logo
UAE Central Bank fines exchange house AED10.7 million

UAE Central Bank fines exchange house AED10.7 million

ARN News Center4 days ago
The Central Bank of the UAE (CBUAE) has imposed a fine of AED10.7 million on an exchange house for violations of anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing regulations.
The decision was taken after an investigation conducted by the Central Bank revealed that the exchange house failed to "comply with anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism policies."
The CBUAE, through its supervisory and regulatory mandates, works to ensure that all exchange houses, their owners and staff abide by the UAE laws adopted to safeguard the transparency and integrity of the UAE financial system.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tarabut Secures In-Principle Approval from the Central Bank of the UAE, Marking a Milestone for Embedded Finance and Financial Inclusion
Tarabut Secures In-Principle Approval from the Central Bank of the UAE, Marking a Milestone for Embedded Finance and Financial Inclusion

Web Release

timean hour ago

  • Web Release

Tarabut Secures In-Principle Approval from the Central Bank of the UAE, Marking a Milestone for Embedded Finance and Financial Inclusion

Tarabut Secures In-Principle Approval from the Central Bank of the UAE, Marking a Milestone for Embedded Finance and Financial Inclusion Tarabut, MENA's leading open banking and embedded finance platform, has received in-principle approval from the Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates (CBUAE) following the introduction of the UAE's Open Finance regulation. This milestone positions Tarabut at the forefront of Open Finance in the region and marks the third national regulatory license for the company, after Bahrain and Saudi Arabia. With this approval, Tarabut becomes the first regional fintech to be licensed under Open Finance frameworks in all three major Gulf economies, underscoring its critical role as the infrastructure layer powering the future of financial services in the region. Tarabut's technology enables regulated financial institutions, lenders, insurers, and digital platforms to leverage customer-permissioned financial data for real-time credit decisions, income verification, and personalised offerings. By embedding these capabilities directly into partner platforms, Tarabut unlocks inclusive, intelligent, and accessible financial services, at scale. 'This is a pivotal step forward for financial inclusion in the UAE and across the region,' said Abdulla Almoayed, Founder and CEO of Tarabut. 'We're proud to partner with the Central Bank of the UAE to help realise the national vision for Open Finance. Tarabut's infrastructure delivers real-time, data-driven products – credit cards for the underserved, embedded SME financing, and more, driving real economic value and enabling access where it's needed most.' Across the region, Tarabut has powered transformative use cases such as: Credit cards for thin-file customers Revenue-based financing for SMEs Pre-check tools that reduce underwriting costs AI-driven financial insights that personalise user journeys These solutions are directly aligned with national economic goals, supporting entrepreneurship, reducing credit barriers, and improving financial health for individuals and businesses. With real-time connectivity to all major banks in Saudi Arabia and Bahrain, and now regulatory clearance in the UAE, Tarabut is uniquely positioned to scale embedded finance and open banking across the Middle East, delivering infrastructure that is inclusive by design and built for impact.

Tarabut's open finance platform secures in-principle approval from CBUAE
Tarabut's open finance platform secures in-principle approval from CBUAE

Arabian Business

time3 hours ago

  • Arabian Business

Tarabut's open finance platform secures in-principle approval from CBUAE

Tarabut, one of MENA's leading open banking and embedded finance platforms, secured in-principle approval from the Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates (CBUAE) that will help it connect real-time to major banks in the country and deliver faster and secure services and infrastructure. This follows the introduction of the UAE's Open Finance regulation and positions the Dubai-based company at the forefront of open finance in the region. It is the third national regulatory license for Tarabut, following Bahrain and Saudi Arabia. Open finance is a secure way for financial institutions to open their systems to accredited third-party providers. Using customer-consented financial data to build applications and innovative financial services can create solutions that provide retail, SME, and corporate consumers with better ultimate control over their information. 'Ultimately, this system can offer customers greater choice in their financial services, and provide better service value,' CBUAE said on its website. A recent MarkNtel Advisors research in June this year projected the global open banking market size to reach US$136.13 billion by 2030, growing at a CAGR of 27.6 per cent from US$31.54 billion in 2024. This growth is driven by the ongoing digital transformation within the banking sector, where both innovative digital banks and traditional institutions are modernising their operations to remain competitive, the research added. With this approval, Tarabut becomes the first regional fintech to be licensed under open finance frameworks in all three major Gulf economies, underscoring its critical role as the infrastructure layer powering the future of financial services in the region. Abdulla Almoayed, Founder and CEO of Tarabut, commented: 'This is a pivotal step forward for financial inclusion in the UAE and across the region. 'We're proud to partner with the Central Bank of the UAE to help realise the national vision for Open Finance. Tarabut's infrastructure delivers real-time, data-driven products – credit cards for the underserved, embedded SME financing, and more, driving real economic value and enabling access where it's needed most.' Tarabut's technology enables regulated financial institutions, lenders, insurers, and digital platforms to leverage customer-permissioned financial data for real-time credit decisions, income verification, and personalised offerings. By embedding these capabilities directly into partner platforms, Tarabut unlocks inclusive, intelligent, and accessible financial services at scale. Across the region, Tarabut has powered transformative use cases such as credit cards for thin-file customers; revenue-based financing for SMEs; pre-check tools that reduce underwriting costs, and AI-driven financial insights that personalise user journeys. These solutions support entrepreneurship, reduce credit barriers, and improve financial health for individuals and businesses.

