Home / News

Featured News


All Other News
OIC Economies
Iran declares US tech giants, American, Israeli banks in region as targets

Iran has said that it will target American and Israeli economic centres and financial institutions in retaliation to an attack on an Iranian bank a day earlier. 

A spokesperson for Khatam-al-Anbiya military command headquarters, said that “the enemy left our hands open to target economic centres and banks belonging to the United States and the Zionist regime in the region,” according to semi-official Tasnim News Agency. 

“The people of the region should not be within a one-kilometre radius of banks,” the spokesperson added. 

Bank Sepah, one of Iran's largest public lenders, came under attack when one of its Tehran-based branches was hit by a missile attack in the late hours of Wednesday night. 

Iran has also issued a list of major American tech giants with regional operations as ‘legitimate targets' for further attacks. 

The list includes offices and assets of tech colossi including those associated with Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Nvidia, IBM, Oracle and Palantir in Israel and around the region.

“With the expansion of the regional war into an infrastructure war, the scope of Iran’s legitimate targets gradually becomes broader,” the post read.

The Middle East has become a hotbed for global tech companies looking to build substantial local presence and ride the region's tech wave. Dubai has become an increasingly preferred destination for tech companies to advance the emirate's ambition of pushing deeper across diverse industries, including technology.

Microsoft operates a major office in Abu Dhabi while Dubai hosts regional headquarters for tech titans, including Meta and Google. 

American hyperscalers and tech giants including OpenAI, Oracle, NVIDIA have bet big on the GCC region, partaking in launching infrastructure and initiatives including Stargate, the next-gen AI infrastructure cluster within the 5-gigawatt UAE-US AI Campus, to serve companies operating within 2,000 miles of the UAE's border. 

However, the region’s digital infrastructure has been increasing susceptible to Iranian attacks in recent days. Three AWS data centres in the UAE and Bahrain sustained drone attacks last week, prompting digital banking and connectivity outages that lasted several days. 

The GCC data center market holds immense potential, looking to double from $3.48 billion in 2024 to $9.49 billion by 2030, fuelled by cloud computing, AI demand, and 2030 initiatives in Saudi Arabia and UAE.

OIC Economies
Shipping disruption amid regional conflict may strain vital sectors  

The blockage of the Strait of Hormuz in response to escalating military conflict following US and Israeli air strikes on Iran, is expected to weaken credit quality across Middle East's vital sectors. 

Several areas of activities, including trade and supply routes, energy and capital flow and tourism are expected to come under strain, according to a study published by S&P Global Ratings. 

Oil prices have surged in the wake of the crisis, with Brent crude oil prices having climbed 11% over the past five days, and nearly 30% since the beginning of the year. 

While higher oil prices are expected to bring some short-term relief to GCC government budgets, it is contingent on whether those barrels can be exported. 

“The extent of obstructions to key trade routes or to production have the potential to induce fiscal strain through weakened revenues, which could be particularly relevant for governments with weaker balance sheets, larger banking systems and limited export options,” the credit rating agency added. 

Oman, the UAE, and Saudi Arabia can partially mitigate the impact through alternative export routes for part of their volumes. Despite alternate routes, Qatar relies on the strait as does Jordan, witj 40% of its exports heading to the Middle East, scaling their exposure to regional trade disruption. Meanwhile, Kuwait is highly reliant on the Strait as an export route, according to S&P

The Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most strategically vital chokepoints, is a narrow waterway that connects the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman to the Indian Ocean for maritime traffic. Approximately a fifth of the world’s oil passes through the waterway, which is roughly 30 miles wide at its narrowest point.

The conflict has escalated the risk of capital outflows for regional financial institutions, and while the duration of hostilities will determine the volume of the outflows, Bahraini and the Qatari banking systems have the largest net external debt position and may require external or government support.

“We classify four out of the six GCC governments as highly supportive of their private-sector commercial banks. in the unlikely event of a banking crisis, there is a high likelihood of extraordinary government support to these banks,” S&P said in a February report.  

