Financial
LATEST CYBERSECURITY CHALLENGES IN THE WORLD OF BFSI
Exclusive interview with Premchand Kurup, CEO, Paramount
Which emerging cyber risks are most likely to influence or reshape GCC banking regulations in the coming years?
We live in an era where nearly every banking service depends on advanced digital infrastructure, and cybercriminals are aware of it. With the emergence of AI, the risks have evolved even further, enabling attacks that can adapt and operate at an unprecedented scale. Over the period of 2024–2026, GCC banking regulations in the region are being influenced by the convergence of advanced ransomware, API-driven open banking risks and AI-enabled cyber threats.
Firstly, targeted ransomware and data extortion attacks against banks and fintechs in the Gulf region have evolved from isolated incidents into a persistent and systemic risk. Financial institutions in the UAE and across the GCC region have experienced a noticeable rise in incidents and malware activity through 2024 and into 2025 by nearly 100%, and this is specific to Paramount. . In response, regulators are tightening requirements for incident reporting timelines, operational resilience testing and recovery capabilities within central banks and national cybersecurity frameworks, with these requirements expected to become more stringent in 2026.
Secondly, the rapid expansion of open banking and digital transformation initiatives has made API security and cloud exposure critical regulatory concerns. Misconfigured cloud environments, weak API authentication, and complex third-party integrations are creating new attack surfaces that traditional perimeter-based security models cannot adequately protect. As a result, regulators in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and other GCC countries are strengthening supervisory expectations around identity management, data protection and third-party risk management within banking regulations.
Additionally, the rise of AI-driven fraud and AI-assisted cyberattacks is reshaping how supervisors view the intersection of model risks and cyber risks. AI is being increasingly used to support credit assessment, KYC and fraud detection, while also being leveraged by attackers to scale phishing, social engineering and evasion techniques. This dual-use nature of AI is prompting regulators to develop guidance on AI governance, explainability and enhanced monitoring of AI-enabled processes in the financial sector.
What is one underrated cybersecurity innovation today that you believe will become critical for the Middle East’s BFSI sector over the next few years?
One of the most underrated cybersecurity innovations today, and yet one that is likely to become critical for the Middle East’s banking, financial services and insurance (BFSI) sector over the next few years, is behaviour-based analytics, which has become deeply integrated into security operations centre (SOC) functions and fraud detection systems. Numerous financial institutions still rely heavily on static, rule-based systems that trigger alerts based on fixed thresholds or known attack signatures. While effective against traditional threats, these approaches struggle to detect modern attacks that rely on lateral movement, living off the land (LOTL) techniques and sophisticated social engineering.
In contrast, behaviour-driven analytics establishs dynamic baselines for users, devices, applications and APIs. It continuously monitors the way accounts are accessed, transactions are executed and systems communicate, enabling early detection of anomalies that signal potential fraud or intrusion. These capabilities closely mirror the patterns observed in recent high-impact attacks on banks and fintechs across the region. For GCC banks navigating rapid cloud adoption, open banking frameworks and increasing use of AI in core operations, behavioural analytics is becoming essential. It allows institutions to distinguish legitimate high-volume digital activity from subtle intrusions, as highlighted in the report titled ‘2025 Global Digital Trust Insights – Middle East findings’.
Reflecting this shift, Paramount’s advisory and SOC services in the region are increasingly promoting a transition from purely rule-driven monitoring to a blended model that combines behavioural analytics, traditional rules, and threat intelligence. This integrated approach significantly improves detection speed and reduces false positives in complex Middle Eastern financial environments.
From the Paramount SOC’s perspective, approximately how many security incidents or threats have been monitored and mitigated this year
Over the last year we have issued over 592 critical advisories and mitigated them. Critical advisories are those that have the potential to halt business operations significantly.
The year 2026 has just begun, and we have issued nearly 100 advisories already.
Apart from critical advisories we have issued regular 318 advisories this year while the number stood at 2208 last year . We have just begun the year, but the number of alerts shows an increasing trend.
