Financial
Vintage Vaults: Dubai’s Premium Safe Deposit Box Facility at Mall of the Emirates
As UAE residents prepare for summer holidays, international travel and seasonal relocation, Vintage Vaults, Dubai’s premium safe deposit box facility at Mall of the Emirates, is highlighting the importance of secure private vault storage for valuables, documents and high-value personal assets.
From jewellery and luxury watches to family heirlooms, legal documents, precious metals and collectibles, extended periods away from home can heighten concerns around security, accessibility and long-term protection. For residents, expatriates, investors and frequent travellers, secure storage during travel in the UAE has become an increasingly important part of responsible asset protection.
Vintage Vaults provides private safe deposit box rental in Dubai for individuals, families, collectors and business owners seeking a modern, discreet and service-led alternative to conventional safety deposit boxes. Combining advanced security infrastructure with premium client experience, the facility has been designed for clients who value privacy, convenience and peace of mind.
Located within Mall of the Emirates, Vintage Vaults offers client access during mall operating hours, 365 days a year. The facility operates within a 24/7 monitored security environment supported by UL-certified vault infrastructure, biometric authentication, controlled access systems, AI-powered surveillance, CCTV monitoring, motion detection technology and advanced alarm systems. It is also directly connected to Dubai Police and SIRA-linked monitoring systems, further strengthening its security framework.
Clients can choose from seven safe deposit box sizes ranging from XXS to XXL, accommodating a wide variety of assets including jewellery, watches, gold, cash, legal documentation, family archives, artwork and collectibles. Every box comes with complimentary insurance coverage, with protection of up to AED 2 million depending on the selected membership tier.
“Dubai has become home to a growing number of individuals and families who have accumulated significant personal and financial assets over the years,” said Sherif El Haddad, Founder and CEO of Vintage Vaults. “At the same time, we are seeing greater mobility, with people travelling more frequently, spending extended periods abroad, relocating between countries or managing assets across multiple markets. Accordingly, secure storage is becoming an essential part of responsible asset management, particularly during periods when people are away from home.”

Vintage Vaults offers three membership categories — Silver, Gold and Black — providing varying levels of insurance coverage, security features, box access nominees and premium services. Clients also benefit from private consultation and access rooms designed to maintain discretion, alongside a multilingual team trained in security, privacy, client service and asset protection.
For clients requiring additional support, the facility offers premium services including chauffeur arrangements, armoured transportation and bodyguard assistance, creating a comprehensive asset protection ecosystem tailored to high-value holdings.
According to Imran Shoukat Khan, Co-founder and Managing Partner of Vintage Vaults, demand for private vault services is being driven by a broader shift in how residents and expatriates think about protecting their assets.
“Today’s clients expect more than storage. They want confidence that their valuables are protected by robust infrastructure, supported by technology and managed with complete client discretion,” said Imran. “Whether someone is travelling for several weeks, relocating internationally or safeguarding assets for future generations, secure private vault facilities provide essential storage with , protection against theft, damage or loss along with peace of mind.”
The summer season presents a timely opportunity for UAE residents and expats to review how their valuable possessions are stored and protected. For many, a safe deposit box in Dubai offers a practical solution for securing jewellery collections, investment-grade precious metals, luxury watches, important family documents and sentimental heirlooms before extended travel or temporary relocation.
As one of the few independent private safe deposit box operators in the UAE not affiliated with a bank, Vintage Vaults offers a level of discretion, flexibility and service that traditional banking institutions may not provide. By combining advanced security standards, complimentary insurance coverage, flexible storage options and premium client services, Vintage Vaults continues to provide a trusted destination for clients seeking long-term asset protection in one of the world’s most dynamic wealth centres.
Financial
TRUST AS A COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE IN GLOBAL FINANCE
Armin Moradi, the CEO and Founder of Qashio
For centuries, financial institutions relied on one advantage. Whether it was the range of their products, their pricing, or how far their services could reach. Today, those advantages are easy to replicate. Digital infrastructure is widely available, capital moves quickly across borders, and acquiring customers is increasingly automated. What now sets institutions apart is not the breadth of their offerings or the cost of their services. It is the confidence they inspire.
In a world that is increasingly more fragmented, turbulent, and cautious, trust has become one of the few advantages that cannot be replicated. Global investment patterns illustrate this shift. According to the UNCTAD World Investment Report 2025, foreign direct investment (FDI) remains far below its early 2010s peak, reflecting a world that is more risk-aware and geopolitically sensitive. The World Bank’s Global Economic Prospects also highlights uneven growth and rising uncertainty across regions. This means capital is no longer chasing the highest return; instead it is seeking predictability. And institutions that inspire trust are the ones most likely to attract it.