However, the conflict could last for weeks, according to US President Donald Trump. The barrage of Iranian drones and missile strikes have targeted military instalments and well as key digital infrastructure, including three AWS data centres in the UAE and Bahrain, leading to multiple digital services outages. 

Customers in the UAE have faced mobile banking outages as the toll of the protracted crisis widens to impact local lenders. 

Capital markets across the region fell on their first day of trading since the conflict broke out. Saudi’s Tadawul All Share Index plunged between 4.8% at the open on Sunday. Dubai Financial Market fell 4.7% on Wednesday, its first day of trading, while Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange plunged 1.9%, with lenders, property firms and utilities leading the losses. 
 

OIC Economies
Emirates, Etihad resume some flights as Iran-US conflict enters third day

UAE-based carriers Emirates and Etihad Airways have resumed limited operations as airlines seek to ease some congestion caused by airspace closures enforced by ongoing Iranian attacks. 

Dubai-based Emirates said it will resume a limited number of flights from the evening of March 2, prioritizing customers with earlier bookings. Etihad resumed flights from Monday, March 2, according to the airline’s website and Flightradar24 data. 

Emirates had said that all flights to and from Dubai remain suspended until 3pm local time on March 3, while Etihad Airways temporarily ceased operations until 2pm local time Tuesday.

Qatar Airways has also suspended operations due to closure of Qatari airspace, with a further update expected by 9am Doha time on March 4. 

Oman Air has announced that all flights to and from Amman, Dubai, Bahrain, Doha, Damman, Kuwait, Copenhagen, Baghdad and Khasab between March 4 to 6 have been cancelled. Barring the aforementioned flights, all other flights will operate as scheduled, though the carrier did warn of some possible delays. 

Airspace closures by GCC countries amid ongoing Iranian attacks were the most severe in recent times, leaving tens of thousands of travellers stranded in places such as Dubai and Doha.

Iran’s attack on Gulf countries has entered its third day, making flying a precarious pursuit, compounded further by the fog of war which has led to the inadvertent downing of US fighter jets in Kuwait. 

The UAE’s Civil Aviation Authority said that more than 20,000 affected passengers were supported through temporary accommodation arrangements and rebooking services. Dubai Airports, the authority that manages Dubai International (DXB) and Dubai World Central (DWC), confirmed that limited operations will resume Monday, permitting a select number of flights to operate from both facilities. 

Since the beginning of the conflict, flight cancellations across seven Middle Eastern airports -including Dubai's DXB and DWC, Abu Dhabi's Zayed International Airport, Doha's Hamad International Airport, Bahrain International Airport, Sharjah International Airport and Kuwait International Airport - have exceeded 12,300 in number, according to Flightradar24

More than 100,000 Britons have registered their presence in the Middle East with the UK government, part of around 300,000 people who are currently present across Gulf countries, including residents, holidaymakers and those transiting through.  

Aviation infrastructure across the Gulf region has come under siege with Iranian missiles and drones attacking critical architecture. DXB’s concourse took a minor hit with four people sustaining injuries. A drone attack struck Kuwait International Airport, leaving multiple people with minor injuries and causing damage to Terminal 1.

In an interview with CNN, the Qatari foreign ministry ‌spokesperson said that country intercepted Iranian attacks that targeted ⁠civilian infrastructure, ⁠including the international airport. 

Airlines around the world, from the UK and France to North America and Asia have axed flights to the Middle East amid mounting regional tensions.

Lufthansa suspended flights to Dubai until March 4 and to other cities including Tel Aviv, Beirut, Tehran and Amman, until March 8. British Airways halted flights to the Gulf, Israel and Jordan through mid-March while North American carriers, including Delta and United, have all paused Middle East operations. Air Canada has suspended all flights to and from Dubai and Tel Aviv until March 23.

