Financial News
NAQD Community Bank’ receives preliminary approval for launch
Royal Strategic Partners (RSP), an establishment attracting organizations from across the world to invest in the UAE, received the preliminary approval for a ‘Specialised Banking License’ from the Central Bank of the UAE to launch its NAQD Community Bank (Naqd).
The Naqd, founded by RSP, is poised to offer ground-breaking digital banking solutions that support the long-term growth of companies involved in numerous industries, particularly for businesses utilising the eCommerce and omnichannel spaces. This aligns with its commitment to achieving the UAE’s vision for digital transformation. It will cater to the financial needs and requirements of the banked and unbanked population, as well as micro-small and medium-sized enterprises (micro-SMEs) and start-ups in the UAE. Furthermore, these innovative solutions seek to support small and medium-sized businesses (SMEs) by catering to their needs using cutting-edge Machine Learning – Artificial Intelligence Ecosystem (ML-AI) technology.
Likewise, Naqd will also serve the UAE’s entertainment, transportation and logistics, and retail sector, in addition to the healthcare ecosystem, by providing innovative services that include – equipment financing, project financing, treasury management, and retail solutions. The advanced digital solutions will be effectively utilised to create a sports digital community where Naqd will collaborate with various UAE sports federations and associations to advance the sector’s infrastructure.
Dr Hamad Al Ali, CEO of Royal Strategic Partners stated: “We are pleased to have received the approval to launch our new NAQD Community Bank. The bank employs cutting-edge digital banking technologies and innovations to provide services to various significant economy sectors in the UAE. Naqd will provide its customers with a safe, seamless, and cutting-edge digital banking network supported by a reliable and advanced infrastructure as well as the progressive laws of the UAE’s digital economy. Naqd is slated to promote the development of digital banking in the country by offering customers a unique, secure, and seamless banking experience. By doing so, we aim to support the strong regulatory frameworks being established and the 2023–2026 strategy of UAE Central bank which includes issuing digital currency, promoting digital transformation in the country’s financial services sector through the use of artificial intelligence (AI) and big data solutions, developing more secure financial cloud infrastructure.”
He added: “The MENA region has been witnessing an upward trend in the use of digital banking owing to the high acceptance of fin-tech solutions and ease of adaptation in the market, which caused a significant shift in the industry. Several local and regional banks are presently concentrating on providing its customers with a branchless banking service via mobile banking technology. By adding RSP into the digital banking community and bringing cutting-edge and distinctive services and facilities to various sectors, we expect that the Naqd Community Bank will offer diverse opportunities for companies and individuals across the UAE.”
The Naqd bank will work with the Neo-banks, which is transforming the banking system with its customer-centric approach and services. The UAE’s digital agenda is completely aligned with the disruptive trends of Neo-Banks, resulting in the nation’s banking operations being altered at a rather surprising rate. The Neo banks primarily focus on streamlining operations while carrying out high-volume digital transactions. With more than 50 commercial banks presently operating in the UAE, Neo banking receives strong government support. By working together with the Neo-banks, Naqd will contribute to advancing the UAE’s banking sector to a completely digital world and encourage more new digital banks to launch its operations in the country.
Financial
Long-term wealth investing: first paycheck to million


By Raaed Sheibani, UAE Country Manager, StashAway
Long-term wealth investing is how you turn a first paycheck into lasting freedom in the UAE. With long-term investing, you build a safety net, automate contributions, and let compounding do the heavy lifting—so today’s income becomes tomorrow’s options.
Long-term wealth investing basics: start here
Before your first trade, set a safety net. Build an emergency fund covering 3–6 months of expenses. Keep it liquid and low risk. Then, park it in a cash management solution rather than an idle current account. Inflation erodes purchasing power; a sensible yield helps you sleep at night and stay invested during shocks.
Two engines of long-term wealth investing: DCA & compounding
Dollar-cost averaging (DCA). Invest a fixed amount on a schedule—regardless of headlines. Sometimes you buy high; often you buy low. Over time, your average cost smooths out, emotions calm down, and you capture the market’s trend. Historically, many of the market’s best days cluster near the worst; therefore, timing often backfires, while DCA keeps you in the game.
Compound growth. Returns earn returns. Start earlier, and compounding does more of the work. For example, with a 6% annual return, investing about $490 per month from age 25 can reach $1 million by age 65. Wait until 35 and you’ll need roughly $952; at 45, it’s about $2,023. Time in the market beats perfect timing.
Build your core portfolio for long-term wealth
Your core is the engine. Aim for a globally diversified, long-only mix across equities, bonds, and real assets. Avoid “home bias”; spread exposure across regions and sectors. Moreover, automate contributions so the plan runs while you work.
