Financial
FOUR DISCIPLINES UAE BOARDS NEED BEFORE E-INVOICING GOES LIVE

Amit Dua, President, SunTec Business Solutions
E-invoicing in the UAE is no longer a distant policy idea; it is a dated commitment. From July 2026, the Federal Tax Authority (FTA) will begin the first mandatory phase of a national e-invoicing regime, with larger taxpayers required to comply from January 2027 and smaller businesses following later that year. Penalties of up to AED 5,000 per violation have already been announced for non-compliance.
This is happening against the backdrop of a fast-expanding non-oil economy. At the same time, artificial intelligence is projected to contribute close to 14 percent of UAE GDP by 2030, the highest relative impact in the region.
In such an environment, e-invoicing is not a narrow tax exercise. It is a test of whether companies can manage real-time regulatory obligations while improving the speed, integrity, and usefulness of their financial data. Firms that treat it as another compliance chore will scramble to catch up. Those that approach it as a strategic capability will emerge with cleaner processes, faster cash conversion, and better insight into how their businesses actually work.
Four disciplines, in particular, will separate the merely compliant from the genuinely prepared.
1. Start by really understanding the new rulebook
The first discipline sounds obvious but is frequently ignored: know the rules in detail. Under the UAE framework, an invoice will no longer be a PDF attachment travelling quietly from seller to buyer. It will be a structured data packet, typically in XML, and in some cases JSON, that must be generated by the supplier’s systems, routed through an accredited service provider operating on the Peppol five-corner model, and delivered simultaneously to the buyer and to the FTA.
This architecture is deliberately more complex than the old email-and-attachment world. Each invoice must pass schema checks, integrity checks, and business-rule validations before it is accepted as a tax-compliant document. The FTA will then use the incoming data stream to pre-populate returns, reconcile declarations with actual invoice flows, and flag discrepancies almost in real time.
There is also a long tail of procedural obligations. Businesses must understand which transactions fall within scope in each phase, how credit notes and cancellations will be handled, how to deal with cross-border supplies, and which exemptions, if any, apply to their sector. Beneath all of this sits a familiar but often neglected requirement: record-keeping. UAE tax law already obliges businesses to retain accounting records, including tax invoices, for at least five years after the end of the relevant tax period, with longer periods for certain assets and real estate. E-invoicing will not replace this obligation; it will tighten it, because the Authority will have its own copy of every invoice.
Companies that only half-understand this rulebook will find themselves constantly reacting to surprises. The ones that invest early in a precise, shared understanding, across finance, tax, IT and operations, will be able to design systems and processes that meet the requirements without strangling the business.
2. Redesign the systems, not just patch them
The second discipline is technical, but it cannot be delegated entirely to IT. Large and mid-sized UAE businesses typically run a patchwork of ERPs, billing engines, and industry-specific platforms. Many were built for a world where an “invoice” was whatever the system could print. They were not designed to produce standardized, structured e-invoices or to connect to a Peppol-based network in which every document is validated by an external access point before it counts.
Trying to bolt e-invoicing on to this kind of landscape in the last quarter of 2026 would be professionally reckless. Boards must insist on a hard-headed mapping of how invoices are currently created, routed, approved, and stored.
The UAE framework gives firms some architectural freedom. They can consolidate invoice generation in a central “hub” that talks to multiple access points, or they can adopt a more decentralized model with business-unit-specific systems feeding into a common provider. But there are hard deadlines. Large taxpayers with annual revenues above AED 50 million must appoint an accredited service provider by 31 July 2026 and go live with e-invoicing by 1 January 2027; smaller taxpayers follow six months later, with their own appointment and go-live dates in 2027.
Accredited service providers themselves face strict requirements on uptime, performance, and information security. Many must demonstrate ISO/IEC 27001-level controls and keep pace with evolving FTA specifications. Choosing one in a hurry, without proper due diligence on their scalability and roadmap, will store up trouble. The more disciplined approach is to treat system redesign as a staged program: clean up master data, rationalize templates, decide which systems are sources of truth and which are consumers, and only then build or buy the integration layer that connects to the Peppol network.
