’s ambitious international expansion strategy in the chemicals sector, while a $693 million purchase in power generation and utilities exemplified the ongoing consolidation within the sector. These strategic moves underscore sector resilience while supporting the region’s gradual but determined pivot toward renewable energy sources, positioning national champions for the global energy transition.

    The industrial sector emerged as a central pillar of the Middle East’s economic diversification strategy, with governments and sovereign wealth funds systematically building capabilities beyond traditional hydrocarbon dependencies. A $925 million acquisition highlights the accelerating consolidation of critical supply chain infrastructure across the region. This transaction reflects a broader, long-term initiative to establish the Middle East as a premier hub for industrial and logistics services, fundamentally reducing dependency on energy revenues while enhancing the region’s global competitiveness across multiple sectors.

    Digital Transformation Fuels Technology Sector Emergence

    Technology, media, and telecommunications gained unprecedented momentum in 2025, establishing itself as an emerging pillar of regional deal activity and signaling a fundamental shift in investment priorities. A transformative $3.5 billion acquisition, representing one of the largest digital entertainment transactions globally, demonstrates the region’s serious ambitions to become a global leader in gaming and digital entertainment. A $855 million acquisition strategically expanded the Middle East’s telecommunications influence into European markets. These high-profile transactions clearly demonstrate that Middle Eastern acquirers are strategically deploying substantial capital to capture growth opportunities across digital platforms, connectivity infrastructure, and entertainment services, aligning perfectly with broader national digital transformation agendas.

    “What we’re seeing is a fundamental transformation in how Middle Eastern investors approach M&A,” said Samuele Bellani, Managing Director & Partner at BCG. “The region’s sovereign wealth funds are not just engines of deal flow—they’re architects of a new economic paradigm that balances traditional energy strengths with cutting-edge technological capabilities and world-class industrial infrastructure.”

    As 2025 enters its final months, the Middle East has distinguished itself as one of the world’s most active and strategically focused M&A markets. Sovereign wealth funds continue providing an exceptionally deep pool of liquidity capable of sustaining robust deal flow regardless of global economic cycles or market volatility. Government-led strategies persistently drive consolidation across industrial and technology sectors, creating unprecedented resilience against the region’s historical reliance on hydrocarbon revenues. The combination of steady foreign interest across TMT, financial services, and healthcare sectors demonstrates the region’s unique dual advantage of supporting sustainable growth while accelerating economic diversification initiatives.

    The sustained momentum in Middle Eastern M&A activity reflects a mature understanding of global market dynamics, where strategic patience combines with decisive action to create lasting competitive advantages across multiple sectors and geographies.

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    BCG report shows Middle East rapidly emerging as a global nexus for scalable AI data centers

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    Boston Consulting Group (BCG) announced the launch of its new report, “AI Data Centers: An Opportunity in the Middle East”, during the sidelines of MWC Doha 2025, revealing that the Middle East is rapidly positioning the region as a rising global nexus for AI data center investment and innovation. As global demand for AI infrastructure accelerates, with data center power needs projected to grow from 86GW in 2025 to 198GW by 2030, BCG finds that the Middle East has a uniquely competitive advantage in supplying scalable, cost-efficient AI compute capacity.

    Middle East: A Critical New Hub of AI Data Center Investment

    BCG’s report highlights that the Middle East is not merely participating in the global AI infrastructure race; it is fast emerging as a critical new hub of AI data center development. The region benefits from distinctive structural advantages. Its strategic geography places it within a 2,000-mile radius of over 3 billion people, enabling it to serve Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Global South with non-latency-sensitive AI inferencing at scale.

    Thibault Werle, Managing Director & Partner, BCG

    Competitive cost structures, including up to 50% lower leasing rates, low power tariffs, and advanced cooling systems adopted by regional operators, significantly reduce the total cost of ownership. Meanwhile, markets such as the UAE and Saudi Arabia continue to accelerate time-to-market for new data centers through fast-track development, dedicated investment teams, and special economic zone clusters such as Masdar City’s Stargate Campus. This momentum is reinforced by the region’s expansive land availability, scalable power ecosystems, and the planned ~720 Tbps Fibre in the Gulf (FIG) submarine cable project.

    Harold Haddad, Managing Director & Senior Partner BCG

    Thibault Werlé, Managing Director and Partner at Boston Consulting Group (BCG), said: “The Middle East is undergoing a pivotal transformation as it positions itself to become a global hub for AI infrastructure. With strategic investments, progressive digital policies, and ambitious national visions across Qatar, the UAE, and Saudi Arabia, the region is building the foundation for scalable, next-generation AI compute. Qatar’s ongoing initiatives, showcased during MWC Doha, reflect the broader regional commitment to shaping a competitive and globally relevant AI ecosystem that can serve markets across Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Global South.”

    Country Momentum Across the Region

    The report outlines major national initiatives shaping the Middle East’s AI infrastructure landscape. Saudi Arabia has launched HUMAIN with a targeted 1.9GW AI data center capacity, along with partnerships with NVIDIA, AMD, AWS, DataVolt, and Groq to develop multi-hundred-megawatt AI campuses, including the world’s largest AI compute center. The UAE is advancing a 5GW AI campus in Abu Dhabi under the US-UAE AI Acceleration Partnership and is importing 500,000 GPUs for regional and US partners, supported by Microsoft’s USD $15.2 billion AI and cloud infrastructure investment. Qatar’s strategic investments complement these national efforts and reinforce a GCC-wide push toward establishing a global AI compute corridor.

