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Invoice Bazaar, Collaborates with Cari to provide Working Capital Solutions to Restaurants

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This strategic alliance aims to facilitate the introduction of Invoice Bazaar’s financial services to restaurants affiliated with Cari’s food delivery platform in the United Arab Emirates.

Invoice Bazaar, a subsidiary of Triterras which is a leading fintech company focused on digital trade and supply chain finance, has announced a strategic collaboration with Rapid Cari Delivery Services, LLC (“Cari”), a prominent food delivery platform in Dubai. This agreement marks a significant step forward in empowering restaurants on Cari’s network with tailored working capital financing solutions through Invoice Bazaar’s innovative supply chain finance platform, KRATOS™.

This alliance seamlessly aligns with Invoice Bazaar’s commitment to fostering economic growth and supporting businesses through accessible financial services. Utilizing its expertise in factoring and forfaiting services, Invoice Bazaar is poised to deliver distinctive working capital solutions to restaurants affiliated with Cari. The KRATOS blockchain-enabled platform is powered by advanced credit analysis tools and revenue-based financing analytics and facilitates transactions in a completely digital environment. This technological approach ensures complete traceability and transparency, further reinforcing the commitment to empower businesses within the Cari network.

“We are thrilled to join forces with Cari to extend our working capital financing solutions to clients within their dynamic network,” said Ashish Srivastava, Chief Commercial Officer at Triterras. “This collaboration allows us to further strengthen our commitment to supporting the MSME businesses in the UAE by providing customized financial solutions that align with the unique needs of the restaurant industry.”

This collaborative effort will empower restaurants on Cari’s platform with Invoice Bazaar’s comprehensive financial solutions, enabling them to manage cash flow more effectively. Moreover, Cari stands to gain by providing a working capital line to its restaurant clients, addressing a key challenge faced by these establishments. This enhanced access to working capital will allow restaurants to also increase promotional spending on the platform, attract more customers and stay ahead of competitors.

Amel Mabrouk, General Manager at Cari, also expressed enthusiasm for the collaboration, stating, “Partnering with Invoice Bazaar allows us to enhance the value we provide to our restaurant partners. By offering streamlined access to financial services, we enable our network to maximize working capital efficiently, fostering a more robust and thriving restaurant community. This collaboration is a testament to our commitment to supporting our partners’ financial needs and driving overall growth within the restaurant sector.”

This partnership solidifies Invoice Bazaar’s dedication to driving economic progress and fostering financial inclusion within the UAE. The company remains committed to playing a pivotal role in empowering businesses across diverse sectors, creating a positive impact on the economic landscape.

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Financial

Rostro Group Enters UAE with New SCA Licence Amid the Country’s 20% Fintech Growth Surge

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Rostro Group Enters UAE with New SCA Licence Amid the Country’s 20% Fintech Growth Surge

Rostro Group, an international diversified fintech and financial services group, has obtained a Category 5 license from the UAE Securities and Commodities Authority (SCA), marking a significant step in its long-term commitment to shape the UAE’s future financial ecosystem.

The UAE’s fintech ecosystem continues to expand at an exceptional pace, supported by progressive regulation, rising investor appetite, and strong government initiatives. Recent industry reports from bodies such as the MENA Fintech Association and Magnitt indicate that the UAE consistently attracts over 40–45% of all fintech investments in the region, reinforcing its position as the leading fintech hub in MENA.

Looking ahead, the sector in the UAE is projected to grow at a compound annual rate of more than 20% over the next five years, driven by increasing adoption of digital payments, rapid expansion in wealth-tech and digital brokerage services, and continued regulatory enhancements from bodies such as the SCA and ADGM. With this momentum, the UAE is well-positioned to remain a regional centre of innovation, capital formation, and digital financial transformation.

With UAE Securities and Commodities Authority (SCA) strengthening oversight and raising industry standards, the approval recognizes Rostro Group as a compliant and trusted participant in the country’s expanding financial landscape. It also allows the Group to operate in line with UAE’s expectations for transparency, investor protection and responsible market engagement.

Based in the UAE, the Group is led by CEO Michael Ayres, who has long-standing experience in the region’s fintech sector. Speaking about the SCA approval, Ayres highlighted that Dubai and Abu Dhabi’s rapid evolution into a future-ready financial ecosystem is unmatched.

Ayres said, “We at Rostro Group see the UAE as one of the most forward-thinking financial centres, one that will soon rival leading centres like London, Singapore or New York. Securing this licence deepens our alignment with the country’s vision to build a tech-first, institutionally robust financial ecosystem and propels our contribution to its next phase of growth.”

Rostro Group’s multi-brand structure is built to serve diverse categories of investors through a unified global ecosystem. Its Scope Prime division supports institutional clients with industry leading trading infrastructure, while Scope Markets offers individuals streamlined access to global trading and investing opportunities.

In recent years, the product offering of Rostro Group has been widened to include access to over 60 regional CFD equities, as well as the development of proprietary CFD indices to mirror the performance of the Dubai and Abu Dhabi stock markets.