 

OIC Economies
Gulf capital markets slump as Iran conflict roils region

Stock markets across the Gulf region opened to a jittery start on Sunday in first signs that the Iran-US conflict has impacted regional financial markets. 

Saudi’s Tadawul All Share Index (TASI) plunged roughly 4.8% at the open on Sunday, hitting a 35-month low before paring more than half of its loss, closing 2.18% lower. 

The benchmark index of Muscat Exchange fell 103.18 points from its previous day's close of 7393.37, amid a regional sell-off triggered by mounting tensions. 

Boursa Kuwait suspended trading on Sunday, citing exceptional circumstances. 

“Based on the decision of the Board of Commissioners of the Capital Markets Authority, and due to the exceptional circumstances, the country is currently experiencing Boursa Kuwait announces the suspension of trading effective 01-03-2026, until further notice,” a notice on Boursa Kuwait’s website read. 

The UAE’s financial regulatory authority also announced the closure of both its bourses - Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange and Dubai Financial Market – on March 2 and 3. The country has faced a barrage of drone and missile attacks over the weekend. 

The UAE Capital Markets Authority said that it would continue to assess the situation on an ongoing basis, taking any further measures as necessary.

Brent crude prices surged from Friday's close of $72.48 a barrel to $78.36 a barrel on Sunday, with the overall price having risen 16% over the past month. 

Felipe Elink Schuurman, CEO and co-founder at Sparta Commodities said that a softer oil price hike than the one anticipated over the weekend indicates a mere logistical disruption, not a supply one. 

“It is indeed surprising that most polls over the weekend were expecting a rise in flat price of $80 to $90 (a barrel]. It started off [Monday] morning at $81 but then it came down,” Schuurman said during a Gulf Intelligence podcast,. 

“For the time being, there is a sort of de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz, mostly because of insurance companies putting in barriers or increasing their insurance coverage or trading companies not willing to take their vehicles through the Strait. So, it basically means that it is a logistical disruption but we have not yet seen any kind of supply disruption.” 

The Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most strategically vital chokepoints, is a narrow waterway that connects the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman to the Indian Ocean for maritime traffic. Roughly 30 miles wide at its narrowest point, oil tankers carry approximately 20 million barrels of oil each day through the Strait.

“Oil markets have been the most visible expression of markets pricing in geopolitical conditions with Brent opening 12.5% higher,” wrote Edward Bell, acting group head of research and chief economist at Emirates NBD.

“Markets have since pared those moves as there is a renewed focus on diplomatic avenues but in the meantime, oil will be highly subject to headlines and in particular, the status of the Strait of Hormuz.”

OIC Economies
Saudi budget deficit hits five-year high amid oil price rout 

Saudi Arabia’s budget deficit in the fourth quarter grew to its highest in five years, as reduced oil prices continue to weigh on state revenues. 

The kingdom's fourth quarter budget deficit rose to $25.3 billion (94.9 billion Saudi riyals) from $23.6 billion (88.5 billion Saudi riyals) recorded during the previous quarter and $15.3 billion (57.6 billion Saudi riyals) posted in the fourth quarter of 2024. 

The budget deficit brought the year’s total shortfall to $73.6 billion (276 billion Saudi riyals), which Riyadh has entirely funded through borrowing.  

Fourth quarter revenues slid to $41 billion (154 billion Saudi riyals) from $45.6 billion (171 billion Saudi riyals) recorded during a year-earlier period.

Oil and non-oil revenues rose over the previous quarter but dipped on an annual basis. Oil revenues slid 10% year-on-year to $41.1 billion (154.2 billion riyals) in the fourth quarter of 2025, alongside non-oil revenues which fell 7% to $32.7 billion (122.6 billion Saudi riyals).

Expenditures rose a nominal 3% over the previous year, with compensation to employees constituting up two-fifth, according to data shared by the Ministry of Finance.

“With oil prices well below the estimated fiscal breakeven level, Saudi Arabia has ramped up borrowing in international debt markets and diversified its funding sources, while also reassessing the pace and scale of major Vision 2030 projects to prioritize efficiency and private sector participation,” the MUFG report read.  

