FinanceMagnets
Published on 2026-04-30 | 2 hours ago

Qatar Eases QFC Compliance Burden for 4,400 Firms as Regional War Tests Financial Hub Push

The Qatar Financial Centre (QFC) has rolled out a relief package for the more than 4,400 firms registered on its platform, extending audited financial statement deadlines and granting case-by-case flexibility on tax filings, the center said in a statement today (Wednesday). QFC framed the measures as part of a broader national effort by the State of Qatar to keep businesses operating amid what it called "evolving regional developments."Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!)A Concrete Backdrop Behind the Diplomatic PhrasingThe Gulf has spent the past two months absorbing the economic fallout from war with Iran. That includes damage at the Ras Laffan LNG complex, a brief shutdown of the Abu Dhabi and Dubai stock exchanges in early March, and a sharp swing in Qatar's trade balance.The IMF in its latest World Economic Outlook projected Qatar's economy could shrink by close to 9 percent in 2026, even as it forecast the country would return to being among the fastest-growing GCC economies from 2027 onward.Brokers across the region have been recalibrating their exposure since the strikes, with firms that anchored fully in the UAE now reckoning with concentration risk.Targeted Relief Covers Filings, Taxes, and Startup WorkspacesThe QFC package focuses on three pressure points the center said its firms have flagged. Companies will get more time to file audited financial statements, and the center said it would adjust tax filing timelines on a case-by-case basis rather than offering a blanket extension.That carve-out suggests an attempt to keep the 10 percent corporate tax regime intact while easing administrative pressure. Startups, which often lease space in QFC's co-working hubs including the Tech Circle on the ninth floor of QFC Tower 1, will see temporary relief on workspace charges.The QFC said the measures sit on top of its existing offer to international firms, which includes 100 percent foreign ownership, 100 percent profit repatriation, and a 10 percent corporate tax on locally-sourced profits."Qatar's commitment to its business community is unwavering," said Sheikh Faisal bin Thani Al Thani, Qatar's Minister of Commerce and Industry and chairman of Invest Qatar, in a statement coordinating the broader national package."As regional conditions continue to evolve, we remain fully focused on acting decisively to support companies operating in our market, safeguard business continuity and reinforce confidence."Doha's Pitch to Brokers Has Lagged Dubai'sFor Qatar, the relief package is also a positioning exercise. The Third National Development Strategy referenced in the QFC statement sits alongside the longer-running Qatar National Vision 2030, which prioritizes diversification away from hydrocarbons into financial services, fintech, asset management, and digital infrastructure.The pitch has historically attracted scattered interest from the retail brokerage industry. London-headquartered ICM.com received QFC authorisation in late 2021, opening a Doha office and citing Qatar's GCC client base.Equiti Group signed a memorandum of understanding with Qatari holding company MK Enterprise in 2023 to expand into the country, with co-founder Mohammed Alahmad Ketmawi describing Qatar's strategic importance at the time.The QFC public register lists dozens of firms operating from towers in West Bay and Lusail, though the bulk are banks, insurers, advisory shops, and family offices rather than CFD brokerages. Most regional broker activity has flowed instead to the United Arab Emirates, where the Dubai Financial Services Authority and the federal Capital Markets Authority offer two distinct licensing routes that have absorbed the bulk of the migration out of Cyprus over the past two years.MENA Broker Migration Has Largely Flowed to DubaiThe numbers tell the story. The DIFC registered 1,081 new active companies in the first half of 2025 alone, bringing its total to 7,700 and lifting financial services authorisations 28 percent year-over-year.The centre now houses more than 70 brokerage firms, including five of the top 10 interdealer brokers globally by volume, according to data DIFC has shared publicly. The Dubai Financial Services Authority subsequently rolled out a digital licensing platform projected to deliver a 33 percent efficiency gain in application processing, the regulator said.Brokers have made the volume case repeatedly. Capital.com reported that 52 percent of its first-half 2025 trading volume, or roughly $804 billion, was generated from MENA traders, against 15 percent from Europe, with UAE-based traders contributing nearly 72 percent of that MENA volume.CFI Financial, another Middle East-focused broker, handled a record $2.3 trillion in trading volume during the first quarter of 2026, a figure that approached the firm's full-year 2024 total. Tickmill said its regional trading volume rose 54 percent year-over-year, while IG Group disclosed Dubai net trading revenue of £28.7 million for the year ended May 31, 2025, up from £18.9 million the prior year.The migration story extends across competitor names. Forex.com operator Gain Capital, XM, RoboMarkets, Deriv, VT Markets, Eightcap, and Anax Capital all secured UAE authorisations in 2025.Plus500, XTB, Deriv, and RoboMarkets have obtained the full Category 1 brokerage licence from the federal Capital Markets Authority, which permits client deposits and local execution. A larger group has opted for the lighter Category 5 license, geared toward introducing-broker and white-label models.Saudi Arabia, by contrast, has yet to roll out a fully-formed CFD licensing framework, and Qatar's offering sits closer to a wholesale and asset-management profile than a retail trading hub.Whether the latest QFC measures move the needle on broker registrations is harder to assess. The relief package is time-bound and tied to current circumstances rather than a structural reform of the licensing regime. The QFC said the measures will be reviewed continuously as conditions evolve. This article was written by Damian Chmiel at www.financemagnates.com.

