Facebook Pixel 7 Women That Took Their Companies Public In 2021 | Forbes Middle East - English - Business - Lisez cet article sur Magzter.com

Essayer OR - Gratuit

7 Women That Took Their Companies Public In 2021

Forbes Middle East - English

|

February 2022

Despite economic uncertainty, favorable market conditions throughout 2021 led to an increased appetite for companies entering public markets. Meet the women that have successfully taken their company public over the last year.

- JAMILA GANDHI

7 Women That Took Their Companies Public In 2021

Whitney Wolfe Herd

Company: Bumble

IPO valuation: $4.9 billion

In February 2021, dating app Bumble made its 32-year-old cofounder Wolfe Herd, the youngest woman to take a company public. Wolfe Herd, who owns a 21% stake in Bumble, became the youngest self-made woman billionaire after going public on Nasdaq in the same month. At the time of writing, she was no longer a billionaire. The startup was the second big dating app to go public after Match Group’s 2015 debut. Bumble was established in 2014 by Wolfe Herd and Andrey Andreev as a social network designed around women, which eventually transformed into a dating app where only women can make the first move. Andreev exited the company in November 2019.

Heather Hasson and Trina Spear

Company: FIGS

IPO valuation: $3.5 billion

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

ROAD WARRIORS

APPLIED INTUITION'S COFOUNDERS ARE BUILDING SOFTWARE THAT CAN DRIVE EVERYTHING FROM PLANES TO TANKS TO AUTOMOBILES. BUT TO EXPAND BEYOND ITS $800 MILLION BUSINESS SELLING TECH FOR CARS, THEY WILL HAVE TO TAKE ON TESLA, GOOGLE, NVIDIA AND A HOST OF OTHER STARTUPS JOSTLING FOR POLE POSITION IN THE AUTONOMY RACE.

time to read

9 mins

March 2026 - English

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

EGYPT'S 50 MOST VALUABLE COMPANIES 2026

Egypt's stock market staged a sharp rebound in 2025, with total market capitalisation rising more than 40% to $67.3 billion as of January 2026.

time to read

1 mins

March 2026 - English

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

How The Middle East's Biggest Companies Are Rewriting Their Playbooks

From oil and utilities to telecoms and banking, the region's largest firms are rethinking how they operate - shifting capital, embracing AI, and rebuilding for a very different decade ahead.

time to read

5 mins

March 2026 - English

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

Music, Without Borders - Spotify And The Rise Of MENA Talent

As Spotify expands across the Middle East and North Africa, the question is no longer whether the region’s music can travel it already does. The real issue isn't reach, but power who captures the value created, and whether global platforms are helping build durable creative economies or simply scaling distribution.

time to read

4 mins

March 2026 - English

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

WHY LAMBORGHINI ISN'T GOING FULLY ELECTRIC

THE CAR INDUSTRY SAYS THE FUTURE IS SILENT. LAMBORGHINI IS BETTING THAT EMOTION STILL MATTERS MORE.

time to read

3 mins

March 2026 - English

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

'Lotus' Lowdown

Set-jetters who want to say they stayed at the hotel from The White Lotus Season 4 before it even started filming should start booking now.

time to read

1 min

March 2026 - English

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

Why WHOOP Thinks Wearables Have Been Solving The Wrong Problem

As wearables compete to measure more of the human body, WHOOP is making a quieter case: the real problem was never data collection. It was knowing what to do with it.

time to read

2 mins

March 2026 - English

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

The Al State: How Gulf Governments Turned Artificial Intelligence Into Critical Infrastructure

Artificial intelligence is now a core layer of national infrastructure across the Gulf, shaping decisions around what is built locally, what is shared, and how dependence is managed.

time to read

3 mins

March 2026 - English

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

FUTURE WRIST

Industrial designer Marc Newson has created luggage for Louis Vuitton, pens for Montblanc and bottles for Hennessy, but the 62-year-old Australian has always had a special passion for timepieces.

time to read

1 min

March 2026 - English

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

RESTAURANTS THAT MATTER NOW

The Middle East has quietly become one of the world's most interesting places to eat - not because it's chasing trends, but because it no longer needs to. There is depth now: chefs who understand their craft, kitchens that know their audience, and restaurants built to last rather than open loudly. This is not a ranking or a review. It's our edit of the places setting the pace right now - the ones you trust when the choice matters.

time to read

1 mins

March 2026 - English

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size