Calls for Credit References Collaboration to Prevent Financial Fraud in the Middle East

Demands for coordinating efforts to combat financial fraud amid financial inclusion and digitization (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Demands for coordinating efforts to combat financial fraud amid financial inclusion and digitization (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Calls for Credit References Collaboration to Prevent Financial Fraud in the Middle East

Demands for coordinating efforts to combat financial fraud amid financial inclusion and digitization (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Demands for coordinating efforts to combat financial fraud amid financial inclusion and digitization (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Credit reference agencies and financial institutions should cooperate to prevent financial fraud in the Middle East, especially the Gulf countries, which have become one of the world's important financial and economic centers, according to a financial expert.

Comprehensive framework

The Head of Financial Crime Compliance at LexisNexis Risk Solutions, Jonny Bell, said that 22 percent of the GCC population does not deal with banks in a region with a 5.2 percent overall economic growth rate in 2022.

The GCC countries have developed large-scale digitization plans to help bridge the gap and transition to a cashless society.

Bell said that digital transformation is at the heart of the strategic economic plans of Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, where building a comprehensive framework for digital payment is an essential element of these goals.

The financial sector in the Middle East showed that digitization could expand access to financial services for society.

Global players

Bell indicated that the region attracted global players in financial technology and created local start-up companies through specialized free trade zones, including the Dubai International Financial Center and regulatory protection funds such as the Saudi Central Bank (SAMA).

The growing number of financial technology companies in the Middle East, which offer a model "buy now...pay later" and Sharia-compliant microfinance, attract millions of unbanked individuals into the financial system.

Compliance approach

Bell noted that innovative financial technology providers and banks could increase consumer access by enhancing transparency in their approach to financial crime compliance.

The operations can expand beyond the usual sources of credit checking agencies to broader credit checks and the use of anonymous data such as educational records, professional records, or court records.

The expert argued that such non-commercial data expands access to financial products for those without a long-term credit history. Companies can better understand economic conditions and make sound decisions by increasing data digitization of potential customers and consumers.

Bell noted that enhancing Financial Crimes Compliance (FCC) protocols help improve financial inclusion and identify new subsets of consumers better qualified to access financial products.

Financial authorities across the Middle East also encourage these practices, including SAMA, which requires banks to set up an administrative unit to combat and address financial fraud.

One operation out of every ten

He disclosed that, on average, one out of every ten financial transactions in the UAE is subject to "malicious bot" attacks carried by fraudsters, according to a study conducted by LexisNexis entitled "The True Cost of Fraud."

The study indicated that the monthly malicious bot attacks increased by 39 percent in the UAE compared to 12 months ago. Sophisticated transactional attacks include identity theft, creation and use of synthetic identities, account takeover, and early default.

Multiple defenses

Bell noted that, due to the current circumstances, companies need a multi-layered fraud defense that targets criminals at every point of contact with the consumer.

He explained that companies could get rid of malicious bots by coordinating verification and operations using fraud analysis technology, noting that it can reduce fraud costs for financial institutions and the risks associated with giving complete access to financial services to new consumers.

Important collaboration

It is essential to increase cooperation between the entities as the Middle East develops as a global financial and commercial hub, said the expert, noting that this requires expanding access to financial services and greater coordination between credit reference agencies, financial institutions, and fraud prevention teams.

Bell concluded that increased innovation and collaboration among all stakeholders would lead to greater inclusiveness of financial services across socio-economic groups.



Türkiye Says Trade Deficit Widened 21.7% in April

FILE PHOTO: The Bosphorus strait is pictured through the window of a passenger aircraft over Istanbul, Türkiye February 1, 2019. REUTERS/Murad Sezer/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: The Bosphorus strait is pictured through the window of a passenger aircraft over Istanbul, Türkiye February 1, 2019. REUTERS/Murad Sezer/File Photo
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Türkiye Says Trade Deficit Widened 21.7% in April

FILE PHOTO: The Bosphorus strait is pictured through the window of a passenger aircraft over Istanbul, Türkiye February 1, 2019. REUTERS/Murad Sezer/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: The Bosphorus strait is pictured through the window of a passenger aircraft over Istanbul, Türkiye February 1, 2019. REUTERS/Murad Sezer/File Photo

Türkiye's trade deficit widened 21.7% year-on-year to 12$ billion in April, Trade Minister Omer Bolat said on Friday.
Exports stood at $20.9 billion in April, while imports amounted to $33 billion, he told a press conference.
The euro's gains against the US dollar since US President Donald Trump introduced new 10% baseline tariffs on all economies and slapped duties totaling 20% on the European Union had a positive effect on Turkish exports amounting to $440 million, Bolat also said.

Meanwhile, the Turkish manufacturing sector contracted in April as output and new orders continued to ease amid subdued demand, with firms scaling back employment and purchasing activity, a survey showed on Friday.
The Istanbul Chamber of Industry Türkiye Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) was unchanged at 47.3 in April. This marked the 13th consecutive month of easing business conditions, with any reading below 50.0 pointing to a contraction in activity.
Although new export orders eased the latest slowdown was the least pronounced so far this year, and the moderation in new business from abroad was also less marked than that seen for total new orders, the survey showed.
Manufacturers continued to scale back employment and purchasing activity, instead reducing inventories, the survey showed.
Manufacturers reported that suppliers quickened their deliveries in April, the survey showed, while the rate of input cost inflation quickened amid currency weakness and higher costs for raw materials.
"An uncertain international economic environment added to the challenges facing Turkish manufacturers in April. As such, further moderations in new orders, output and exports were recorded by the latest PMI survey," said Andrew Harker, Economics Director at S&P Global Market Intelligence.
"That said, there were some signs of improvement, raising hopes that the sector could potentially move closer to growth territory in the months ahead."