3. Train the organization for real-time tax
The third discipline is organizational. E-invoicing looks, at first glance, like a back-office affair. In reality, it will touch sales, procurement, operations, customer service, and even treasury. Every group that raises, approves, disputes or chases an invoice will have to change behavior.
In markets that have already implemented similar regimes, many of the worst early-stage problems had little to do with software. They arose from people trying to work around the new rules. Sales teams promised bespoke formats or unusual discount structures that the system could not express in a valid e-invoice. Shared service centers reverted to spreadsheets when confronted with a new edge case. Managers asked IT to “override” rejections to recognize revenue faster, undermining both controls and audit trails.
The UAE will not be an exception. Training cannot be limited to a single webinar or a set of user manuals. Front-line staff need to understand what makes an invoice “real” in the new world, which fields are non-negotiable, and what to do when an invoice fails validation. Middle managers need to know how to interpret new exception reports and how to balance commercial pressures with compliance obligations. Senior leadership needs a clear view of key metrics such as rejection rates, average time from issue to acceptance, and the volume of manual interventions as leading indicators of whether the new regime is bedding in or beginning to buckle.
The most effective organizations are already running “shadow” or pilot cycles, issuing e-invoices alongside traditional ones and using the results to refine processes ahead of the legal deadlines. That kind of rehearsal requires coordination, and coordination requires visible sponsorship. When the CEO, CFO and CIO jointly own e-invoicing, it becomes a transformation initiative. When it is dumped quietly into the IT work queue, it becomes an expensive troubleshooting exercise.
4. Treat data, security, and retention as strategic infrastructure
The fourth discipline goes beyond the launch date. E-invoicing will generate one of the richest, most sensitive data streams in a business. Each invoice reveals who is paying whom, on what terms, for what goods or services, and under what tax treatment. In the UAE’s Peppol-based five-corner model, this data will flow more widely than before, passing through access points and central systems on its way to the FTA.
Regulators have attempted to pre-empt security concerns. Accredited providers must meet rigorous information-security standards, and the technical specifications call for encryption, digital signatures and auditable logs. But no external standard can compensate for weak internal governance. Boards must be asking very basic questions now: who can change tax codes or customer master data; how access rights are granted and revoked; what happens if an access point is compromised or goes offline; and how quickly the company can detect unusual patterns, such as repeated rejections for a particular counterparty.
Record-keeping deserves similar attention. Existing VAT rules already require businesses to retain tax records, including invoices, for at least five years after the end of the relevant tax period, with longer retention periods for some categories. E-invoicing will make it easier to store these records in a structured way, but it also raises the bar. If the Authority holds a copy of every invoice, gaps or inconsistencies in a company’s own archive will be harder to explain.
If managed well, this new data environment is an asset. Structured e-invoice data can give leadership teams a real-time view of receivables, payables, pricing, and discount patterns across business units and geographies.
From four steps to one mindset
The UAE’s e-invoicing mandate will not dominate headlines in the way that new trade agreements or record non-oil trade figures do. Yet, quietly, it will shape how companies in the country bill, collect, report and plan. It is tempting for boards to think of it as a discrete project with a defined end date. In reality, it marks a shift to a more transparent, data-intensive relationship between business and state, one that will continue to evolve as tax rules, digital infrastructure, and trade flows change.
The four disciplines outlined here, understanding the rulebook, redesigning systems, training the organization, and treating data and security as strategic infrastructure, are not an exhaustive checklist. They are, however, a good proxy for mindset. Companies that embrace them are likely to find that e-invoicing improves the quality of their numbers, the speed of their decisions and the robustness of their controls. Those that do not, may meet the letter of the law but miss the larger opportunity.
In a country positioning itself as a global hub for trade and AI-driven digital commerce, e-invoicing is part of the plumbing. As every good engineer knows, the quality of the plumbing determines how much pressure the system can take.
Financial
INSIDE THE NEW RISK REALITY FACING GCC TRADE AND LOGISTICS

Exclusive interview with Aurélien Paradis, CEO of AU Group MEA
How Supply Chain Disruptions Are Reshaping Trade Across the GCC?