Capital Moves Toward Certainty
The UAE offers a compelling example. The EMIR report, supported by Qashio, Flows of Capital: Mapping the UAE’s Role as a Global Financial Gateway, shows that FDI into the country reached $40 billion, doubling from 2019 levels, and accounting for 40% of gross capital formation compared to a developed economy average of 4.3%. That differential cannot be explained by tax efficiency alone. It reflects regulatory clarity, institutional stability, and operational reliability, all of which underpin trust
The same principle is playing out at the company level.
UAE banks are increasingly pushing for founders and business owners to separate personal and corporate spending. On paper, that is a compliance issue. In reality, it signals a structural shift. Poor accounting discipline creates risk. Blurred financial lines complicate audits, funding discussions, and cross-border expansion. When investors and regulators examine financial behaviour, governance becomes visible immediately, highlighting that trust begins with discipline.
Designing Trust: Transparency, Control, Reliability
As finance becomes more digital, trust is becoming more measurable. It rests on three interlocking foundations: transparency, control, and reliability.
Transparency is now a baseline expectation. Customers want to know what they are paying, when transactions settle, and how fees are calculated. The scale of global financial flows reinforces this demand. The World Bank estimates that remittance flows to low- and middle-income countries reached $685 billion in 2024. That figure exceeds FDI and official development assistance combined for those economies. When volumes are that significant, even marginal opacity in pricing or settlement becomes economically material, making clarity a matter of cost efficiency at the system level rather than a branding exercise.
Control is equally critical. Modern finance teams operate across distributed workforces, multi-entity structures, and global vendor networks. Organisations lose an estimated 5% of revenue annually to fraud. While fraud has multiple sources, weak internal controls and policy bypass increase exposure. Giving customers direct control of their funds, through stronger controls and policies, helps reinforce trust in financial institutions.
The most resilient organisations design policy directly into their payment infrastructure. Approval hierarchies, spend limits, and permission layers are embedded into the system itself. This allows companies to move quickly without sacrificing oversight. The distinction between proactive and reactive governance is not philosophical. It determines speed, cost of capital, and investor confidence.
Reliability completes the triad. Finance is ultimately about certainty. Platforms must perform consistently. Settlements must arrive when expected. Liquidity windows must be predictable. Inconsistent infrastructure creates friction not just for finance teams, but for suppliers and partners across the value chain.
The Economics of “Free”
Digital finance has conditioned customers to expect “free” services: zero-fee accounts, no-cost cards, complimentary transfers. Yet compliance, fraud monitoring, capital provisioning, cybersecurity, and regulatory reporting all carry measurable costs. If a core financial service is offered at no charge, the obvious question becomes: how is it funded?
Revenue may come from interchange, cross-selling, float income, or data monetisation. None of these are inherently problematic. But misalignment between a provider’s revenue model and a customer’s long-term interests can erode confidence over time.
The question “How good can it be if it’s free?” is not rhetorical. It is structural. Sustainable economics enables sustained investment in compliance, uptime, and risk management. Underinvestment may not be visible immediately, but in financial services, weaknesses surface under stress.
From Compliance to Competitive Moat
Trust can no longer be viewed as a soft metric. It is measurable in capital inflows, in regulatory endorsements, in uptime statistics, and in audit outcomes. It influences valuation multiples and partnership decisions.
Institutions that deliberately design for transparency, embed control within infrastructure, and invest consistently in reliability will compound confidence over time. Those that rely primarily on aggressive pricing or superficial features may gain short-term adoption, but long-term retention is built on predictability.
In a more volatile global environment, the question facing financial leaders is shifting. It is no longer simply about how fast a product can scale or how cheaply it can be distributed. It now depends on the system’s ability to remain reliable under pressure.
Financial
UAE energy firms risk forfeiting millions in R&D credits unless spend is qualified and pre-approved
From enhanced carbon capture at gas processing plants to grid modernisation and renewable energy storage, the technology reshaping the UAE’s oil and gas industry, has acquired a new dimension. As of the 2026, a significant portion of the research and development (R&D) behind it can be converted into a corporate tax credit of up to 50 percent under the country’s first dedicated R&D Tax Credit regime. According to Dhruva, a Ryan Affiliate, the opportunity for the energy sector is substantial, but the design of the regime rewards companies that act early and penalises those that treat it as a year-end exercise.
The regime was established by Cabinet Decision No. 215 of 2025 and made operational by Ministerial Decision No. 24 of 2026, issued on 18 March 2026. It applies to tax periods and fiscal years beginning on or after 1 January 2026, with the first claims expected in 2027. Credits are calculated on a tiered basis, rising from 15 percent to a headline 50 percent. Qualifying expenditure is capped at AED 5 million per qualifying entity or tax group per year, which produces a maximum credit of AED 2 million.