“While officials expect the deficit narrow to 3.3% of GDP this year, investors anticipate it will remain higher, reflecting persistent spending pressures and a challenging oil revenue environment.”  

The kingdom has been running budget deficits since 2022, as reduced oil revenues strain public finances. Brent crude, which serves as a benchmark for roughly two-thirds of the world's crude oil supplies, is hovering around $71 per against the backdrop of a substantial American military buildup in the Middle East. 

Saudi Arabia needs oil to be north of $92 per barrel this year and at $86.6 per barrel in 2026 to balance its books, according to the IMF. 
 

OIC Economies
Saudi rows back on HQ rule to execute strategic projects

Around two years after mandating foreign firms to establish regional headquarters in Saudi Arabia or risk losing out on lucrative government contracts, Riyadh has rowed back on its HQ rule. 

The move, launched last November, aims to strike a balance between the requirement of a local presence with the pragmatism of fulfilling strategic projects that warrant specialized expertise or financial competitiveness, Asharq Al-Awsat reported.

The Local Content and Government Procurement Authority has notified all relevant bodies of the mechanism to apply for exemptions through Etimad, the kingdom’s official financial services portal. 

Public sector entities can request for a waiver on one or more projects or for a specified time period, so long as the application is submitted prior to launching a tender or initiating direct contracting procedures.

Some exceptions to the original legislation continue to exist, such as foreign firms without regional headquarters can still compete for - and win - government tenders if the bids are technically superior and 25 per cent cheaper than the next best offer, or if there are no competing offers. Contracts with an estimated value of $266,000 or less are also exempt. 

The original legislation, which was enforced in January 2024 barring the government and state-backed institutions from signing contracts with foreign companies with regional headquarters outside the kingdom, was intended to limit economic leakage and boost job creation.  

More than 700 multinational companies had relocated their regional headquarters to Riyadh by early 2026, exceeding the initial target of attracting 500 companies by 2030. 

The move comes amid a slew of changes introduced by the kingdom, including the appointment of a senior PIF official as the new investment minister and opening up its financial markets to all foreign investors earlier this month. 

OIC Economies
Saudi, UAE lead AI startup funding in MENA

Saudi Arabia and the UAE have emerged as top destinations for AI startup funding across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), as both nations look to scale their investments in frontier technologies. 

Enterprises across the UAE and Saudi Arabia raised $519 million and $235 million, respectively, making up 60% and 27% of the MENA’s AI funding last year, according to data platform Magnitt. 

The reported attributed strong financial services sectors as a key driver, with most VC investors hosting offices in either Riyadh or Dubai. 

Saudi Arabia and the UAE have launched colossuses to drive their national AI ambitions – G42 backed by Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund Mubadala Investment Company and Humain, a subsidiary of Saudi sovereign wealth fund, Public Investment Fund.

The US recently authorised the export of advanced AI chips to G42 and Humain, slated to receive American semiconductors, equivalent of up to 35,000 Nvidia Blackwell chips.

The International Monetary Fund said that the GCC is well-positioned to leverage digitalization, with most countries close to or on par with advanced economies, especially in terms of digital infrastructure and affordability. 

“Similar to digitalization, the GCC’s AI preparedness exceeds that of an average EM (emerging market), supported by rapid advances in AI investments (including by SWFs), R&D (e.g., initiatives with universities and research centers, and investments in GenAI foundational models), and talent (including the attraction of AI skills from abroad),” the fund said in its GCC note published on December 6. 

AI captures sizeable slice

AI startups in MENA raised $858 million in 2025, making up 22% of the region’s total funding and 29% of its deal volume. 

AI-native startups, with their appetite for compute and model development, received 69% of total AI capital, while AI-enabled startups raised $267 million.

AI-native are startups whose core product or service is built on AI, while AI-enabled startups deploy the technology within their workflows and processes

Enterprise software stood as a top performer, drawing 30% of the region’s AI funding with 59 deals, signalling at the growing adoption of AI solutions by corporates. 
 