Consider risk in layers. Equities drive growth. Bonds dampen drawdowns and fund rebalancing. Real assets, including gold, add diversification. Rebalance periodically to lock in discipline: trim winners, top up laggards, and keep risk aligned to your goals.
Make the math work for you
Consistency compounds. Invest $1,000 monthly for 20 years at 6% and $240,000 in contributions can grow to over $440,000. The gap is compounding plus habit. Likewise, fees matter. Lower costs leave more return in your pocket, and tax-aware choices improve after-fee, after-tax outcomes.
Add satellites—without losing the plot
Once the foundation is solid, consider a core–satellite approach. Keep 70–80% in the core. Then, use 20–30% for targeted themes: clean energy, AI, healthcare innovation, or specific regions. Thematic ETFs can express these views efficiently. Because satellites carry a higher risk, cap their size and set clear review dates. If a theme drifts off the thesis, rotate back to the core.
Look beyond public markets as wealth grows
For qualified, higher-net-worth investors, private markets can broaden opportunities. Many large, fast-growing companies stay private longer. Select exposure to private equity, private credit, or venture—sized prudently—may enhance diversification and long-run returns. However, consider liquidity, fees, and manager quality. Align commitments with your time horizon so you never become a forced seller.
Guardrails that keep you on track
Write an Investment Policy Statement (IPS). Define risk level, contribution cadence, rebalancing rules, and when you’ll make changes. Then, automate to reduce decision fatigue. Additionally, track a few metrics: savings rate, fee drag, drawdown tolerance, and progress to goals. Celebrate streaks—months contributed, quarters rebalanced—to reinforce behavior.
A simple roadmap to your first million
- Fund 3–6 months of expenses.
- Automate DCA into a diversified core.
- Rebalance on a set schedule.
- Add satellites thoughtfully, 20–30% max.
- Review fees, taxes, and liquidity.
- Increase contributions as income rises.
Long-term wealth investing is not a secret. It’s a system: foundations first, habits next, scale last. Start small if needed, start now if possible, and let time do its quiet work.
Check Out Our Previous Post on UAE depreciation rules: real estate’s tax edge
Financial
UAE depreciation rules: real estate’s tax edge

By Shabbir Moonim, CFO, The Continental Group
UAE depreciation rules just gave real estate a quiet but valuable upgrade. For owners who elect the realisation basis—deferring tax until sale—the guidance now allows a capped annual deduction up to 4% on original cost or written-down tax value even when properties sit at fair value. That tweak won’t change the reasons to own property; it will change how the asset performs inside a tax-aware portfolio.
UAE depreciation rules: what changed

Historically, businesses faced a trade-off. If you valued property at fair value, you gained market-reflective reporting but lost depreciation. If you used historical cost, you kept depreciation but sacrificed market alignment. The new guidance removes that friction. Consequently, you can keep fair-value reporting and recognise year-on-year tax relief—while still taxing gains on realisation.
How UAE depreciation rules lift internal returns
Property isn’t judged only by appreciation. Cash flow, tax outcomes, and reinvestment capacity matter just as much. Here, the annual deduction acts like an efficiency dividend: it offsets taxable income, raises post-tax returns, and frees cash for debt reduction, maintenance capex, or growth. Even at 4%, the effect compounds across multi-year holds and multi-asset portfolios, especially where liquidity needs are modest.
Fair value plus depreciation: a cleaner model for allocators
With depreciation now available under fair value, asset allocators can compare real estate more cleanly with private equity, listed securities, and insurance portfolios. Assumptions for tax and cash flow become clearer. Moreover, fair-value carrying amounts keep balance sheets aligned with market conditions, while the deduction provides recurring relief that supports stable planning.
CFO checklist: capturing the UAE depreciation benefit
1) Confirm the realisation basis. Ensure the election is in place and tied to the relevant entities.
2) Map the cap. Model the 4% limit by asset; prioritise where cash-flow uplift is most material.
3) Align books and tax. Keep fair-value for reporting; maintain disciplined tax bases and schedules.
4) Optimise structure. Revisit SPVs, intercompany leases, and financing so deductions land against income.
5) Pre-commit reinvestment. Direct freed cash to deleveraging, resilience capex, or higher-yield opportunities.
6) Document governance. Evidence valuations, elections, and controls to reduce audit friction.
Risks and realities: keep perspective
This is a tailwind, not a thesis. Real estate remains a long-horizon asset with rate, liquidity, and operating-cost sensitivities. Tenancy quality, interest cover, and capex discipline still drive outcomes. Cross-border groups should coordinate transfer pricing and substance to avoid leakage. In short, use the rule to improve performance; don’t rely on it to create performance.
