African Banks Shift Global Strategy Toward Gulf Hubs

  • African banks are deepening their presence in the Gulf as part of a broader strategy to follow clients, access capital, and enter high-growth markets
  • Absa Bank (South Africa) and Equity Bank (Kenya) plan to open offices at the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) in 2026
  • United Bank for Africa (UBA), already present in Dubai, will launch an office at Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah Financial District (KAFD) by year-end

African banks are deepening their presence in the Gulf as part of a broader strategy to follow clients, access capital, and enter high-growth markets. Absa Bank (South Africa) and Equity Bank (Kenya) plan to open offices at the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) in 2026. United Bank for Africa (UBA), already present in Dubai, will launch an office at Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah Financial District (KAFD) by year-end.

The move reflects the growing trade and investment ties between Africa and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries. From 2016 to 2023, African imports from the GCC rose 145%, outpacing China and the EU. Kenyan, Nigerian, and South African firms--especially in energy, agriculture, and mining--are increasingly active in Gulf markets.

With global banks retreating from Africa due to risk concerns, African institutions are filling the gap. BNP Paribas, Standard Chartered, and Société Générale have exited several African markets, opening space for local players to offer cross-border services.

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Remittance flows and diaspora banking also present opportunities. In 2023, GCC countries accounted for 27% of total remittances to Africa, surpassing Western Europe. African banks see DIFC and KAFD as platforms for structured finance, debt vehicles, and investment access across Africa-Gulf corridors.

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Key Takeaways

The financial axis of African banking is shifting east. As Africa-Gulf trade and investment flows accelerate, regional banks are embedding themselves in hubs like Dubai and Riyadh to serve clients, originate deals, and scale corporate banking operations. The Gulf's openness to diversified investment, coupled with Africa's infrastructure needs, creates space for African banks to co-arrange mega-deals once dominated by international lenders. These Gulf offices aren't just symbolic--they're strategic. They provide access to liquidity, investor networks, diaspora clients, and the structured finance expertise needed for complex transactions. With over $100 billion in GCC investments in Africa between 2022 and 2023 alone, African banks now stand at a critical junction: capture the flows or risk being sidelined. As compliance, speed, and capital efficiency become priorities, the East-West financial corridor is becoming the new frontier for African finance.

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