Local banking relationships have already been established. In addition, Rostro’s Scope Prime division is now ready to provide multi-asset prime brokerage services to financial institutions across the GCC, whilst the retail client-facing Scope Markets division has the ability to offer account types denominated in multiple currencies including AED and USD.

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AI gives Gulf banks the edge in managing liquidity with confidence

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Integrated platforms and data-driven agility will allow IFIs to meet rising expectations and shape global standards

By Matthew Nassau, Business Architect, Treasury & Capital Markets at Finastra

Markets move in cycles. Each generation experiences most of the things that previous generations have endured (bull or bear markets, natural disasters, geopolitics, …) punctuated by turning points from which the future takes a distinct path (powered flight, the transistor, The Beatles, …). These highlights are often recognized early on as important in their day and seem to appear ‘overnight’, and yet have taken years of development and formation to appear in our consciousness, while the lasting extent of their transformative power is not fully appreciated.

Generative AI (GenAI) fits the model described above, poised as it is to revolutionize treasury and capital markets by markedly altering decision-making processes for market professionals. From conversational finance to predictive analytics, AI is evolving from a mere assistant to becoming a crucial decision-making tool. In Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, GenAI could add between USD 21 billion and 35 billion each year, on top of roughly USD 150 billion that existing AI technologies are expected to contribute. That represents about 1.7 to 2.8% of the region’s current non-oil GDP.

To deliver on this potential, it is essential that financial institutions have access to high-quality data, upon which GenAI can infer connections, deliver insights and enable actions.

Data has never looked so good

Data has long been treated as one of the most important assets in financial services. Vendors have built major businesses supplying real-time market feeds, and institutions invest heavily to safeguard customer information in every form. The value is clear. What is changing is how much more that value can grow as GenAI gains access to richer and more precise datasets. Large language models can spot relationships and trends that were previously buried, turning raw information into forecasts, alerts and actions that support commercial and risk decisions.

Unlocking that potential requires broader access to the information that treasury teams already rely on. Data lakes and warehouses form part of the picture, but they rarely capture everything. Treasury management systems are a prime example. Their reporting evolves constantly and plays a central role in liquidity decisions, yet much of it remains confined within the system. By making these reporting histories available to GenAI, banks can reveal patterns over time, flag emerging opportunities or risks and prompt timely intervention.

Timing is everything

To show how quickly things have shifted, consider a discussion I had with a major European bank a few years ago. The team was exploring how to treat treasury and capital markets data as a strategic asset without forcing everything into one central system. Their vision was a unified data layer where information could stay within existing applications yet still be accessed, combined and analyzed by staff using low code tools. The goal was to shift toward more data-driven decision making across the business and to uncover new sources of commercial value.

The concept was sound, but the technology required to deliver it at scale was simply too expensive and complex at the time. The bank had to narrow its ambitions and proceed with smaller, tactical initiatives. Artificial intelligence was not even part of the conversation. It felt experimental and far removed from daily operations.

Looking back, the idea wasn’t premature in strategy, only in timing. GenAI now makes this kind of agile, distributed data insight far more realistic.

‘Go big or go home’ – not any more

Expectations have moved on as technology has matured and become easier to access. The old way of classifying data projects as either short-term tactical fixes or long-term strategic overhauls no longer applies. GenAI changes the conversation. It shifts focus from where data lives to how much value it can generate. Deploying AI in specific functions like operations, the front office or reconciliation isn’t a stopgap. It’s a practical way to unlock intelligence quickly.

What will determine success is an institution’s ability to surface a wide range of data, ensure its accuracy and let AI learn from it. This doesn’t require a massive transformation program from day one. Starting with focused use cases can improve efficiency, reduce manual work and reveal valuable insights straight away. As more processes become AI-enabled, those individual wins begin to connect, creating a stronger and more intelligent foundation across the entire organization.

Outcomes lead to incomes

When a technology is still emerging, no one can predict with certainty how far its influence will reach. The best indicators often come from those willing to adopt early and test ideas in the real world. Many concepts compete for relevance, and only a few will ultimately reshape how people work.

The organizations that benefit most are the ones comfortable experimenting, moving quickly and learning as they go. GenAI encourages exactly that mindset. It allows teams to explore and refine new approaches by tapping into the data they already hold. The results show up in lower costs, stronger client value and healthier margins.

This shift is not about replacing existing business models but enhancing them. Each step forward can deliver outsized returns for firms confident enough to start now.

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Legacy planning: The clause you’ll never see, but every Will needs

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Authored By:
Pooja Bhattia, Solicitor &
Nazneen Abbas, Founder, Ma’an

When a Dubai family recently attempted to execute a Will that divided everything “equally,” the process turned unexpectedly complicated. The father had left behind three properties, a thriving trading business, and a handful of investments. On paper, each heir was entitled to one-third. In practice, however, the math didn’t add up.

Two of the properties required transfer fees before the titles could change. The business needed a professional valuation before any shares could move.