South Africa's finance minister and central bank governor at odds over inflation target
South Africa's finance minister and central bank governor at odds over inflation target

Zawya

time4 hours ago

  • Zawya

South Africa's finance minister and central bank governor at odds over inflation target

The South African central bank's decision to lower its inflation target last week without the sign-off of the finance ministry has raised questions among investors about policymaking cohesion in Africa's largest economy. South African Reserve Bank Governor Lesetja Kganyago and Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana rarely disagree in public, but they have been at odds on this issue. Godongwana on Friday, 1 August 2025 dismissed expectations that he would quickly endorse the bank's preference to aim for 3% inflation rather than the middle of the 3%-6% target range. Kim Silberman, portfolio manager at Matrix Fund Managers, said Thursday's Sarb announcement raised "questions around where the mandate for inflation targeting sits". Markets nevertheless cheered the decision, with South African government bonds outperforming and yields at five-year lows. They are set for a 2.2% return this week, outstripping Turkey, Chile, Brazil and Mexico. Piotr Matys, senior FX analyst at InTouch Capital, said the Sarb's commitment to anchor inflation would have long-term benefits. "But over the short term it could prove a risky move, being an additional burden on the economy that faces the prospect of tariffs to the US." Many investors' base case was that the target would eventually be lowered, but Kganyago going it alone gave investors a jolt. "The decision itself was no surprise to the market. It was the Sarb's explicit preference to aim for the lower 3% band of its existing 3-6% CPI target, ahead of the National Treasury formally adjusting the target lower, that caught most by surprise," said Jeffrey Schultz, Head of CEEMEA Economics at BNP Paribas Markets 360. The target, or the process? Kganyago says the current target band is too wide and erodes competitiveness, while Godongwana says decisions on the target should not be taken without the necessary technical and political engagements. Inflation has moved below the current 4.5% target, and inflation expectations have dropped below that figure. Kganyago said on Thursday that the bank could lock in these gains and make sure that South Africans benefit from them. Godongwana, without openly disagreeing about inflation, said he wanted to stick to procedures for making any target changes. "Any adjustments to our inflation-targeting framework will follow the established consultation process," he said in a statement on Friday. "This means comprehensive consultation between National Treasury, the Reserve Bank, Cabinet, and relevant stakeholders – not unilateral announcements that pre-empt legitimate policy deliberation." Lowering the inflation target could cause some short-term pain. Some analysts, like those at Goldman Sachs, expect the central bank may front-load interest-rate cuts. That's based on inflation forecasts more benign than those of the central bank. But equally, it may find itself constrained and need to keep them higher for longer to combat global risks and to force prices lower. Wages and prices also adjust slowly, likely resulting in lower spending, faltering investment, and job losses before benefits can be felt. Trade unions have previously voiced their objections. Governor Kganyago pointed to Section 224 of the constitution, which states the bank must protect the value of the currency, Silberman said. "According to the MPC (Monetary Policy Committee), this decision is procedurally equivalent to when the Sarb announced in 2017 that it would explicitly target 4.5%," said Silberman at Matrix Fund Managers. "Despite any possible tensions between the two institutions, we do not expect that the latest change in the MPC's reaction function with respect to targeting 3.0% will be retracted," she added. At Thursday's briefing, Kganyago said: "Changing policy is never easy." "What you can't do is to refuse to make a decision, because there are costs to a policy. There are costs in sticking to the existing target as well," he said. The finance ministry has previously voiced concerns about the impact on consumers, said Annabel Bishop, chief economist at Investec. "But the MPC has said it will be flexible in aiming to achieve 3% sustainably."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store