OIC Economies
Bahraini banks may require support if regional conflict arises

Bahraini banks could face a funding shortfall of $1.9 billion as of year-end 2025, in the event of a full-blown US-Iran conflict, threatening GCC stability and capital flows, according to recent analysis.  

The kingdom’s absolute funding shortfall, which will total 8% of its external assets after assumed haircuts, will be a steep decline from a $1.7 billion surplus in 2024, S&P Global said in a stress analysis report published on Tuesday. A haircut refers to a reduction applied to the value of an asset in percentage terms. 

Under a severe stress scenario where GCC lenders could face external funding outflows, Bahraini lenders may require domestic or regional support.

The shortfall reflects Bahraini banks' “rising external debt and an increase in assumed haircuts on investment portfolios that results from high exposure to sovereign creditworthiness”, the report added. 

Qatari lenders have pared their funding shortfall compared with previous estimates, with the potential shortfall declining from $7.4 billion as of year-end 2024 to $4.4 billion as of year-end 2025. The financial gap is anticipated to be covered by its government, thus limiting its overall risk.

Banks in the UAE, Kuwait, and Oman, on contrast, maintain strong net external asset positions and are well placed to cope with outflows. This scenario extrapolates to Saudi lenders, too, despite rapidly rising external debt levels. Saudi banks witnessed a sharp rise in their net external debt, increasing fivefold to $54.6 billion at year-end 2025, from $9.1 billion at year-end 2024.

On balance, GCC lenders have been highly exposed to external debt outflows amid rising geopolitical risks and regional tensions since 2023. 

“We continue to view external debt outflows as a plausible risk under a severe stress scenario - particularly in the event of a prolonged conflict involving non-regional and regional actors and sustained, broad-based attacks,” the report added. 

In case of an escalation, GCC lenders may face external funding outflows that may equate to half of interbank liabilities, and 30% for non-resident deposits. Lenders may then liquidate their external positions to fund the outflows that could result in reduced assets valuations, according to the analysis.   

Such liquidations could cause haircuts of 10% on interbank deposits and 20% on deposits held at head offices and branches. Furthermore, a reduction of 20% is possible on investment portfolios abroad, typically held for liquidity management; and 100% on loans to non-residents and other assets, the agency said. 

Qatari banks' net external debt stood at approximately $121 billion at the end of last November, equalling about 32% of total domestic lending. Non-resident deposits and interbank funding totaled $109 billion around the same time, constituting around 52% of banks’ external debt, according to S&P

“We consider this debt to be subject to the potential for outflows in the event of a significant spike in geopolitical risk. We note, however, that such outflows were limited when targets in Qatar were attacked by Iran and Israel in 2025, with about $3 billion of total outflows in each of August and October,” the rating agency said last month.  


Most Viewed

Events & Courses

Special Coverage

30 Notable Islamic Fintechs - 2026

View all

30 Notable Islamic Fintechs - 2025

View all

Global Islamic Fintech Report 2025/26

View all

15 Most Active VCs in the Islamic Digital Economy

View all

State of the Global Islamic Economy (SGIE) 2024/25 Report

View all

Global Islamic Fintech Report 2024/25

View all

Top 30 Digital Islamic Economy Startups 2024

View all

Top 30 OIC Halal Products Companies 2023

View all

Gaza Crisis

View all

Global Islamic Fintech Report 2023/24

View all

The State of the Global Islamic Economy 2023/24 Report

View all

Global Islamic Fintech Report 2022

View all

State of the Global Islamic Economy 2022

View all

Food Security

View all

Women in the Islamic Economy

View all

COVID-19 and the Global Islamic Economy

View all

E-book: Impacts of the COVID-19 outbreak on Islamic finance in OIC countries

View all

State of the Global Islamic Economy 2020/21

View all

Global Islamic Fintech Report 2021

View all