What types of cyber threats are most frequently detected and addressed by the SOC?
During the fiscal year 2024–2025, the most frequently detected threats identified by Paramount’s SOC include phishing and credential theft leading to account takeover, often using highly localised and AI-generated lures. SOC teams also regularly respond to ransomware and data extortion campaigns, alongside API, web application, and DDoS attacks targeting digital banking platforms. Moreover, cloud misconfigurations and excessive access permissions remain a persistent risk, frequently identified through continuous monitoring and threat hunting.
How can C-suite leaders better prepare their organisations, and what proactive steps should banks take to stay ahead of fraud and cyber threats?
For banks across the GCC region, C-suite leaders need to treat cyber resilience as a core board-level business capability, and not simply as a technical or IT function. With cyber threats having direct implications for financial stability, reputation, and regulatory compliance, leadership should embed cyber risk into enterprise risk management frameworks and board reporting. Major threat scenarios such as prolonged digital channel outages, data extortion incidents, or systemic third-party failures should be quantified and reviewed alongside credit and liquidity risks, in line with evolving GCC regulatory expectations. Leaders should further align their cyber strategies with national cybersecurity frameworks and central bank guidance, using independent maturity assessments to identify gaps and prioritise investments through 2026.
From an operational and technology perspective, adopting a zero-trust approach across identities, devices, networks and applications is becoming essential, particularly in API-enabled and cloud-based banking environments. This should be supported by strong SOC and incident response capabilities, whether in-house or through specialised providers such as Paramount, to ensure 24/7 monitoring, rapid containment and documented playbooks for both regulators and customers. Banks also need to invest in advanced fraud analytics and behaviour-based monitoring to detect account takeover and payment fraud, particularly as AI tools make phishing and social engineering more convincing, as witnessed in recent UAE ransomware trends.
Equally important is rigorous third-party and supply chain risk management. This includes structured security due diligence and continuous monitoring of fintech partners, cloud providers and critical vendors, given the growing risk of indirect compromised paths into Gulf financial institutions. Finally, C-suite leaders should actively promote a strong cyber resilience culture. This involves running realistic simulations of ransomware, data leaks, and payment fraud scenarios to sharpen organisational readiness and showcase proactive resilience to regulators, customers and shareholders.
Given the distinct regulatory, cultural, and operational landscape of the GCC, what makes cybersecurity in the region’s BFSI sector uniquely challenging compared to the US or Europe?
Cybersecurity in the GCC region’s BFSI sector is uniquely challenging because financial institutions operate at the intersection of rapid digital transformation, high geopolitical relevance and complex, multi-layered regulation. From a regulatory standpoint, institutions in the region must comply simultaneously with national cybersecurity authorities, central banks, and in some cases, free zone regulators. These entities impose detailed requirements on controls, data protection and incident reporting, creating a more fragmented and demanding compliance landscape than in many single-jurisdiction markets. The situation is further complicated by strict data residency and data sovereignty rules, which significantly influence how banks can design and deploy cloud, analytics, and cross-border platforms.
Operationally, GCC banks are advancing quickly into digital, mobile and open banking services, often faster than ecosystem-wide security maturity. While this supports financial inclusion, it also expands the attack surface through APIs, cloud services, and fintech partnerships. At the same time, the Gulf region has become one of the most actively targeted regions for financially motivated cybercrime and disruptive attacks, with banks and fintechs featuring prominently in 2024–2025 reports on ransomware, DDoS campaigns and sophisticated fraud schemes. The combination of rapid innovation, partner security, high attacker interest and evolving regulatory expectations creates a risk profile that is distinct from more established markets in North America and Europe.
In response, Paramount’s work with GCC BFSI clients focuses on developing region-specific security architectures and systems rather than simply importing models from other geographies. This includes designing frameworks aligned with local regulatory obligations, regional threat intelligence and the operational realities of Middle Eastern institutions as they evolve through 2026.