Read full article on FINANCEMAGNETS

Latest News View more

FINANCEMAGNETS | Published on 2026-04-30 | 13 mins ago
Bullish
4%

Bullish
Neutral
93%

Neutral
Bearish
2%

Bearish
Sentiment Analysis (Alert )
Bullish ND
Bullish
Neutral ND
Neutral
Bearish ND
Bearish
 
1
BITCOIN.COM | Published on 2026-04-30 | 23 mins ago
Bullish
1%

Bullish
Neutral
42%

Neutral
Bearish
56%

Bearish
Sentiment Analysis (Alert )
Bullish ND
Bullish
Neutral ND
Neutral
Bearish ND
Bearish
 
2
FINANCEMAGNETS | Published on 2026-04-30 | 27 mins ago
Bullish
20%

Bullish
Neutral
78%

Neutral
Bearish
2%

Bearish
Sentiment Analysis (Alert )
Bullish ND
Bullish
Neutral ND
Neutral
Bearish ND
Bearish
 
3
FINANCEMAGNETS | Published on 2026-04-30 | 27 mins ago
LIVE BITCOIN NEWS | Published on 2026-04-30 | 28 mins ago
Bullish
2%

Bullish
Neutral
45%

Neutral
Bearish
53%

Bearish
Sentiment Analysis (Alert )
Bullish ND
Bullish
Neutral ND
Neutral
Bearish ND
Bearish
 
4
LIVE BITCOIN NEWS | Published on 2026-04-30 | 28 mins ago
99 BITCOINS | Published on 2026-04-30 | 50 mins ago
Bullish
5%

Bullish
Neutral
55%

Neutral
Bearish
40%

Bearish
Sentiment Analysis (Alert )
Bullish ND
Bullish
Neutral ND
Neutral
Bearish ND
Bearish
 
5
FINANCEMAGNETS | Published on 2026-04-30 | 58 mins ago
Bullish
15%

Bullish
Neutral
84%

Neutral
Bearish
1%

Bearish
Sentiment Analysis (Alert )
Bullish ND
Bullish
Neutral ND
Neutral
Bearish ND
Bearish
 
6
FINANCEMAGNETS | Published on 2026-04-30 | 58 mins ago
Top 10 Performance
TRX +0.97% News
FIGR_HELOC +0.05% News
USDC -0.01% News
USDT -0.03% News
BNB -2.12% News
XRP -2.25% News
BTC -2.36% News
DOGE -2.86% News
SOL -2.97% News
ETH -3.65% News
View more