“The UAE’s energy transition has been told as a sustainability story and an investment story. From this year it is also a tax story. The work being undertaken to decarbonise hydrocarbon production, including enhanced oil recovery, carbon capture and storage, methane abatement, and the development of digital twins for processing plants, exemplifies the systematic, uncertainty-driven R&D that this regime is designed to reward. The catch is that the value sits in the documentation, and the documentation has to be built in real time. You cannot retrospectively reconstruct a year’s worth of R&D evidence in 2027,” said Nimish Goel, Leader, Middle East, Dhruva, Ryan LLC Affiliate.
For an industry as engineering-intensive as oil and gas, the central question is not whether qualifying activity exists. It is whether companies can tell the difference between routine engineering and genuine R&D, and prove it. Applying an established recovery method to a new reservoir does not, in itself, qualify. By contrast, systematically resolving technical uncertainty, whether relating to reservoir behaviour, materials performance under high-pressure conditions, the capture of CO₂ from sulphur recovery flue gas, or the integration of new digital control systems, may qualify, provided the systematic experimentation and its outcomes are documented as the work is carried out.
“Two features will catch international energy companies off guard. Only R&D performed inside the UAE qualifies, and subcontracted R&D counts only when it is carried out by UAE-based third parties. Much of the sector’s historical R&D has run through global technology centres and group affiliates abroad. Companies will need to look hard at where their R&D actually physically takes place, before they assume they qualify,” said Fran Wilhelm, Associate Partner, Dhruva, Ryan LLC Affiliate.
The regime’s defining feature is a dual threshold that links the credit rate to both qualifying spend and headcount. The first AED 1 million of qualifying spend earns 15 percent and requires at least two R&D staff on average; spend between AED 1 million and AED 2 million earns 35 percent and requires at least six; and spend between AED 2 million and AED 5 million earns the top 50 percent rate and requires at least fourteen. Both conditions must be met for each band. Where the headcount falls short, the claim drops back to the highest band where both the spend and the staffing tests are satisfied. A minimum of AED 500,000 of qualifying expenditure applies to each R&D project.
This is where oil and gas companies face a structural choice that other sectors may not. R&D in the industry is often capital-intensive rather than people-intensive: a single carbon capture or enhanced oil recovery pilot can absorb millions in equipment and consumables while employing only a handful of dedicated researchers. Under the dual threshold, that profile caps the credit at the lowest band regardless of how much is spent. Reaching the higher rates means building R&D headcount physically in the UAE.
Pre-approval from the Emirates Research and Development Council is mandatory before any credit can be claimed, with no exceptions. No pre-approval means no credit, however strong the underlying scientific or technological uncertainty. Businesses must keep detailed technical records of objectives, methods, experiments and outcomes for at least seven years. The credit is also currently non-refundable, so it benefits companies that have a corporate tax or top-up tax liability to offset, which describes most established producers and service contractors in the sector. That said, it has been suggested that Phase 2 may include a refundable credit and an increase in both application and generosity, meaning all businesses should start planning ahead, irrespective of their tax position.
“Companies that map their qualifying projects now, secure pre-approval and build the evidence trail through the 2026 financial year will capture real value when claims open in 2027. Those that wait will find that the spend was eligible but the proof was never created. In this regime, the documentation is the asset,” concluded Nimish Goel.
Financial
WHY THE MIDDLE EAST’S DIGITAL IDENTITY INFRASTRUCTURE NEEDS A DEEPER TRUST LAYER

Stefan Deiss, CEO and Co-Founder, The Hashgraph Group
The Middle East has moved faster on digital identity than almost any other region in the world. The UAE Pass now connects residents to more than 5,000 government and private services. Saudi Arabia’s Absher platform has issued over 28 million unified digital IDs. Dubai has gone fully paperless across 45 government entities.
But these systems were built for a world where the main challenge was convenience: getting citizens online, reducing paperwork, speeding up access to services. The threats they were designed to handle were stolen passwords, forged documents and basic impersonation.
What they were not built for is an environment where artificial intelligence can generate a convincing human face in seconds, clone a voice from a few minutes of audio, and inject a synthetic video feed into a verification check in real time.
What distributed ledger technology actually adds
Most digital identity systems today are centralised. Your credentials sit in a government or enterprise database, and every time your identity needs to be checked, the system queries that database. Sometimes that means scanning your face against a stored biometric template. Sometimes it means pulling up your document records and cross-referencing them. Either way, the process depends on one central store of information being secure, accurate and available.
The model works until it doesn’t. A single database holding millions of identities is a high-value target. An attacker who gets in does not compromise one person. They compromise everyone. And the tools available to attackers are improving fast.