Financial
Why Personalisation Is the New Currency in Wealth Management
By Kalpesh Khakhria, Group Chairman at Klay Group
Everyone in the wealth management industry claims to offer “personalisation.” Yet, for most traditional institutions, it remains a hollow buzzword, a superficial exercise of sorting investors into predefined “conservative” or “aggressive” risk boxes. This transaction-led and product-pushing model is fundamentally broken for today’s ultra-high-net-worth families, whose lives, businesses, and assets span multiple global jurisdictions. Real personalisation is a structural necessity that requires a radical overhaul of how advice is delivered.
We are operating in an era where wealthy families are building complex, cross-border portfolios. A business might be headquartered in the GCC, hold properties in Europe, and have beneficiaries residing across continents. The most critical point is “What does this capital need to achieve across generations?” Traditional banking silos, driven by high client-to-advisor ratios and transactional commissions, simply lack the agility and independence to answer this effectively.
While personalisation is a growing trend across the broader service industry, in wealth management, it has become the new currency. It is the primary driver of growth and retention, shifting the industry standard from generic products to trust-based, tailored advice. The future of wealth management will be exclusively influenced by trust and deep customisation. True personalisation relies on two specific, uncompromising differentiators: structural independence and relationship-plus-data intelligence.
First, it is impossible to fully understand a family’s cross-border tax realities, liquidity needs, or succession plans if an advisor manages multiple different accounts. Personalisation requires time and undivided attention. That is why boutique advisory models that deliberately cap an advisor’s roster, such as limiting it to just 20 families, are so critical. By removing the pressure of aggressive sales targets and replacing transaction-led commissions with a transparent advisory fee structure, advisors gain the freedom to ask the “why” behind a client’s wealth. This structural independence aligns the advisor’s interests directly with the client’s long-term outcomes, enabling the advisor to act as a true partner.
Second, modern personalisation demands the seamless integration of advanced financial technology. We have entered the era of “Wealth 3.0,” where artificial intelligence and data analytics are fundamentally changing how the industry forecasts risk and segments clients. AI must be utilised to codify a family’s complex constraints, such as multi-currency exposures, jurisdictional rules, and legacy holdings, into actionable, real-time portfolio adjustments and proactive stress testing.
However, the industry must draw an uncompromising line between automation and autonomy. While AI powerfully accelerates scenario analysis, it cannot replace the human connection. The nuanced human judgment, discretion, and contextual understanding required to navigate complex, multi-generational wealth remains absolutely irreplaceable. Technology provides the speed and the insight, but seasoned human strategists must retain ultimate autonomy to ensure that personalisation scales without compromising suitability or compliance.
Wealth management today must transcend simple market timing. It is about actively building multi-generational partnerships. The families that succeed over time are those who partner with independent advisors who are unconditionally in their corner. By combining bespoke human expertise with cutting-edge data intelligence, true personalisation transforms wealth from a static collection of assets into a powerful, coherent legacy that thrives across generations.
Financial
ATHAR+ LAUNCHES 2ND HACK4IMPACT HACKATHON IN ABU DHABI
Athar+, Abu Dhabi’s first purpose-driven hub dedicated to accelerating social impact, operated by the Authority of Social Contribution – Ma’an, has launched the second edition of its HACK4IMPACT hackathon, bringing together changemakers to develop practical solutions that address key social priorities and contribute to positive social impact across Abu Dhabi.
Launched in line with the objectives of the UAE’s Year of Family, this edition of the hackathon focuses on addressing family-related challenges through innovative and community-driven approaches. Taking place from 16-18 June 2026 at Athar+, the three-day programme brings together aspiring entrepreneurs, innovators, professionals, and community members to develop solutions addressing three family-centred priorities: building stronger family foundations, enhancing financial wellbeing for parents, and supporting families caring for aging parents.
Guided through a structured innovation journey, participants will apply design thinking methodologies to explore challenges, validate ideas, develop prototype concepts, and present their solutions to a panel of judges.
