How DLT Infrastructure Is Reshaping GCC FinTech
GCC financial systems are entering a new phase of infrastructure reform.
Central banks in the region are now addressing one of the most expensive weaknesses in cross-border payments, the problem of trapped liquidity.
The pilot of Project Aber by the Saudi Central Bank and the Central Bank of the UAE showed that Distributed Ledger Technology can support a shared settlement currency between two national systems.
This development is changing how banks move money and how FinTech companies build services on top of national rails.
Why Trapped Liquidity Is a Structural Problem
Traditional cross-border payments rely on correspondent banking. Commercial banks must maintain Nostro accounts in each country they trade with.
These accounts hold capital that cannot be deployed elsewhere. The cost of maintaining them increases overheads and slows up regional trade.
This affects the GCC more than many other regions due to its high trade volume and the large number of SMEs that depend on quick settlement cycles. Payment delays restrict working capital and reduce the speed at which goods and services can move across borders.
Compliance checks across several intermediaries add further friction. The system works, but it limits growth.
What Project Aber Proved
Project Aber aimed to test whether a jointly issued settlement currency could reduce these inefficiencies. The pilot confirmed that a DLT network can support a shared digital currency for use by commercial banks in both countries.
The system showed stronger architectural resilience than a centralised model. It allowed payments between banks without constant central bank involvement. Removing the single point of failure reduces operational risk and improves business continuity. It also demonstrated that cross-border transfers can settle at the moment of transaction, which removes the need for Nostro accounts.
For commercial banks, this means lower capital costs and faster settlement. For central banks, it sets a foundation for future regional projects. For the private sector, it creates a stable base for new financial products.
How This Infrastructure Supports FinTech Growth
The GCC FinTech market is expanding quickly. The UAE market alone is expected to grow from 3.16 billion dollars in 2024 to 5.71 billion dollars in 2029.
This growth depends on secure and predictable payment rails. A DLT settlement layer gives startups and financial institutions a dependable base for building new products. It reduces delays, lowers the cost of moving funds, and increases certainty for transactions.
SMEs Gain the Most
SMEs are an important part of the region’s trade and e-commerce ecosystem. They rely on steady cash flow and efficient payment cycles. Faster settlement improves their ability to manage suppliers, fulfil orders, and scale their operations.
As regional payments reach a forecasted value of 9.00 billion dollars in 2025, reduced friction creates more space for SME-led expansion.
The Next Phase, Building Services on the DLT Layer
The settlement layer is only the starting point. The larger opportunity sits in the services that can operate on top of this infrastructure.
Smart Contract Applications
DLT systems allow agreements to execute based on predetermined conditions. This reduces manual checks and lowers the risk of errors. In trade finance, this can remove several steps that normally involve paper workflows.
Decentralized Settlement Tools
New financial applications can be built around instant cross-border transfers. These tools can support treasury functions, liquidity management, and cross-border lending. The goal is to make financial operations simpler and more predictable for regional businesses.
Trade Finance Platforms
A shared ledger helps document the movement of goods and related payments. This creates transparency for banks and suppliers and strengthens trust within supply chains. It reduces disputes, shortens verification cycles, and supports more accurate risk assessments.
Expanding Into Capital Markets
The same infrastructure can support Delivery versus Payment for assets such as bonds. This aligns payment systems with wider capital market reforms in Saudi Arabia and the UAE. As national markets deepen, secure settlement rails become more important.
Conclusion
GCC central banks have shown that regional settlement reform is possible with DLT. The shift from trapped liquidity to instant settlement gives banks, SMEs, and FinTech builders a more efficient system to operate within.
The next stage is to create practical services that use this foundation. This change is setting up the GCC for stronger financial activity and a more competitive regional FinTech landscape.
