u/wishworthweb

[WTS] Heera sweet in Dubai want to sell

If you love premium Indian sweets and unique gift boxes, check out Heera Sweets Nagpur — a trusted sweet brand since 1952.

Their specialties include:

🍊 Orange Burfi (Nagpur Special) - soan cake - 10 aed for 250gm
🥜 Figs & Nuts - 10 aed for 250gm
🌴 Dates Delicacy - 12 aed for 250gm
🎁 Premium Assorted Gift Boxes 12 aed for 250gm

More weight and options DM me

reddit.com
u/wishworthweb — 1 day ago
▲ 7 r/ourUAE+4 crossposts

What’s the biggest investing mistake you’ve made in UAE markets?

Everyone talks about winning stocks, but the best lessons usually come from mistakes.

It could be:
- Buying a stock purely because of hype

- Holding too long and missing the exit

- Ignoring diversification

- Choosing real estate at the wrong time

- Sitting in cash while markets rallied

For me, the most valuable insights often come from understanding why an investment thesis failed.
👉 What was your biggest investing mistake in UAE (DFM, ADX, real estate, or global investing from UAE)?
👉 What did you learn from it?
👉 What would you do differently today?

The goal is to help new investors avoid expensive lessons and build better long-term strategies.

Let’s join this community as will start writing some real research articles on UAE stocks.

reddit.com
u/wishworthweb — 5 days ago
▲ 8 r/UAEInvestor+1 crossposts

We’ve been operating a healthy food concept through a third-party setup for some time and the response honestly pushed us toward officially launching our own operation in Business Bay Dubai.

Even with the current conflict/market uncertainty, demand for healthy delivery meals, subscriptions, and convenience-based food seems to be growing strongly in UAE.
Now we’re entering the final stage before launch and trying to make smart decisions around scaling, operations, and funding in the next few days.
Curious to hear from people who’ve built or scaled

F&B/delivery businesses here:

What would you prioritize first?
What mistakes should be avoided at launch stage?
Did you bootstrap or bring investors in early?

Open to hearing ideas, experiences, or different approaches from people in this space.

reddit.com
u/urbanpatch — 6 days ago
▲ 2 r/ourUAE+3 crossposts

As owner I have opportunity to increase the rent for my tenanted apartment. I am looking for increasing by 7% - in rear it is showing no increase what can I do?

At the same time I am staying in a rented appartment where I for same 7% increment notice, but in rera rental index it is showing 5% in eligible.

What are my best options.

reddit.com
u/wishworthweb — 8 days ago
▲ 25 r/ourUAE+3 crossposts

Let’s make this interesting.
You have AED 100,000 to invest ONLY within UAE options:
DFM / ADX stocks

UAE real estate (fractional or full)

Bonds / fixed income

Gold

❌ No US stocks
❌ No crypto

Your goal:
Build the best possible portfolio for next 3–5 years

Example:
40% Emaar

30% DEWA

20% ETF / Bonds

10% Cash

I will share mine once we get 10 people response.

reddit.com
u/wishworthweb — 8 days ago
▲ 6 r/UAEInvestor+1 crossposts

I have identified a compelling opportunity in Dubai’s commercial real estate market, where investment cycles can range from just 3 to 5 months. With the right strategy and execution, there is strong potential to achieve returns that could double the initial investment within a short period.
Dubai continues to be one of the most dynamic and opportunity-rich real estate markets in the world. High demand, rapid development, and a business-friendly environment create ideal conditions for sourcing undervalued assets and turning them into profitable ventures.
My approach focuses on identifying strategic opportunities, optimizing asset value efficiently, and exiting at the right time to maximize returns. I am currently seeking a serious and forward-thinking investor to partner with and scale this model into a consistent, high-performing investment strategy.
In Dubai, opportunities are abundant—you just need the vision and the right partnership to capture them.

reddit.com
u/CompetitiveLead7774 — 5 days ago
▲ 2 r/UAEInvestor+1 crossposts

I’ll go first 👇

Age: 28
Salary: AED 18,000/month
Net Worth: ~AED 210,000

Breakdown:
• ETFs: 90k
• Crypto: 40k
• Savings: 60k
• Emergency fund: 20k

Goal: AED 1M by 35 💰

Curious where everyone stands in UAE 🇦🇪
No judgment — just real numbers.

👇 Drop yours (or vote anonymously):

  1. < 50k
  2. 50k – 200k
  3. 200k – 500k
  4. 500k – 1M
  5. 1M+
reddit.com
u/wishworthweb — 10 days ago

Hey everyone! I'm u/wishworthweb, a founding moderator of r/UAEInvestor.
This is our new home for all things related to UAE Emirate and non residents . We're excited to have you join us!

What to Post
Post anything that you think the community would find interesting, helpful, or inspiring. Feel free to share your thoughts, photos, or questions about any thing.

Community Vibe
We're all about being friendly, constructive, and inclusive. Let's build a space where everyone feels comfortable sharing and connecting.

How to Get Started

  1. Introduce yourself in the comments below.
  2. Post something today! Even a simple question can spark a great conversation.
  3. If you know someone who would love this community, invite them to join.
  4. Interested in helping out? We're always looking for new moderators, so feel free to reach out to me to apply.

