Financial News
RAKBANK Achieves Record Half-Yearly Net Profit of AED 901M, Marking a Remarkable 71% Year-on-Year Increase.
The National Bank of Ras Al Khaimah (RAKBANK) reported its financial results for the first half of 2023 (“H1’23”)
|
Highlights H1 2023 |
Total Income
AED 2.2B +42% YoY |
Gross Loans & Adv.
~AED 40B +7% YoY |
Deposits
AED 49B +19% YoY |
Return on Equity
19.3% |
Return on Assets
2.7% |
Key Financial Highlights
Record net profit in H1 2023 driven by diversified growth in balance sheet, continued sales momentum and strong credit quality.
- Income up 42% YoY as sustained increase in operating accounts drive low cost deposits while a well diversified growth on the asset side
- Cost increases 7% YoY as we accelerate our strategic transformation for H1’23 whilst delivering operational efficiencies, cost to income ratio for H1’23 at 3% vs. 48.0% in H1’22.
- Gross Loans & advances increased to ~AED 40B, up 7% YoY, whilst all segments reflect growth, Wholesale banking advances up 13% YoY representing 27% of the asset mix against 25% in H1’22.
- Customer deposits increased to AED 49B, up 19% YoY with the share of CASA deposits at 68% being one of the best in the industry, reflecting a 10% growth YoY.
- Portfolio credit quality remains robust with cost of risk at 2.6% and with one of the industry leading impaired loan coverage ratio of ~232% for H1’23 against ~142% for H1’22.
RAKBANK delivered strong shareholder returns with ROE of 19.3% and ROA of 2.7%, whilst remaining highly liquid and well capitalized.
- Strong profitability and diversified growth on the balance sheet drives healthier Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) at 7% for H1’23 vs. 16.8% in H1’22.
- We remained highly liquid with Regulatory Eligible Liquid Asset Ratio at 15.1% for H1’23 and the Advances to Stable Resources Ratio stood comfortably at 79.9%.
- The bank delivered enhanced shareholder value with the Return on Assets improving to 7% against 1.8% for H1’22.
- The Impaired Loan ratio improved to 5% against 3.4% for H1’22.
Raheel Ahmed, Group Chief Executive Officer, RAKBANK said, “We continue to make strong progress in implementing our new strategy to build a ‘digital bank with a human touch’. At the same time we consistently pivot the culture and mindset of our company to being ‘customer first’ in everything we do.
Our active customer base grew 5% YoY. In H1 we supported over 900 customers with home loans. Being the ‘go to’ SME bank of the UAE, we opened 7,800 accounts for budding entrepreneurs and small businesses. We also disbursed over AED 1 billion of business loans. Our wholesale banking business is now well established with strong product capabilities and is growing in double digits.
Our existing customers continue to increase their trust and engagement with us. Our deposits grew by 19% YoY with robust growth in operating accounts. Spends on our cards are up 20% YoY. Our digital banking was accessed over 21M times in H1 (up 15%) and digital transactions have grown over 10% YoY.
A deep-rooted commitment to contribute back to the society in which we operate is embedded in our DNA. We actively promote financial inclusion and green financing solutions. In line with UAE’s vision for Net Zero by 2050, we have partnered with Honeywell to reduce our electricity consumption by 20% in next 12 months.
Whilst the UAE economy continues to demonstrate positive momentum & growth as we enter the second half of 2023, we do remain cautious about the global macro environment and the downstream impact of rising interest rates & inflation on our customers.
We enter the second half of the year with great excitement as we prepare to launch a range of transformational initiatives in the market. These initiatives will showcase our relentless commitment to innovation and our dedication to meeting the evolving needs of our customers.”
Balance Sheet crosses AED 71 Billion with a strong uptick across customer segments
- Balance Sheet crosses AED 71B as the Total Assets increased year to date by AED 5B reflecting a growth of 8.3%, due to an increase in Gross Loans and Advances by AED 1.8B, Cash and Central Bank balance increased by AED 2.2B, Lending to Banks which increased by AED 1.4B and Investments increased by AED 260M.
- Lending in the Retail Banking increased by AED 888M, Wholesale Banking segment increased by AED 376M and Business Banking lending increased by AED 495M compared to 31 December 2022.
- Wholesale Banking Segment reflects a strong YTD growth of 7% on the back of
~7% growth in the Corporate portfolio.
- Growth for Retail Banking supported by a strong sales momentum across products, with Mortgage loans reflecting 11.4% YTD growth, Auto loans growing by 11.2%, and Credit Cards by 1%.
