Anghami Inc. (ANGH) shares surged nearly 50% in after-hours trading Tuesday, climbing to $3.48 after the Middle Eastern streaming platform released six-month results that showed some serious momentum. The question is whether growth alone can fix what's been a brutal year for the stock.
Revenue Doubles as Integration Pays Off
The United Arab Emirates-based streaming platform, which serves the Middle East and North Africa region, reported 97% year-over-year revenue growth to $48.4 million for the six months ended June 30. That's the kind of number that gets investors excited. The growth was driven primarily by the OSN+ integration and expanding subscription income, which hit $43 million for the period.
Paid subscribers doubled to 3.54 million, while total registered users topped 120 million. Those are impressive metrics for a platform competing in a region where streaming services are still establishing themselves.
Earlier this year, Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) injected $57 million into OSN Streaming Ltd., which happens to be Anghami's majority owner. The investment gave Warner Bros. Discovery exclusive access to HBO content and Max Originals in the region, validating Anghami's strategic positioning.
CEO Elie Habib highlighted the platform's operational improvements, noting it "delivered 99.9% uptime and improved app store ratings from 3.8 to 4.6 stars." That's not just vanity metrics—reliability and user satisfaction matter when you're trying to retain paying subscribers.
Growth Comes With a Price Tag
Here's the catch: Anghami reported a $37.1 million loss for the period. The company attributes this to subscriber acquisition costs and integration expenses, which is standard for high-growth companies but still something investors watch closely.
The company also announced new distribution partnerships with Talabat, Noon, and PlayStation during the period, expanding its reach across different platforms and services.
What's Next for Anghami
Management expects revenue growth to continue in the second half of the year. However, integration investments will keep pressuring profitability until operational synergies and cost controls kick in. The company confirmed major content launches for early 2026, including exclusive regional productions and expanded international content partnerships.
The Stock Remains Near Rock Bottom
Despite Tuesday's after-hours pop, the context is sobering. Anghami closed regular trading at $2.32, down 4.85%, before the surge. The stock has declined 71.84% over the past 12 months, a brutal decline that puts it near its 52-week low of $2.25. The 52-week high sits at $8.40, which now feels like a distant memory.
With a market capitalization of just $21.03 million, Anghami is a small-cap story with big ambitions. The stock's relative strength index (RSI) stands at 31.66, indicating oversold territory. Positioned at just 1.14% of its 52-week range, the stock is much closer to its lows than its highs, suggesting limited upside potential without a strong catalyst to push the price higher.
The after-hours rally suggests investors liked what they saw in the six-month results. Whether that enthusiasm survives into regular trading and beyond depends on whether Anghami can turn its growth story into a path toward profitability.