What we are seeing across the GCC is a reset in how trade moves. Goods are still flowing, but the routes, timelines, costs, and risk assumptions behind them are changing. That is the real shift businesses are now dealing with. The pressure on key shipping corridors has forced companies to rethink the way they move goods across the region. Many are having to re-route shipments, work with a wider mix of logistics partners, and rely more heavily on alternative models such as land bridge solutions or sea-air combinations. At the same time, higher freight costs, with carriers introducing surcharges ranging from USD 1,500 to USD 4,000 per container, rising insurance premiums, and longer transit times, with the rerouted sailings adding around 10- 14 days, are putting additional pressure on already tight supply chains.
For businesses in the GCC, this creates a very different operating environment. Essential imports, raw materials, and industrial inputs may still arrive, but not with the same predictability companies were used to. And once predictability is lost, the impact is felt well beyond logistics. It affects project timelines, inventory planning, customer commitments, and ultimately working capital. Even with the re-opening of the Strait of Hormuz, it will take time to make-up for the delays. So, the real story is this: trade in the GCC is continuing, but under a new risk and cost structure. Companies that adapt fastest, by building more flexibility into sourcing, transport, and risk planning, will be in a much stronger position than those still relying on old trade assumptions.
Why GCC Companies must Rethink Credit Risk in a Volatile Trade Environment?
At its simplest, trade credit insurance exists to protect a business when a customer cannot pay for goods or services. It is built on a basic commercial truth: a sale is only complete when the cash is collected. In more stable conditions, many companies treat that risk as manageable and assume late payment can be absorbed. The problem today is that volatility is changing the risk much earlier in the trade cycle.
Receivables are often one of the largest assets on the balance sheet, so when they come under strain, the effect is immediate on cashflow and working capital. The stronger businesses will be the ones that reassess buyer quality earlier, stay closer to payment behaviour, and act before stress becomes loss. In this environment, protecting the receivable is just as important as moving the goods.
Why Trade Credit Insurance Is Gaining Importance in the GCC
Because businesses are operating in a market where uncertainty is no longer occasional; it is becoming part of the trading environment itself. In that kind of climate, companies are paying closer attention not just to how much they sell, but to how securely they can sell on credit. The value of trade credit insurance is that it does not only protect against non-payment. It also gives businesses a more informed view of the customers they are trading with and the level of exposure they are carrying. That becomes particularly important when supply chain disruption, rising costs, and liquidity pressure can weaken a buyer’s position quite quickly.
What is changing is the way companies are looking at the tool. It is no longer seen only as a defensive measure used after something goes wrong. More businesses are using it as a way to trade with greater confidence, protect cashflow, and make better credit decisions while conditions remain volatile. It can also strengthen access to financing, because insured receivables are often viewed more positively by lenders. In that sense, trade credit insurance is gaining relevance not only because risk is rising, but because it helps businesses stay commercially active without taking unnecessary exposure. The companies that understand this are treating it less as a safety net and more as part of a stronger growth strategy.
What are the biggest logistical challenges currently affecting GCC businesses?
The biggest issue at the moment is that companies are not facing just one logistical challenge, but the piling up of several at once. Businesses are dealing with route disruption, longer transit times, capacity pressure at alternative ports, customs and documentation delays as cargo is redirected, and higher transport and insurance costs as carriers adjust to a more volatile operating environment. Even when goods can still move, they are not always moving through the most efficient or predictable channels, which makes planning far more difficult for importers, distributors, and project-led businesses. That loss of predictability is often the most disruptive part, because it affects everything from inventory timing to delivery commitments and resource allocation.
What can make things more serious and with a lasting impact is the scale and the duration of the disruption. In practical terms, that means companies must now incorporate higher risk for rerouting, and delays rather than treating them as exceptions in the GCC region. The businesses managing this best are the ones increasing flexibility in routing, diversifying logistics partners, and planning for disruption as a recurring operating condition rather than a temporary shock
Q5. Which sectors are most vulnerable to supply chain disruptions?
