Expert View: Islamic Finance in the GCC — Scale, Innovation and Global Relevance

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Expert Analysis — Gulf Times Now

Islamic finance — the provision of financial services in accordance with Sharia principles that prohibit interest (riba), excessive uncertainty (gharar), and investment in prohibited activities — has grown from a niche market serving Muslim communities to a global industry with assets estimated at over $3 trillion. The GCC countries sit at the heart of this industry, as both its largest practitioners and the primary regulatory innovators shaping its evolution.

The GCC as the Hub of Islamic Finance

Saudi Arabia and the UAE together account for a substantial proportion of global Islamic banking assets. Al Rajhi Bank in Saudi Arabia is the world’s largest Islamic bank by assets, managing hundreds of billions of dollars in Sharia-compliant assets. Dubai Islamic Bank, Emirates Islamic, and Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank are major institutions in the UAE. Bahrain, as home to the Accounting and Auditing Organisation for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI) — the global standard-setter for Islamic finance — plays a disproportionately important regulatory role in the industry’s development.

Sukuk: The Islamic Bond Market

Sukuk (Islamic bonds) represent one of the most significant product innovations in global fixed income markets over the past two decades. Unlike conventional bonds that involve a lender-borrower interest relationship, sukuk are structured around asset ownership, lease arrangements, or equity participation — mechanisms that generate economic returns without riba. Nasdaq Dubai is the world’s largest sukuk listing venue, with hundreds of billions of dollars of sukuk listed from issuers across GCC countries, Malaysia, Turkey, and international corporations and governments seeking access to Islamic capital.

Islamic Fintech: The Next Frontier

The intersection of Islamic finance principles and financial technology is creating a new generation of Sharia-compliant digital financial products. Islamic buy-now-pay-later services (structured as murabaha contracts rather than interest-bearing credit), halal robo-advisors that screen investments for Sharia compliance, and blockchain-based sukuk issuance platforms are all emerging categories. Bahrain FinTech Bay and ADGM in Abu Dhabi have positioned themselves as regulatory-friendly environments for Islamic fintech experimentation.

For international businesses and investors, Islamic finance is no longer niche. With a Muslim global population exceeding 1.8 billion — a significant proportion of whom have strong preferences for halal financial products — and with GCC sovereign wealth increasingly deployed through Sharia-compliant structures, Islamic finance literacy is becoming a genuine business skill for anyone operating in Muslim-majority markets or partnering with GCC institutional investors.

Also Read: GCC Real Estate Markets 2025: Why Gulf Property Outperforms Global Benchmarks | Expert View: The Evolving Role of GCC Sovereign Wealth Funds in Global Markets | AI in GCC Banking: How Gulf Banks Are Deploying Artificial Intelligence

Fatima Al Zaabi
Fatima Al Zaabi
Senior Editor covering GCC business leadership, policy and economic strategy.

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