Growth in financial transactions messaging system SWIFT’s
traffic volumes in the Middle East and Africa has accelerated by
double-digit percentages this year as banks expand rapidly and
non-financial institutions join the industry cooperative, said the
regional head.
In the Middle East growth in the year up to the end of August was 12
percent, with double-digit expansion in Qatar and the United Arab
Emirates helping offset a decline in Lebanon, Iraq and Libya, said Sido
Bestani in an interview.
The data excludes Iran, which has been disconnected from the
Belgium-based network since 2012 as a result of EU sanctions against the
country.
Expansion in Africa in the past year was up 11 percent, led by Kenya, Ghana and Nigeria, Bestani said.
Average global SWIFT traffic growth so far this year is running at 10
percent. The Middle East and Africa represents more than 4 percent of
total volumes, a level that should rise as both regions historically
grow at a faster pace than the rest of the world.
Banks in the Middle East and Africa have been expanding both within
and outside their borders in recent years. Through acquisitions, Qatar
National Bank, the largest bank in the Gulf Arab region, has expanded
into Egypt and several other African markets, while South Africa-based
Standard Bank, Africa’s largest bank by assets, has built a presence in
20 countries including Nigeria, Angola and Mozambique.
In Africa, banks have been adding more clients in a country where the
proportion of the population without a bank account totals as much as
80 percent in sub-Saharan Africa.
But Bestani said that drivers for business in the Middle East and Africa were different.
“We see more traction from some African communities,” said Bestani.
“There is centralised decision-making, so for example the central bank
of Ghana contacted us to ask if we can provide a service for complying
with sanctions to all banks.
“In the Middle East we see less examples of supporting the community
and more action at the level of individual banks and financial
institutions.”
More non-financial institution companies are also joining. In the
Middle East, around 50 such firms have joined, enabling them to handle
cash management, trade and supply chain business through the system.
But SWIFT expects one of the main areas for future expansion to be
the securities markets, where a lot of payments and settlement
instructions are currently sent manually.
In the Middle East and Africa, including Turkey, payments represent
57 percent of information sent through SWIFT, with securities forming 30
percent of the total data. That compares with worldwide, where payments
and securities roughly account for percent each of total data flow.
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