Algeria
Digital Economy
Yassir Acquires Kawarizmi: Algeria’s First Retail Media Play
Yassir acquires Paris-based Kawarizmi Group to build a retail media network across North Africa. What the deal means for Algeria's digital advertising market.
Digital Economy
Yassir’s $150M Bet: Building Algeria’s Answer to Grab and Gojek
The funding round has been covered. The $150M headline, the Bond-led syndicate, the super app ambition — that story is familiar to anyone following North African tech.
Startups
Algeria’s Stock Exchange: Now Open to Startups at Zero Cost
On February 1, 2026, Algeria's financial regulator COSOB — the Commission d'Organisation et de Surveillance des Opérations de Bourse — announced that labeled startups would face zero fees to list on the Algiers Stock Exchange through 2028. It was a policy announcement that made headlines.
Startups
What Failed Algerian Startups Teach Us: Post-Mortems and Hard Lessons
Nobody publishes post-mortems in Algeria. This is not unique to Algeria — failure stigma is a feature of entrepreneurial culture globally, and the Arab world has a documented cultural aversion to associating one's name with a failed business.
Startups
Moustachir SPA: How Algeria’s First Startup IPO Changed the Exit Game
On December 31, 2024, a month-long public subscription closed on the Algiers Stock Exchange. A two-year-old consulting startup called Moustachir SPA had offered 125,000 shares at 760 dinars each.
Digital Economy
The Digital Souk: Algeria’s Informal Economy Is Going Online
Algeria's government has been digitizing with increasing urgency: 500 projects, a sovereign cloud, e-government portals, fiber optic expansion. What the official digital transformation narrative rarely acknowledges is that Algeria already has a thriving digital economy — it is just informal.
Digital Economy
Halal Fintech in Algeria: Sharia-Compliant Products in a 99% Muslim Market
Algeria's financial sector has a paradox at its core. The country is 99% Muslim, with a substantial proportion of the population holding religious convictions that prohibit riba — the charging or payment of interest.
Startups
Sending Money Home: Fintech Startups Targeting Algeria’s Diaspora Remittances
Somewhere between five and seven million Algerians live outside their country. The majority are in France, with significant communities in Canada, Belgium, and the Gulf states.
Digital Economy
28 Startups, One Delivery Problem: Algeria’s Last-Mile War
Algeria has 28 logistics technology startups fighting over the same delivery corridor. That number — tracked by Tracxn as of January 2026 — is extraordinary for a market of Algeria's size, and it signals two things simultaneously: the e-commerce logistics opportunity is real