Thanks for being part of the very first wave. Together, let's make r/UAEInvestor amazing.

reddit.com
u/wishworthweb — 12 days ago
▲ 1 r/UAEInvestor+1 crossposts

I’ve been digging into Watania recently and wanted to get the community’s view.
Company: Watania International Holding (DFM: WATANIA)
Sector: Takaful (Islamic Insurance) + Investment Holding

📊 Key Numbers:
Revenue growth: +76% YoY
Net profit growth: +250%+ YoY
P/E ratio: ~4.6 (very low vs global peers)
Market cap: ~AED 150M (small cap)

🧠 My View:
This looks like a classic undervalued small-cap:
✔ Cheap on paper
✔ Strong recent growth
BUT…
❗ Could remain ignored for years due to low market interest
❗ Not a momentum stock

⚖️** The Real Question**:
👉 Is Watania a hidden gem before rerating
OR
👉 Just another value trap in DFM small caps?

💡 Bonus: Other UAE Stocks I’m Watching
Emaar → Real estate leader
DEWA → Stable dividend play
Salik → Monopoly-style toll revenue
Emirates NBD → Banking giant

reddit.com
u/wishworthweb — 12 days ago
▲ 293 r/UAEInvestor+1 crossposts

The headline EPS of $5.11 caught everyone's attention but honestly that's kind of a distraction — there was a big non-operating gain baked in there.

The number that actually matters is Google Cloud hitting $20 billion in quarterly revenue, up 63% year over year. But here's the part that gets interesting — operating income for Cloud was $6.6 billion. That's nearly 3x what it was a year ago.

Google Cloud was basically a money pit until like 2023. It was growing fast but burning cash, and most investors valued Alphabet as "Search + optionality." Cloud was a nice story but not something that moved the needle on earnings.

>Q1 2026 Cloud operating income: $6.6B Q1 2025 Cloud operating income: ~$2.2B That's a ~$4.4B swing in one year from a single segment

That $6.6B in operating profit is not a rounding error anymore. Its a legit second profit engine. And it's scaling with real operating leverage — revenue tripled in profit terms, not just in top line.

The way I think about it: Alphabet used to be a company where you were basically just buying Search ads. Everything else was a free option. Now Cloud is big enough and profitable enough that it actually changes your valuation math. If Cloud can keep compounding anywhere near this rate with margins expanding, the earnings mix gets way less dependent on one ad business.

The risk is capex. AI infrastructure is expensive and Google is spending aggressively. If growth slows before the capex pays off you've got a margin problem. But so far the numbers say the opposite — margins are expanding as revenue scales.

fwiw I think the market mostly gets this already, GOOGL has rerated a lot. But the speed of the Cloud profit ramp surprised me tbh.

I wrote up more details on the linked note if anyone wants to look at the other segments.

u/Wooden_Fondant_703 — 12 days ago
▲ 3 r/NagpurStartups+1 crossposts

Met Ritesh Agarwal (OYO CEO) at C7 in Nagpur. Here's what happened when I pitched him.

So this happened today and I'm still processing it.

I'm sitting at a C7 in Nagpur, working on my laptop like any other day. I look up for a second and realize the guy sitting at the table behind me is Ritesh Agarwal. Yes, THAT Ritesh Agarwal. The OYO guy.

For a moment, I just stared. Then I realized he was about to leave.

I've been building an AI learning platform for kids. We have early users, traction is slow but steady, and I'm trying to figure out how to scale globally from a tier 2 city in India.

I had two options:

  1. Let him walk out and regret it forever
  2. Shoot my shot

so I chose option 2.

and this is what happened

As he was getting up to leave, I approached him. No rehearsed pitch, no formalities. Just straight up:

"Hi Ritesh, I'm building a Personalized AI learning platform for kids. We're based here in Nagpur and have early users. Would love to connect with you for mentorship on scaling this globally."

He stopped. Smiled. And said something I didn't expect:

"You're building this from Nagpur? That's really good."

We spoke for just a few minutes, but I could see it in his reaction,he was genuinely happy to see someone from a city like Nagpur working on a global startup.

We took a photo together (still feels surreal), exchanged a few more words, and that was it.

What I Learned:

  1. If I'd hesitated for 10 more seconds, he'd have been gone.
  2. His reaction to "building from Nagpur" showed me that founders from smaller cities building global products is still rare enough to stand out.
  3. Shoot your shot. The worst that happens? They say no or ignore you. The best that happens? You get 3 minutes with someone who's built a $10B company.
  4. I didn't have a perfect pitch deck or a rehearsed elevator pitch. I just told him what I'm building and why I need help.

For Anyone Wondering:

Yes, I've approached founders before,Jay Kotak, Nikhil Kamath, Nithin Kamath, Ashish Hemrajani,at events and random places. That confidence comes from just doing it once and realizing they're human too.

But this one felt different. Random coffee shop. No event. No crowd. Just two people talking about startups in a city that most people think is "too small" for this stuff.

My Advice if You Ever Get a Chance Like This:

  • Check if they're in a rush (body language, phone checking, etc.)
  • Be respectful of their time,keep it short
  • Be clear about what you want (advice, connection, feedback,not investment on the spot)
  • Don't fanboy/fangirl. Treat them like a person, not a celebrity.
  • Take the damn photo. You'll regret it if you don't.
u/rohit_raut5 — 5 days ago