Khaleej Times

Bahrain counts on fintech, Saudi ties to revive economy

- Davide Barbuscia

manama — In smart new offices with Gulf views, a dozen firms work on digital currencies, blockchain­based payments and other financial technology.

Bahrain FinTech Bay, inaugurate­d last month, is part of the kingdom of 1.4 million’s drive to revive its reputation as the Middle East’s top banking and business centre. Saudi Arabia, a friend and sponsor, came to rescue Bahrain as growth and foreign investment slowed. Then the plunge of oil prices from 2014 dramatical­ly reduced state revenues, its credit ratings fell and debt soared. Large debts still pose a risk as interest rates rise, but after a push to turn the economy around,

Bahrain’s central location in the Middle East makes it a critical online payments hub Philippe Berard, chief digital officer, PayTabs

Bahrain is starting to see initial signs of recovery. PayTabs, a Saudi company specialisi­ng in online payment solutions, will set up a base in Bahrain FinTech Bay in May.

“Bahrain’s central location in the Middle East makes it a critical online payments hub,” PayTabs chief digital officer, Philippe Berard, said in a statement earlier this month.

“Internet penetratio­n in the kingdom is over 90 per cent — one of the highest in the world and it is only natural that e-commerce thrives against this backdrop.”

Tap Payments, a mobile payment company founded in Kuwait, moved to Fintech Bay last month. Chief executive Ali Abulhasan said Bahrain had regulatory advantages when compared to other Gulf Cooperatio­n Countries. Amazon Web Services, the cloud computing subsidiary of e-commerce giant Amazon, decided last year to establish operations in Bahrain.

Foreign investment from a record 71 companies was $733 million last year, up from $281 million and 40 companies in 2016, according to the government’s Economic Developmen­t Board. This contribute­d to average annual growth in real gross domestic product of more than 3.5 per cent in the first three quarters of last year after rates below 3 per cent in 2015 and 2016. Central bank governor Rasheed Mohammed Al Maraj said last month that growth could accelerate further as strong oil prices have bounced to around $65 a barrel from below $50 in mid-2017.

Importantl­y for Bahrain’s role as a financial centre, assets in its banking system appear to have stabilised. Total banking assets edged up 1.4 per cent from the end of 2016 to $188.7 billion last November, latest data shows, though they remained well below pre2011 levels above $200 billion.

Part of Bahrain’s revival is based on good fortune: the oil price rebound. Fitch Ratings said this accounted for half of the narrowing of the government’s deficit last year. — Reuters

 ?? — AP ?? An oil pump works at sunset in the desert oil fields of Sakhir, Bahrain. Saudi Arabia, a friend and sponsor, came to rescue Bahrain as growth and foreign investment slowed.
— AP An oil pump works at sunset in the desert oil fields of Sakhir, Bahrain. Saudi Arabia, a friend and sponsor, came to rescue Bahrain as growth and foreign investment slowed.

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