One child wanted to retain the family home, another wanted their share in cash, and the third had settled abroad, facing foreign tax liabilities. The estate was rich in assets but poor in liquidity. What seemed like a clear-cut Will became a year-long exercise in negotiation, paperwork, and frustration.

This is the quiet problem most families never anticipate. A Will can divide ownership, but it cannot generate liquidity. Without readily available funds to meet transfer fees, buyouts, and taxes, the process of inheritance becomes logistically and emotionally taxing.

 

The invisible thread between fairness and liquidity

Estate planning conversations often revolve around fairness: ensuring that every child or beneficiary receives an equal share. Yet, fairness depends not just on value but on accessibility. An heir inheriting property worth millions may find it difficult to sell or borrow against it. Another inheriting shares in a family business may have no interest or capacity to manage it. Without liquidity, equality on paper can quickly turn into imbalance in practice.

Lawyers can draft the most carefully worded Wills, but unless they account for liquidity, execution remains vulnerable. The costs of succession – transfer charges, administrative fees, professional valuations, and in some cases, estate taxes – arrive well before any inheritance is realized. Families often find themselves dipping into personal savings, taking loans, or reluctantly selling assets just to complete what was intended to be a smooth transition.

Liquidity: The quiet equalizer


To bridge this gap, experienced planners build in financial solutions that create liquidity at precisely the right time. These may include structured portfolios, annuity plans, dedicated investment buckets, life insurance arrangements, or a combination of all three. The label matters less than the outcome: a pool of liquidity available when the estate most needs it.

For many families, the challenge arises not from a lack of assets but from a lack of accessible cash to make those assets usable. A property cannot be transferred without fees, a business cannot be divided without valuation, and heirs living abroad may face taxes before they can claim what they inherit. The purpose of these financial plans is to ensure that when such obligations arise, the necessary liquidity already exists.

In legal drafting, these provisions are rarely described by the name of a product. Instead, they appear through clauses addressing estate equalisation, shareholder protection, or tax optimisation – terms that focus on the outcome rather than the instrument. This approach keeps Wills concise while allowing flexibility for the underlying financial architecture to adapt over time. The result is subtle but significant: heirs receive not just assets, but the ability to act on them.

Consider again the Dubai family. With a well-structured liquidity clause, one heir could have drawn on pre-arranged funds to pay the transfer fee and retain the home. Another could have bought out a sibling’s business shares, while the third could have met foreign tax obligations without selling inherited assets. Instead of disputes and delays, execution would have been straightforward, preserving both relationships and value.

Business continuity and fair valuation

Among entrepreneurs, this liquidity gap often runs deeper. Many business owners assume that dividing shares equally among children ensures fairness. Yet, few pause to consider what happens when only one or two heirs wish to continue the business.

Without liquidity, buyouts become impossible. Those running the enterprise must continue to share profits with siblings who contribute nothing to its growth, breeding resentment on both sides. A well-drafted Will therefore includes a clause that mandates valuation of the company at the time of death and provides a mechanism for exit – often funded through pre-planned financial solutions such as insurance, annuity contracts, or investment plans earmarked for succession.

In such cases, these instruments are not a safety net, but a continuity tool. They provide the cash flow that keeps ownership clean, operations uninterrupted, and family dynamics intact. The alternative – co-ownership without clarity – can stall decision-making and diminish the very business meant to support future generations.

Navigating cross-border tax exposure

Modern families are increasingly international. Parents may reside in the UAE, while children live or work abroad, in jurisdictions where inheritances attract income, estate, or wealth taxes. The very act of inheriting can push an heir into a higher tax bracket. Well-structured financial instruments can efficiently offset cross-border liabilities.

Clients are sometimes surprised that their legal documents focus on principles such as estate equalisation, shareholder protection, or tax optimisation rather than naming specific products like insurance. This is deliberate. A Will is a legal document; it defines intentions and outcomes. The financial architecture that supports those clauses is built through separate planning, which can evolve over time.

Behind that discretion lies pragmatism. Financial tools evolve, regulations shift, and family circumstances change. What matters is not the name of the mechanism but its function: to ensure that cash exists where the law and logic demand it most.

Designing for peace of mind

A well-structured estate plan treats liquidity planning as part of its core architecture. It supports every transfer clause, equalisation formula, and tax-planning provision, ensuring that the Will delivers real, actionable outcomes. These financial solutions – whether investment-based, annuity-linked, or insurance-backed – act as quiet safeguards that help preserve what matters most.

The most successful successions are often the quietest. Properties change hands without conflict, businesses continue seamlessly, and families remain intact. To outsiders, it may appear as though the Will “worked perfectly.” In reality, what worked was the preparation – the foresight to pair legal precision with financial planning that sustains both assets and harmony.

People spend lifetimes building security for their families, and inheritance should strengthen that harmony, not test it. When liquidity is thoughtfully built into an estate plan, a legacy becomes less a transfer of wealth and more a continuation of peace.

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