    Qatar Leading Regional Momentum

    Qatar is steadily strengthening its position as a competitive player in the global AI and technology race, supported by strategic investments from the Qatar Investment Authority (QIA). These include the establishment of a USD $3 billion global platform with Blue Owl Capital to accelerate international AI and cloud infrastructure expansion, as well as QIA’s participation in Anthropic’s USD $13 billion funding round. These initiatives underscore Qatar’s commitment to advancing its digital capabilities and align closely with the ambitions of the Qatar Digital Vision 2030.

    MWC Doha serves as a testament to the country’s growing role in shaping the regional technology landscape, reflecting Qatar’s intent to contribute meaningfully to the Middle East’s emerging AI infrastructure ecosystem.

    Reflecting on BCG’s participation at MWC Doha, Harold Haddad, Managing Director and Senior Partner noted: “Qatar’s digital ambition is rapidly taking shape, driven by decisive leadership and a deep commitment to innovation. In line with Qatar National Vision 2030 and Qatar’s Third National Development Strategy, the country is harnessing AI and emerging technologies to cement its role as a competitive force in the global digital economy. Hosting Mobile World Congress Doha reflects this momentum and Qatar’s growing influence as a pivotal hub for technological advancement. At BCG, we are proud to contribute to this journey, partnering across sectors to help build the digital foundations of the future economy.”

    Recommendations for Middle Eastern Governments


    To fully unlock the region’s potential, BCG recommends that governments create streamlined, unified investment packages that integrate key inputs such as land, power, water, and connectivity within clear, time-bound frameworks. Expanding a diverse ecosystem of business and financing models including hyperscalers, GPU-as-a-Service providers, equity platforms, and bond-backed investments will be critical to enabling flexibility for market entrants. The report also emphasizes the importance of strengthening partnerships across chipset suppliers, research institutions, and component manufacturers to accelerate innovation across the AI data center value chain. Developing and retaining world-class digital and AI talent remains a central requirement for long-term competitiveness, capacity building, and sustained innovation.

    As AI continues to reshape economic landscapes, data centers form the critical backbone of global technological leadership. With its strategic geography, favorable economics, and ambitious national digital agendas, the Middle East is uniquely poised to emerge as a global AI data center powerhouse—particularly for regions requiring scalable and cost-efficient AI compute such as the Global South.

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    GCC Ranks 2nd Globally as an AI Powerhouse: High Adoption, Strong Leadership, and Bold Transformation

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    As AI becomes more mainstream, optimism and confidence in the GCC are notably higher than global averages, according to Boston Consulting Group’s (BCG) latest “From Pilots to Progress: AI at Work in the GCC” study. The survey reveals that in 2025, the region ranked 2nd globally in AI adoption, supported by strong leadership and effective digital transformation.  

    The survey highlights that 58% of GCC respondents expressed optimism (up 9 percentage points from 2024) and 45% reported confidence. These figures surpass global averages, indicating a strong regional embrace of AI.

    The study, in collaboration with BCG X, BCG’s tech build and design division, included respondents from Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, ranging from executive suite leaders to frontline employees. It highlights the region’s rapid advancement in AI adoption, in line with national strategies aimed at digital transformation and economic diversification.

    Dr. Lars Littig, Managing Director and Partner at BCG, said:

    “The GCC is emerging as a global leader in AI deployment, with high frontline adoption and leadership support nearly twice the global average. For companies and public sector entities alike, this signals a clear mandate: strategic investment in AI, paired with strong leadership and training, offers a blueprint for enterprise-wide transformation.”

    The GCC showed a strong adoption in regular AI usage, with 78% of frontline employees using GenAI frequently, 27 percentage points above the global average. Among managers and leaders, usage is even higher, reaching 90% and 92% respectively, compared to global averages of 78% and 88%. This widespread adoption reflects a strong regional commitment to integrating AI into daily workflows.

    About 45% of respondents in the GCC found their AI training satisfactory (versus 36% globally), and 54% of frontline employees received clear guidance from leadership (compared to 25% globally). However, this also correlates with a higher risk of “shadow AI” use, with 63% expressing they would use AI tools even if not authorized by the company, compared to 54% globally.

    AI is also delivering tangible productivity benefits. Over half (53%) of the report’s respondents save more than an hour daily through AI, with time reallocated to a variety of tasks. These include performing more tasks (58%), working on strategic initiatives (38%), finishing work earlier and with better quality (58%), and pursuing professional development (38%). Others use the time to experiment with GenAI (43%), connect with coworkers (43%), or engage in non-work activities (33%). However, only half receive guidance on how to best use this saved time, which may limit the full impact.

    The real transformation lies ahead with two critical developments: agentic AI systems that can operate autonomously to complete complex workflows and make decisions, and the emerging opportunity to invent entirely new business solutions with AI that go beyond efficiency gains to create novel value propositions and revenue models.

    “AI is undoubtedly already a powerful driver of performance, which will only get more embedded in organizations, enhancing workflows and how teams operate and collaborate. Indeed, in the GCC, over half of employees are saving more than an hour daily and re-investing that time into strategic initiatives, innovation, and employee well-being. For business leaders, this makes a powerful case for scaling AI not just for efficiency, but for unlocking sustainable growth and talent potential,” added Rami Mourtada, Partner and Director at BCG.

    As the GCC continues to lead in GenAI adoption and confidence, the BCG study underscores how strong leadership, effective training, and high awareness are driving productivity and innovation, while also flagging risks like unauthorized AI use. It offers valuable insights for policymakers and business leaders to shape responsible, future-ready AI strategies by benchmarking against global data.

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