Strategic takeaway: predictability that compounds
Small, rules-based changes can meaningfully enhance strategy. The updated UAE depreciation rules convert property from a passive store of value into an active contributor to tax planning and capital management. Just as importantly, they signal policy predictability—guidance that supports investment without favouring any single structure. For owners building across decades, that predictability underpins steadier decisions, clearer reporting, and healthier reinvestment cycles.
Bottom line: Real estate still stores capital, diversifies risk, and stabilises wealth. Now, with fair-value depreciation in play, it also works harder inside the portfolio.
Check out our previous post, Wio Xero integration simplifies UAE SME accounting
Financial
Wio Xero integration simplifies UAE SME accounting

Wio Bank PJSC has taken a practical step that many UAE founders have been waiting for. With the new Wio Xero integration, Wio Business customers can connect their accounts to Xero in a few clicks, turn on direct bank feeds, and reconcile transactions automatically. As a result, owners and accountants gain real-time visibility on cash flow, while manual entry and end-of-month chaos finally recede.
Why the Wio Xero integration matters
SMEs run on time and trust. Therefore, every minute spent chasing statements or keying in data is a minute not spent on sales, service, or product. By piping transactions straight from Wio into Xero, teams eliminate repetitive work, reduce errors, and shorten the month-end close. Moreover, automatic invoice matching and smart suggestions help users spot issues early—before they become a cash-flow surprise.
What customers get on day one
Once connected, bank feeds flow directly into Xero several times a day. Consequently, reconciliations move from hours to minutes. Owners can check live balances, compare inflows and outflows, and track payables and receivables without exporting spreadsheets. Meanwhile, accountants gain cleaner audit trails, clearer narratives for management reports, and fewer back-and-forth emails asking for “the latest statement.”
Designed for UAE workflows
Local context matters. Wio Business already streamlines onboarding, payments, and expense management for entrepreneurs. Now, with Xero in the loop, daily finance operations feel cohesive. Card transactions and transfers appear in Xero quickly; rules and bank-reconciliation suggestions accelerate matching; and dashboards surface the metrics that matter. Additionally, because the integration is direct, there’s no third-party connector to maintain, which means fewer points of failure and greater data control.
Leaders’ view: smarter banking, better decisions
Wio’s Chief Commercial Officer, Prateek Vahie, frames the move simply: make business banking smarter, faster, and more efficient so owners can focus on growth. Likewise, Colin Timmis, Regional Director EMEA at Xero, highlights the benefit for UAE businesses that want better visibility with less admin. In practice, both sides are pushing toward the same outcome—time back, clarity up.
Automation that compounds
Automated reconciliation is more than convenience. It compounds into stronger decision-making because the books stay current. With fresher data, founders can approve hires with confidence, negotiate supplier terms, and plan inventory with fewer assumptions. Furthermore, advisors can deliver forward-looking guidance instead of spending billable hours cleaning transactions.
Independence and control
Because the connection is direct, businesses keep ownership of their data pathways. There’s no rekeying, no CSV juggling, and no waiting for middleware to sync. Therefore, finance teams can standardize processes, document controls, and scale with fewer manual touchpoints. That discipline pays off during funding rounds, audits, and rapid growth phases.
Getting started
Setup takes minutes. In Wio Business, navigate to integrations, select Xero, and authorize the secure connection. Then map your accounts, confirm the start date for feeds, and turn on reconciliation rules inside Xero. From there, keep an eye on unmatched items, refine rules weekly, and enjoy the calm that comes with clean, current books.
Ultimately, the Wio Xero integration gives UAE SMEs what they need most: time and visibility. With direct bank feeds, automated reconciliation, and real-time insight in one workflow, teams spend less energy on admin and more on the work that moves the business forward.
Check out our previous post on Whish Money Mastercard Move: seamless Lebanon remittances
-
Tech News1 year ago
Denodo Bolsters Executive Team by Hiring Christophe Culine as its Chief Revenue Officer
-
VAR5 months ago
Microsoft Launches New Surface Copilot+ PCs for Business
-
Tech Interviews2 years ago
Navigating the Cybersecurity Landscape in Hybrid Work Environments
-
Tech News2 months ago
Nothing Launches flagship Nothing Phone (3) and Headphone (1) in theme with the Iconic Museum of the Future in Dubai
-
Tech News2 years ago
Brighton College Abu Dhabi and Brighton College Al Ain Donate 954 IT Devices in Support of ‘Donate Your Own Device’ Campaign
-
Editorial10 months ago
Celebrating UAE National Day: A Legacy of Leadership and Technological Innovation
-
VAR1 year ago
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold6 vs Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold: Clash Of The Folding Phenoms
-
Tech Features1 year ago
The Middle East to Lead with Next-generation Mission Critical Communication Advancement