The GCC fraud detection market has reached $1.2 billion. Deepfake attacks on identity systems are surging globally. In May, the Saudi Data and Artificial Intelligence Authority published updated deepfake guidelines that explicitly recommend blockchain-based provenance systems to establish traceable records of original content. The guidelines identify identity impersonation through cloned voices and facial simulations as a major risk, and single out finance, politics and identity verification as sectors requiring priority monitoring.
This is the context in which distributed ledger technology becomes relevant. Decentralised identity flips the conventional model. Instead of credentials sitting in someone else’s database, you hold them yourself, in a digital wallet on your device. When you need to prove something, you present only the specific credential required. The verification is recorded on a distributed ledger, a shared record maintained across a network of independent computers rather than controlled by any single organisation. Nobody owns it, can alter it, and shut it down.
Then there are zero-knowledge proofs. This is a way of proving something is true without revealing the underlying information. You could prove you are over 18 without showing your date of birth. You could prove you hold a valid professional licence without disclosing your name or address. The verifier gets the confirmation they need. You keep everything else private.
There is no single database to breach. The individual controls what information is shared and with whom. And every verification event is recorded permanently, creating an audit trail that regulators, enterprises and individuals can each trust independently.
In Sharjah, decentralised identity infrastructure has been integrated across a smart city ecosystem, making it one of the first urban environments in the world where residents, buildings and services interact through digital credentials rather than centralised databases.
The physical presence problem
There is a further gap that even well-designed digital identity systems do not currently address: physical presence.
Identity verification today confirms who someone claims to be remotely. It checks documents, runs facial recognition, performs biometric matching. What it cannot confirm is that a real human being is actually sitting in front of the screen. A synthetic face, a cloned voice and an injected video feed can sail through remote checks that were designed for an era when faking a human was genuinely difficult. That era is over.
The technology to close this gap exists. Ultra-wideband radar, the same short-range spatial sensing found in consumer devices, can detect physical presence with sub-10-centimetre accuracy. It can pick up vital signs such as breathing and heartbeat as a liveness check. When that presence event is cryptographically bound to a decentralised identity credential and recorded on a distributed ledger, the result is a tamperproof record proving a specific individual was physically present at a given location at a given time, verifiable by any authorised party without exposing personal data.
The applications stretch across sectors. In transport, a traveller approaching a gate at an airport or train station could be verified instantly: identity confirmed, physical presence proven, the event recorded permanently. The same logic applies to stadiums, conferences, concert venues and any gated environment where ticket fraud is a problem.
Why the Middle East is the right place for this conversation
The UAE government has announced its intention to transition 50 per cent of federal sectors and services to agentic AI within two years. When AI agents begin autonomously processing licences, permits, compliance checks and cross-border transactions, the question of who authorised what, and whether a human was genuinely involved at the point of decision, becomes critical. Without a verifiable link between a physical person and a digital action, agentic AI systems become vulnerable to impersonation at a scale that manual fraud teams cannot monitor.
The region also has structural advantages that most other markets do not. Governments in the Gulf are bringing policy, investment and technology deployment together under unified national strategies. Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030, the UAE’s digital economy strategy targeting 20 per cent of non-oil GDP by 2030, and the broader push toward smart city infrastructure all create an environment where new identity infrastructure can move from concept to deployment far faster than in markets weighed down by legacy systems and fragmented regulation.
What comes next
The digital identity systems the Middle East has built over the past decade are genuine achievements. But they were designed for a world where the person on the other end of a verification check was assumed to be real. That assumption is becoming less reliable every quarter.
The next generation of identity infrastructure needs to do three things. It needs to remove single points of compromise by decentralising how credentials are stored and verified. It needs to give individuals control over their own data through zero-knowledge proofs and selective disclosure. And it needs to prove physical presence at the moment of verification, closing the gap that synthetic media is already exploiting.
About the Author:
Stefan Deiss is Co-Founder and CEO of The Hashgraph Group (THG), a Swiss-based Web3 and AI technology engineering company specialising in enterprise solutions built on the Hedera network.
Stefan brings over two decades of experience in technology and business transformation. He spent 11 years at Orange Business Services before moving to Zurich Insurance Group, and went on to found his own consulting firm in 2013. In 2016, he co-founded The Hashgraph Group, which today operates globally with offices across Switzerland, Abu Dhabi, Hong Kong, and beyond.
Under his leadership, THG has developed a suite of enterprise products including TrackTrace for EU Digital Product Passport compliance, IDTrust for decentralised digital identity, and EcoGuard for sustainability and carbon markets. He is also co-inventor of CITI (Continuous Identity Trust Infrastructure), a patent-pending cryptographic framework that binds physical presence to digital identity.
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