High-potential concepts emerging from the hackathon have the opportunity to be considered for further support through Athar+’s incubation ecosystem, enabling participants to continue developing their solutions beyond the event. Through these challenge areas, the initiative aims to advance family wellbeing, strengthen social cohesion, and support the development of solutions that respond to the evolving needs of families in Abu Dhabi.
This initiative aims to strengthen practical innovation skills among participants while identifying high-potential ideas and scalable concepts capable of addressing key social priorities. It also encourages collaboration by bringing together individuals from diverse backgrounds and expertise. The hackathon provides an accessible entry point for youth and first-time innovators to contribute to solving community challenges through entrepreneurship and social innovation, inspiring them to play an active role in shaping impactful and practical solutions.
His Excellency Salem AlShamsi, Executive Director of Social Incubation and Contracting at Ma’an said: “HACK4IMPACT reflects Athar+’s commitment to empowering innovators and aspiring entrepreneurs to develop practical solutions that address real social priorities and enhance quality of life across our communities. By empowering future talent through Athar+, we are strengthening Abu Dhabi’s position as a regional hub for social entrepreneurship while advancing the Authority’s vision of fostering a culture of giving, participation, and measurable social progress.’’
Aligned with the objectives of the UAE’s Year of Family, the initiative also supports broader national efforts to strengthen family wellbeing, social resilience, and community cohesion through collaborative innovation and inclusive engagement.”
Through dedicated workspaces, expert mentorship, professional services, and tailored growth programmes offered by Athar+, participants will be supported in transforming ideas into prototype concepts while gaining access to opportunities within Abu Dhabi’s innovation and entrepreneurship ecosystem.
Financial
QASHIO AND NEXA AI LAB LAUNCH PARTNERSHIP TO AUTOMATE FINANCE WORKFLOWS IN THE UAE
Qashio, the UAE’s leading spend management platform, has partnered with NEXA AI Lab, the AI division of NEXA, one of MENA’s leading digital growth agencies, to help accelerate AI adoption across finance teams in the UAE through automation and AI-powered financial workflows.
As part of the partnership, Qashio and NEXA AI Lab will work together to support businesses in adopting AI tools that improve spend visibility, streamline manual processes, and make finance operations more efficient. The partnership will also include a free AI audit to help finance teams identify where AI can deliver immediate operational value and support broader adoption across the business. Both companies say the initiative is designed to move businesses from AI awareness to implementation, in line with the UAE’s national AI strategy targeting full public sector AI integration by 2031.
Amit Vyas, CEO of NEXA, comments: “AI delivers value when it is embedded directly into day-to-day workflows, rather than treated as a standalone concept. Finance is one of the clearest areas where this shift is already taking place, with businesses under increasing pressure to improve real-time decision-making. Through our partnership with Qashio, our goal is to help organisations identify where AI can be applied in practical, high-impact ways across financial operations.”
Armin Moradi, CEO of Qashio, said: “A global industry survey shows that 81% of financial institutions expect AI to be embedded in their core operations by 2030, and the UAE is one of the fastest-growing AI markets globally, setting a new baseline for competitiveness across the private sector. Our partnership with NEXA AI Lab is built to help close the gap between AI adoption plans and real execution, enabling enterprises and SMEs in the UAE to compete with the best in the world.”
Qashio has already integrated AI into its own financial workflows through features such as AI-powered receipt capture, which automatically extracts key information, including TRN, vendor names, and transaction data. The technology helps finance teams reduce manual data entry, save more than 4 hours each week, and maintain cleaner, more reliable financial records.
NEXA brings deep expertise in digital transformation and AI implementation across industries. Together, the two companies are focused on making AI accessible and measurable for businesses in the UAE. Both companies are already using tools like ConvoAI to improve access to data and provide instant support outside of working hours. Qashio is already leveraging NEXA AI Lab’s product offering. This reflects a broader shift towards always-on, AI-enabled operations.
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