This was primarily driven by the Ports, Economic Cities & Free Zones (EC&FZ), and Maritime & Shipping clusters.
Group EBITDA rose 9 per cent YoY to AED 1.17 billion ($318.5 million) with a 24.2 per cent margin, while profit before tax increased 5 per cent to AED 519 million ($141 million).
Net profit was flat at AED 445 million ($121 million) due to higher taxes, with EPS steady at AED 0.07 ($0.019).
Operating cash flow nearly doubled to AED 1.14 billion ($310 million), supporting positive free cash flow.
Capex reached AED 928 million ($267 million), with intensity dropping to 19 per cent of revenue, mainly directed at port and shipping assets.
READ: AD Ports, MBME to advance digital TradeTech solutions
Container throughput at the ports cluster grew 17 per cent YoY, and general cargo volumes rose 13 per cent.
Khalifa Port’s CMA Terminal, which began commercial operations in early 2025, reached a quarterly utilisation rate of 80 per cent.
In EC&FZ, land leases reached 1.6 square kilometres year-to-date (YTD), with staff accommodation utilisation increasing to 80 per cent from 63 per cent in Q2 2024.
The Maritime & Shipping cluster saw container feeder volumes increase 34 per cent YoY, and its vessel fleet expanded to 34 bulk, multipurpose, and RoRo ships, up from 28 in Q2 2024.
The marine services fleet grew to 74 vessels from 65 a year earlier.
Despite ongoing geopolitical challenges, including the Red Sea crisis and shifting global trade flows, the Group maintained operational resilience and capitalised on alternative routing demand.
In Egypt, a 50-year agreement was signed with the Suez Canal Economic Zone to develop a 20 square- kilometres (km²) logistics and industrial hub near East Port Said.
The Group also advanced its maritime services in Bahrain through its Noatum Maritime-ASRY joint venture.