Nine Moroccan companies earned spots on Forbes Middle East’s annual ranking of the 100 Most Valuable Companies in the Middle East and North Africa, placing Morocco fourth overall by number of firms represented. Only the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar had more companies on the list, making Morocco the highest-ranked African nation in the region’s most closely watched corporate index.
The ranking, published annually by Forbes Middle East, draws from market capitalization data across 12 stock exchanges in 11 countries, with figures recorded as of January 31, 2026. The top 100 firms together carry a combined valuation of $3.7 trillion, equal to roughly 86% of the region’s total listed market value of $4.3 trillion. Gulf Cooperation Council nations account for 88% of the companies on the list, along with the vast majority of that aggregate value.
Saudi Aramco sits at the top of the rankings with a valuation of roughly $1.7 trillion, representing close to 40% of the region’s total listed market value on its own. The energy sector, though represented by just nine firms, accounts for $1.9 trillion in combined value, while banking and financial services leads by volume with 34 companies worth a collective $732.6 billion.
Morocco’s banking and telecom sector lead the charge
Among Moroccan entrants, Attijariwafa Bank holds the highest position, ranked 33rd overall with a market capitalization of $17.4 billion. The bank operates more than 7,200 branches across 27 countries and reported total assets of $82.2 billion, alongside net income of $1.1 billion in the first nine months of 2025.
Maroc Telecom ranked 50th with $10.4 billion in revenue and approximately 81 million customers spread across Africa. The company recently launched 5G services, signaling a push toward next-generation connectivity across its operating markets.
Mining group Managem Group landed at 48th with a valuation of $10.8 billion. The company operates across nine African countries and recently recorded its first gold production at the Boto mine in Senegal, while also expanding through a $420 million stake sale in Sudan.
Port operator Marsa Maroc came in at 60th with a value of $7.53 billion, a figure tied to strategic investments in maritime infrastructure and international partnerships. Construction firm SGTM, valued at $5.6 billion, recently raised $531.6 million through a public listing. Energy producer TAQA Morocco, valued at $5.42 billion, is advancing green ammonia and large-scale infrastructure projects as part of Morocco’s broader energy transition.
Financial institutions BCP Group, valued at $6.2 billion, and BANK OF AFRICA, at $4.97 billion, each continue expanding their footprint across dozens of African markets, reinforcing Morocco’s standing as a regional banking hub. LafargeHolcim Maroc rounds out the group at $4.66 billion, backed by steady revenue growth in 2025.
What Morocco’s rise signals for Africa
The strong showing from Moroccan companies reflects something larger than one country’s good year. African firms are scaling regionally at a pace that is beginning to show up in rankings once considered the exclusive domain of Gulf-based giants.
Morocco’s portfolio spans banking, telecoms, energy, construction, mining, and port logistics. That breadth gives it a kind of corporate resilience that single-sector economies rarely achieve. As companies like Maroc Telecom roll out 5G and TAQA Morocco chases green energy targets, the country is building an economic identity that extends well beyond its own borders.
For the rest of Africa, Morocco’s presence on this list is a tangible data point. The continent’s companies are not simply growing. They are competing.

