Gulf Business Invest

GEARING FOR MORE GROWTH

MOVING TOWARDS MORE HOMOGENISE­D REGIONAL FRAMEWORKS CAN CATALYSE A WAVE OF NEW FINTECHS TO EXPONENTIA­LLY SCALE GLOBALLY, SAYS IDNOW’S CEO

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QHow do you see the growth of the fintech sector in the Middle East region?

The growth of the fintech sector is driven by both regulation and innovation. Regulators have traditiona­lly operated on a state or national remit rather than the regional focus. Moving towards more homogenise­d regional frameworks and applying internatio­nal standards can catalyse a wave of new fintechs to scale across not just their home territory but regionally and even globally. State-run sandbox programmes are also essential for pre-startup, helping to incubate ideas and provide camaraderi­e among fellow innovators to support growth.

When it comes to innovation of financial services, this is also occurring at the enterprise level, where brick-and-mortar banks and institutio­ns are moving into digitalise­d models.

They are even forming their own fintechs, often operated under a different brand. So far, competitio­n has driven attitudes rather than collaborat­ion – the ambition of big banks to not fall behind agile startups has spurred incumbent organisati­ons to level up their digital processes.

There is a mobilisati­on towards more efficient operating methods, including faster and more convenient ways of identity verificati­on to speed up onboarding and conversion, prevent fraud and, of course, be compliant to changing/new regulatory requiremen­ts.

When it comes to innovation of financial services, this is also occurring at the enterprise level, where brick and mortar banks and institutio­ns are moving into digitalise­d models. They are even forming their own fintechs, o ten operated under a di erent brand”

When it comes to fintechs, they are learning from the existing banks and using those lessons to shape the future and do things differentl­y. While big banks have the strength of scale and large customer databases, startups benefit from being able to create digital-first infrastruc­ture without overhangin­g legacy systems. Fintechs are also taking advantage of an appetite for investment in the region. The recent example of Rain Financial’s $110m Series B round underlines this point.

What are the regulatory risks every fintech company should have on their radar?

Every GCC state has different regulatory requiremen­ts, so fintechs need to balance their growth plans with the rules of operating in each jurisdicti­on. To achieve sustainabl­e growth, they must take on the right amount of regulatory risk and balance their expansion with compliance.

Having the right technology in place that can be deployed seamlessly in any country is vital for the fintech scale. With secure, compliant and seamless identity verificati­on steps, robust onboarding processes help reduce the risk of fraud and protect businesses from money laundering activities.

Data residency laws and data privacy are fundamenta­l for all businesses to follow. For fintechs, it’s crucial to ensure the right kind of licencing for specific activities, which might include proving business maturity, auditing and hitting milestones/targets, before graduating to more comprehens­ive licencing and advanced activities. Government regulation­s must keep up with them to stimulate ecosystem growth.

With the cryptocurr­ency industry expanding, regulation­s are becoming a challenge. So, how can customers stay ahead of a fastchangi­ng industry regulation?

It’s essential for cryptocurr­ency organisati­ons to select the right partner so that there isn’t any disruption or lag time in reacting to changes in regulation. Our technology and experience help support firms through growth and can identify investors.

The big challenge for cryptocurr­ency and NFTs is trust. Customers are wary because of online scams – take the recent example of Logan Paul and the purchase of fake Pokémon cards.

Scammers can take the upper hand without proper digital identity verificati­on and flagging of fraudulent activity. In the same way for cryptocurr­encies, being able to identify fraudulent operators before transactio­ns take place is essential in moving crypto from trending to being trusted, mainstream and full of opportunit­ies.

Compliance and verificati­on are a big part of this. While each jurisdicti­on decides regulation, businesses can use more robust processes of verificati­on to their advantage to build trust in their communitie­s and differenti­ate from challenger­s.

While big banks have the strength of scale and large customer databases, startups benefit from being able to create digitalfir­st infrastruc­ture without overhangin­g legacy systems. Fintechs are also taking advantage of an appetite for investment in the region”

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