Several industries across the GCC are feeling the sharpest impact from current supply chain disruption, particularly those that rely heavily on global shipping routes, imported inputs, or time-sensitive delivery cycles. Food and FMCG remain among the most exposed, especially within the cold chain, where fresh produce, meat, dairy, and other perishables depend on strict timing and uninterrupted movement. Manufacturing and industrial sectors are also under pressure, as delays in raw materials and inbound components can slow production, raise inventory costs, and strain working capital.
Construction and building materials face similar challenges, with many projects across the region dependent on imported supplies, meaning longer transit times can lead to delays, cost overruns, and pressure on already demanding timelines. Energy-linked industries are not immune either, as refinery inputs and critical equipment still move through affected shipping lanes. Automotive, electronics, and retail have also been hit by detours around Africa, which are creating shortages and pushing out delivery schedules for consumer goods.
At the same time, SMEs across all trading sectors remain especially vulnerable, as thinner margins and lower liquidity leave them less able to absorb delayed settlements or sudden disruption. Despite these pressures, the region remains highly resilient, and one clear outcome of the current environment is that businesses are being pushed toward stronger supply diversification, tighter financial discipline, greater use of credit risk tools, wider adoption of trade credit insurance, and more serious investment in supply chain agility.
Financial
MOZN’s AI-Powered FOCAL Platform Earns Recognition in Forrester Financial Crime Landscape
MOZN, a leading enterprise AI company, today announced that it has been named among notable vendors in Forrester’s Financial Crime Management Solutions Landscape Q1 2026 report. This inclusion marks a significant milestone for MOZN and reinforces its position among global innovators.
The Forrester report, which lists 42 vendors, provides financial institutions with an overview of notable vendors and the key market dynamics shaping the rapidly evolving financial crime management (FCM) market, including fraud and anti-money laundering (AML) solutions.
MOZN was listed in the report with a geographic focus on Europe, the Middle East, and Africa (EMEA) and the Asia-Pacific (APAC) regions, and an industry focus on financial services, government, and insurance. The recognition underscores the company’s sustained investment in AI-driven innovation and its focus on delivering scalable, future-ready financial crime solutions tailored to high-growth and complex regulatory markets.
At the center of this recognition is FOCAL, MOZN’s end-to-end financial crime management platform. Built on a unified FRAML (Fraud + AML) architecture, FOCAL leverages agentic AI to automate data integration, accelerate risk-scoring, and streamline alert triage, enhancing investigator productivity while preserving human judgment. The platform offers flexible deployment options, allowing organizations to modernize their operations in a way that aligns with their technical and regulatory needs.
“MOZN’s inclusion in Forrester’s report reflects the progress we have made in building technology that truly transforms how institutions combat financial crime,” said Dr. Mohammed Alhussein, Founder and CEO of MOZN. “As Saudi Arabia designates 2026 as the Year of Artificial Intelligence, it reinforces the Kingdom’s ambition to lead in shaping the future of AI globally. At MOZN, we are proud to contribute to this vision by engineering AI-native platforms that make financial crime prevention more proactive, precise, and effective. This milestone reflects both the momentum of our mission and the growing global relevance of technology built in the region.”
By combining deep regional expertise with global technology standards, MOZN continues to advance its purpose of empowering organizations with intelligence that matters. The company remains committed to delivering AI-native solutions purpose-built for the world’s most regulated and knowledge-intensive sectors, enabling institutions to operate with greater clarity, confidence, and control. As demand for advanced AI-driven capabilities accelerates worldwide, MOZN is expanding its global footprint, supporting organizations as they navigate an increasingly complex financial crime landscape.
Financial
THE INFORMATION PARADOX IN MODERN MARKETS: WHY MORE DATA DEMANDS BETTER JUDGEMENT

By Roberto d’Ambrosio – CEO at Axiory
Financial markets in 2026 are producing more information than at any point in history. Earnings data, geopolitical alerts, AI-generated analysis, social media commentary, and real-time price feeds reach investors continuously, relentlessly, and from every direction. The conventional assumption is that this abundance is empowering. More data, the argument goes, means better-informed decisions. From my experience across more than three decades in financial services, the reality is considerably more complicated, and for many investors, the opposite is closer to the truth.
