DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Veteran Middle East CEO says business in the region isn’t retreating—it’s resetting

June 22, 2026
in News
Veteran Middle East CEO says business in the region isn’t retreating—it’s resetting
  • In today’s CEO Daily: A CEO in the UAE has a message for Western peers.
  • The big leadership story: The case for a SpaceX-Tesla merger.
  • The markets: Mixed globally as investors await developments on an Iran peace deal.
  • Plus: All the news and watercooler chat from Fortune.

Good morning. What’s it like doing business in the Middle East right now? The Strait of Hormuz has closed again, a lasting U.S.-Iran peace deal remains elusive, and global airline profits have been cut in half this year, according to IATA, which blames high fuel costs and war-related disruptions in the Middle East. Visitor arrivals to the region dropped 14% in the first quarter. You could be forgiven for thinking things look dire.

But that’s not the case, argues Johannes Hummer, the Dubai-based CEO of Freedom Telecom International, an arm of Freedom Holding Corp., which helps telecom operators embed fintech services into their platforms, primarily across emerging markets. He’s spent more than a decade operating out of the region and previously ran Vodafone’s Middle East and Africa business. His message to Western executives watching from a distance: the companies showing up right now are the ones that will own the next chapter of Gulf growth.

Hummer points out that while the UAE reported 13 deaths from the fallout of drone attacks early on, there have been no fatalities reported since late March. He says local companies are using the war-related downturn to improve their operations and infrastructure. “Hotels are closing down for innovation, doing long-overdue maintenance and getting ready for autumn when the season comes back up,” he told me recently, pointing to the government’s rollout of a range of new infrastructure projects, too. “Traffic was getting out of control because too many people came in and the infrastructure couldn’t keep up. Now, they’re focusing on getting it right.”

Moreover, he notes that companies like Revolut and Nubank have recently moved headquarters to Dubai. In addition to being a good base for sourcing multicultural talent and expanding into Asia or Africa, Hummer argues that the U.S. is trailing the UAE when it comes to going digital. “I have all my stuff on one app—my car license renewal, insurance, bills, electricity, visa stuff. If your car is up for renewal, you can do it all in two minutes,” he said.

Every country expects companies to establish a physical presence in order to tap its market. As Hummer puts it: “If you come now, you are giving a very strong signal of commitment.” To better understand the perspectives and players in this shifting business climate, subscribe to our new Fortune Gulf Brief newsletter, written by veteran journalist Melissa Hancock and edited out of London by Kamal Ahmed. Contact CEO Daily via Diane Brady at [email protected]

The post Veteran Middle East CEO says business in the region isn’t retreating—it’s resetting appeared first on Fortune.

The Election System Wasn’t Built for This
News

The Election System Wasn’t Built for This

by The Atlantic
June 22, 2026

Not so long ago, the Republicans who ran elections in one of the nation’s most important battlegrounds—Maricopa County, Arizona—largely got ...

Read more
News

Europe Is Expecting Record-Breaking Temperatures. Here’s What to Know.

June 22, 2026
News

Democrats’ Great Alaskan Hope

June 22, 2026
News

Metro’s new D Line stations tell a tale of two (transit) cities

June 22, 2026
News

Software engineers are facing an ‘identity crisis bordering on depression,’ Menlo Ventures partner says

June 22, 2026
Starmer announces he’ll resign as U.K. prime minister with Burnham confirming bid to succeed him

Starmer announces he’ll resign as U.K. prime minister with Burnham confirming bid to succeed him

June 22, 2026
Alan Greenspan, most powerful central banker of modern times, dies at 100

Alan Greenspan, most powerful central banker of modern times, dies at 100

June 22, 2026
Paradise Revisited

Paradise Revisited

June 22, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026