- Business Banking segment recorded a 5% growth YTD backed by 10.3% growth on Business Loans while trade and working capital loans reflected 2.5% growth YTD.
- Non-performing Loans and Advances to Gross Loans and Advances ratio was 2.5% as at 30 June 2023 compared to 4% as at 30 June 2022 and 3.0% as at December 2022.
Strong growth in Customer Deposits as we become the main bank for more of our customers
- Customer deposits increased by 19.4% as against first half of 2022 and 9.1% or AED 1B to AED 49.0B compared to 31 December 2022 mainly due to an increase of AED 2.5B in time deposits and AED 1.6B in CASA accounts, endorsing the trust our customers place in the RAKBANK franchise and our services.
Capital and Liquidity
- The Bank’s total Capital Ratio as per Basel III, after the application of prudential filter was 7% compared to 16.4% at the end of the previous year.
- The regulatory Eligible Liquid Asset Ratio at the end of the first half was 15.1%, compared to 12.8% as at 31 December 2022, and Advances To Stable Resources Ratio stood comfortably at 9% compared to 79.4% at the end of 2022.
Cash Flows
- Cash and cash equivalents as at 30 June 2023 were AED 4.0B compared to AED 3B as at 30 June 2022.
- Net cash generated from operating activities was AED 2M, AED 299.0M was used in investing activities and AED 192.2M was used in financing activities.
Impact of Capital Expenditure and developments
- The capital expenditure more than doubled to AED 80.3M in H1’23 against 31.9M in H1’22 as we continued to invest in our digitization initiatives and strengthening our regulatory and customer protection framework
- The Bank will continue to invest in innovative digital first solutions to offer a highly personalized & digitized experience.
RATINGS
RAKBANK gets continuously rated by leading rating agencies with their latest ratings shown in the table below. This rating reflects the institutional strength of the Bank that is backed by trust and transparency in financial reporting.
| Rating Agency | Last Update | Deposits | Outlook |
| Moody’s | May 2023 | Baa1 / P-2 | Stable |
| Fitch | April 2023 | BBB+ / F2 | Stable |
| Capital Intelligence | August 2022 | A- / A2 | Positive |
Financial
RISK, RESILIENCE AND A 96 PERCENT: WHAT ACCA’S TOUGHEST PAPER TAUGHT ME ABOUT STRATEGY

Advanced Financial Management is a paper that separates theoretical knowledge from applied thinking. It tests your ability to make strategic decisions under uncertainty, weighs competing risks in real time, and defends your reasoning when there is not one right answer. The pass rates reflect that difficulty. When I sat for the exam, World Rank 1 was never the target, surviving the paper with credibility was. I scored 96 out of 100. But the number, on its own, tells you very little. What matters is what the journey demanded: a complete rewiring of how I approached preparation, pressure, and failure.
Treating preparation like a financial model
Early on, I made a decision that changed everything: I would stop following a generic study plan. Instead, I approached my preparation the way an analyst might approach a sensitivity analysis. I tested variables by studying at different times of the day, experimenting with visual mapping versus deep reading. Each iteration helped me identify what produced the best results for my learning style.
This was about precision, not volume. In finance, we talk about capital allocation, where you deploy resources matters more than the sheer amount available. I applied the same logic to my time. High-yield areas got the most attention. Weak spots got targeted effort. Comfortable topics got less.
Strategy is not a luxury reserved for boardrooms. It belongs in every decision you make.
The negative cash flow phase
There is a phase in every long-term project, financial or otherwise, where the output does not match the input. In corporate finance, we call this negative cash flow. You are investing, and the returns have not materialised yet.
My first few weeks of AFM preparation felt exactly like that. I was putting in the hours, but comprehension was patchy. It would have been easy to panic or abandon ship for a different approach.
Instead, I recognised the phase for what it was: temporary. Every business that reaches breakeven has survived this stage first. I leaned into discomfort, trusted the process, and kept showing up. Slowly, the fog lifted.
That early patience was critical. If I had changed course every time results lagged behind effort, I would never have built the understanding that carried me through the exam.
Discipline over motivation
There is a popular idea that success comes from being motivated. I found the opposite to be true. Motivation is unreliable, it fluctuates with your mood, your energy, a difficult question that throws you off balance.
What carried me was routine. I built a daily structure that operated regardless of how I felt on any given morning. Good days and bad days received the same treatment: sit down, open the material, work through the plan.