Access to information is not the same as the capacity to process it. When data exceeds the ability of the individual to filter, interpret, and act on it with clarity, the result is not better decision-making. It is hesitation, reactive behaviour, and a false sense of confidence that having seen the data is the same as having understood it. Research published by the Board of Governors of the US Federal Reserve has confirmed what practitioners have long observed: information overload is associated with lower trading volumes and measurably higher risk premia, as investors demand greater compensation for holding assets in an environment where they can no longer reliably distinguish signal from noise. The effect is not marginal. It is structural, and it worsens precisely when markets are most volatile and when clear thinking matters most.
This is particularly relevant for the Middle East. The GCC’s retail investment sector has expanded rapidly, with neo brokerages and digital trading platforms now comprising a market valued at approximately $1.2 billion. The UAE’s regulatory framework, spanning the Securities and Commodities Authority, the Dubai Financial Services Authority, and the Financial Services Regulatory Authority, sets meaningful standards for disclosure and investor suitability. Yet the sheer volume of unfiltered data reaching individual investors through apps, alert systems, and AI-driven content is outpacing the governance infrastructure designed to protect them. Earlier this year, UAE-based retail platforms reported a sharp spike in commodity trading volumes following geopolitical alerts linked to regional energy infrastructure. The pattern was instructive: investors were not responding to analysis. They were reacting to the noise itself.
In my opinion, the real competitive advantage in today’s markets has shifted decisively. It is no longer about who has access to data, because everyone does. It is about who has the discipline, the frameworks, and the human capacity to determine what that data means and what it does not. This is fundamentally a risk management challenge, not a technology challenge.
Consider the consequence chain. When platforms deliver thousands of data points, alerts, and AI-generated recommendations without adequate curation, they create an illusion of informed participation. Investors who lack the training or advisory support to contextualise this information face two symmetrical risks: paralysis, where conflicting signals prevent any decision at all, and impulsive reaction, where a single alarming headline triggers an unexamined trade. Both degrade portfolio outcomes. Both increase transaction costs, erode returns through poorly timed decisions, and expose investors to risks they have not consciously chosen to take.
This raises an uncomfortable question for data providers and platform operators. The business model of much of the fintech and financial information industry is built on engagement, meaning more alerts, more content, more interaction. But engagement is not the same as service, and information delivery without responsibility for its quality, context, and potential impact on decision-making is not a neutral act. It carries consequences, and regulators are beginning to recognise this.
The European Union’s AI Act, whose high-risk obligations for financial services take effect in August 2026, will require providers of AI-driven systems used in credit scoring, risk profiling, and investment decision-making to meet strict standards around transparency, human oversight, and auditability. The EU’s proposed Financial Data Access regulation extends similar principles to data sharing across the financial sector. These frameworks signal a clear direction: those who provide financial data and algorithmically generated analysis will increasingly bear responsibility for how that information is presented, contextualised, and governed. For the GCC, where regulators have consistently demonstrated a commitment to adopting and adapting international best practice, the trajectory is evident. Data provision is moving toward becoming a compliance-intensive activity, and firms operating in or serving the region should prepare accordingly.
But regulation alone will not solve the information paradox. Compliance frameworks establish floors, not ceilings. The deeper challenge is cultural and organisational. Investors, whether institutional or individual, need not just data but the capacity to interpret it within a coherent risk framework. Before acting on any data point, alert, or algorithmically generated recommendation, the prudent investor asks three questions: what is the source, what context is missing, and does this information warrant action or merely attention? This discipline is not intuitive in a market designed to reward speed, but it is essential. It means investing in financial literacy, in advisory relationships grounded in trust and expertise, and in governance structures that ensure decisions are informed by judgement rather than driven by impulse.
Ultimately, this is a human capital challenge. Algorithms can process data at scale, but they cannot replace the informed professional who understands context, identifies what is missing from the data, and exercises the judgement to act, or equally important to refrain from acting, when conditions are uncertain. Organisations and platforms that invest in experienced risk professionals, in robust advisory capability, and in the governance to ensure quality over quantity will build durable competitive advantages. Those that continue to prioritise data volume over decision quality will find that the market eventually prices that negligence in.
In a market flooded with information, the scarcest resource is not data. It is the judgement to know what to do with it.
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