During my time at Manipal Academy of Higher Education Dubai, I learned to value consistency over intensity. Resilience, I realised, is not about gritting your teeth and pushing through pain. It is about designing a process robust enough to function even when you are running on empty.
Confronting discomfort deliberately
One of the more counterintuitive lessons AFM taught me was about comfort zones. When preparing for a high-stakes exam, there is a strong temptation to practise what you already understand. You move through questions quickly, confidence builds, and the work feels rewarding.
But that feeling is misleading. The topics I avoided, the ones that made me uneasy, the questions I got wrong repeatedly were precisely where the growth was. I started restructuring my study sessions to front-load the most difficult material. If a topic made me uncomfortable, it went to the top of the list.
Over time, those uncomfortable sessions became the foundation of my exam performance. The questions that would have caught me off guard were the ones I was most prepared for.
Managing pressure, not just content
I remember finishing a mock exam and feeling genuinely defeated. The time pressure had overwhelmed me. I knew the material but knowing the material and performing under timed conditions are two very different skills.
That experience changed my approach. I began treating exam technique as its own discipline, separate from subject knowledge. I practised under strict time limits and developed a method for approaching unfamiliar questions: pause, outline, then write.
On exam day, there were moments where questions looked unfamiliar at first glance. Instead of panicking, I paused, outlined a structure, and worked through each part methodically. I finished on time, with every question addressed.
The real lesson: stress does not disappear because you have prepared well. You simply get better at functioning within it.
Feedback as fuel
A score of 96 percent might suggest a clean, linear path to the top. The reality was messier. Mock results were humbling. Feedback on practice answers was sometimes blunt.
But I made a conscious decision early on, I would treat every piece of critical feedback as information, not as judgement. If a mock answer missed the mark, I wanted to understand why so, to close the gap between where I was and where I needed to be.
That openness to correction was, I believe, one of the most important factors in my result. The students who improve fastest are rarely the most talented. They are the ones willing to be told they are wrong and to adjust accordingly.
Beyond the exam
World Rank 1 was a rewarding outcome. But the rank is a snapshot, a single data point from a single day.
Structured thinking. Disciplined preparation. The ability to remain calm when the stakes are high. A willingness to sit with discomfort rather than avoid it. These are not exam skills. They are life skills.
AFM taught me that risk is not something to fear. It is something to understand, to price, and to manage. That principle holds whether you are valuing a derivative or deciding how to spend your next hour. The same applies to every challenge worth pursuing.
Financial
Abu Dhabi-Based Asif Aziz Will Illuminate London’s West End with Ramadan Lights for Fourth Year, Expanding Global Cultural Impact


Abu Dhabi–based businessman and philanthropist Asif Aziz, Founder of Criterion Capital, continues to set the benchmark for large-scale public programming as his landmark Ramadan Lights London initiative returns for a spectacular fourth edition.
Having launched Western Europe’s first-ever aerial Ramadan lights in 2023, Aziz has permanently reshaped the cultural landscape of London. What began as a groundbreaking concept has since evolved into a globally-recognised, free, annual celebration delivered for civic good, placing the values of Ramadan at the heart of one of the world’s most influential cities.
Delivered through Aziz’s charity, The Aziz Foundation (Registered Charity: 1169558), Ramadan Lights London demonstrates values-led leadership at scale, showing how faith, culture and community can intersect to create lasting social impact.

At the heart of the programme is the flagship aerial lights display along Coventry Street: a pioneering installation of more than 30,000 sustainable LED lights arranged in intricate geometric patterns inspired by Islamic art, with motifs representing suhoor and iftar.
The 2026 programme will open with a high-profile switch-on ceremony, with the lights activated by Sir Sadiq Khan, Mayor of London, Rahima Aziz BEM, Trustee at The Aziz Foundation, and Adil Ray OBE, actor and broadcaster, in the presence of senior public leaders, distinguished cultural figures, ambassadors and international dignitaries. The display will remain illuminated until 18th March 2026, before transitioning to Eid Lights through to 24th March 2026.

A selection of artworks featured in Shared Light – central London’s first interfaith art exhibition. Left: Rooh-e-Bhag (Soul of the Garden) (2025) by Mohamad Aaqib Anvarmia. Centre: Hospitality of Abraham – After Rublev (2025) by Meg Wroe. Right: Mettavihari (2025) by Colin Panrucker
This year will also see the launch of Shared Light – central London’s first interfaith Ramadan art exhibition – bringing together artists of all faiths and backgrounds whose work is inspired by the values of Ramadan. The exhibition will be unveiled by the Deputy Lord Mayor of Westminster and hosted at Aziz’s Zedwell hotel at Piccadilly Circus, reinforcing culture’s role as a bridge between communities in one of the world’s most iconic city centres.

Ramadan Lights London will also welcome back Ramadan Delights, London’s first curated iftar food trail, introduced by Aziz in 2025 and now firmly established as a district-wide West End experience. The trail brings together leading international brands and heritage institutions – including Fortnum & Mason, 1 Leicester Square Rooftop, PizzaExpress and Shake Shack- offering special menus, exclusive offers and halal-friendly dining while supporting local businesses and the economic vitality of the area.
This year, the initiative is further strengthened through a partnership with Centrepoint, the UK’s leading youth homelessness charity, reflecting a shared commitment to social mobility, economic empowerment and supporting disadvantaged young people.
Commenting on the programme, Asif Aziz said: “Ramadan Lights London reflects how the values of Ramadan – generosity, reflection and empathy – can contribute meaningfully to civic life. It is about thoughtful engagement and creating shared experiences that strengthen communities and endure over time.”
Beyond Ramadan Lights London, Aziz’s wider philanthropic work continues to deliver impact. Since 2015, The Aziz Foundation has awarded over 750 scholarships, supported more than 100 media internships, and delivered extensive mentorship programmes across key industries. Aziz is also leading the regeneration of Criterion Capital’s Grade II-listed London Trocadero, transforming the landmark into a 1,000-capacity mosque and community centre – a long-term investment in cultural and faith infrastructure in a major global city.
Alongside his charitable endeavours, Aziz is establishing a scalable, world-class co-investment platform in Abu Dhabi, working with UAE institutions to deploy capital into transformative urban and living-sector opportunities across Europe and the Middle East, with a continued focus on sustainable social outcomes.
Financial
UAE ATTRACTS $40BN IN FDI AMID GLOBAL UNCERTAINTY, NEW REPORT SUPPORTED BY QASHIO REVEALS

As geopolitical tensions, de-globalisation, and economic uncertainty reshape global capital flows, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is consolidating its position as one of the world’s most trusted and resilient financial gateways, according to a new report by Emerging Markets Intelligence & Research (EMIR), supported by Qashio.
The report, ‘Mapping the UAE’s Role as a Global Financial Gateway’, highlights how the UAE is attracting high levels of foreign direct investment and financial activity at a time when capital is retreating from many traditional markets.
Foreign direct investment into the UAE doubled to $40 billion (between 2019 and 2024), reaching record levels even as global FDI stagnated. In 2024, FDI accounted for 40% of the UAE’s gross capital formation, compared to just 4.3% across developed economies, underscoring the country’s growing role as a destination for long-term, trust-led capital.
The scale of activity is accelerating rapidly. The UAE recorded 1,362 FDI projects in 2024, representing a 350% increase since 2020, while assets under management in the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) reached $700 billion, growing 58% year-on-year.
According to the report, the UAE’s ability to benefit from global realignment is closely linked to its neutrality, regulatory clarity, and institutional agility.
“The UAE is actually benefiting from the de-globalisation and the geopolitical reorientation of major power blocks. It doesn’t have adversaries, so is able to build economic ties with everyone. The speed with which the government has been able to adapt to and anticipate the new situation is remarkable,” the report notes.
Beyond capital inflows, the research also points to the UAE’s expanding role as a transaction and payments hub, supported by modern financial infrastructure, strong compliance frameworks, and growing confidence among global businesses managing cross-border activity from the region.
From Qashio’s perspective, the UAE’s rise as a financial gateway reinforces the importance of secure, transparent, and compliant financial operations for businesses operating in an increasingly complex global environment.
“As capital flows become more fragmented and regulated, trust and control are no longer optional — they are foundational,” said Armin Moradi, Founder and CEO of Qashio. “Businesses operating from the UAE need full visibility over spending, strong compliance with Central Bank guidance, and the ability to act on financial insights in real time. This report reflects why the UAE has earned global confidence — and how organisations can operate responsibly within that ecosystem.”
The findings position the UAE not only as a safe destination for capital, but as a jurisdiction capable of supporting long-term growth across finance, trade, technology, and digital assets — at a time when global businesses are reassessing where and how they deploy resources.
To learn more about how the UAE is consolidating its role as a trusted global financial gateway and what this means for businesses navigating today’s fragmented capital landscape download the full report here.
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