Artwork

Content provided by Mike Baliman. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mike Baliman or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Player FM - Podcast App
Go offline with the Player FM app!

LFP242 – Fintech in Saudi Arabia and Collective Savings w/Naif AbuSaida CEO Hakbah

51:59
 
Share
 

Manage episode 389391855 series 2480363
Content provided by Mike Baliman. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mike Baliman or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Saudi Arabia is a country that increasingly confounds stereotypes and expectations – an example being a YouTuber who has visited every country in the world choosing it for his honeymoon. At the same time it has undergone a phenomenal journey literally in a lifetime from a very low economic standard of living to super-high. As a result, like China, it shares the “relatively blank canvas from which to start Finteching” but equally has it’s own unique issues notably eg in a country with centuries of little wealth and suddenly (on average) excess savings culture and the likes of pension provision are very distinct – or perhaps lacking.

Naif has had a wide and varied career before starting Hakbah a collective savings platform Fintech. Interestingly talking about different social models worldwide P2P was focusing in this “modern” “Western” way on the individual as the “unit of social currency” [and in passing re zeitgeist then became institutionalised on one side (the lending side) and then most became banks). Collective savings were A Big Thing in say the UK for some time where regionally folks would pool savings for others to get mortgages in “Building” (sic) societies. They remain A Big Thing in a still at heart traditional Arabian/Islamic culture.

In this show we dive into some historical and geographical aspects of Saudi Arabia – the 5th largest by land mass in the world in passing. Thence the unique aspects of Fintech in Saudi – one of which is a very rapid pace of development and another a very government-sponsored approach – and finally collective savings in more depth.

Topics discussed include:

  • the geography of Saudi Arabia – unique features and aspects one might not expect
  • tourist aspects and anecdotal reports from visitors
  • 19thC British women travellers to Arabia and the long lasting (and unexpected) consequences of their journeys
  • management of national oil wealth by the government as key to the economic consequences
  • Naif’s career journey
  • the influence of encountering 3rd stage cancer on Naif’s journey and motivation to start Hakbah
  • the genesis of deciding upon collective savings especially in a country without a savings culture
  • the background to the history of Saudi Arabia and particularly the formation of the country and the central bank
  • the long background in money changing due to centuries of pilgrims to Mecca
  • the Dutch starting the first bank branch
  • the first loan in Riyals
  • the central role of the central bank in all finance to this day
  • the national remittance system and immediate payments system outside of the “western” rails of visa/mastercard
  • the advanced nature of ease of using compared to other countries (UK for example)
  • 2018 as the real start of Fintech in Saudi
  • the central banks sandbox and first cohorts
  • verticals that were established
  • moving beyond batches/cohorts in the sandbox to continuous application
  • the national strategy for Fintech and government departmental support
  • key Fintech verticals with the greatest penetration in 2023
  • around 130 Fintechs at present
  • target of 525 by 2030
  • the complex issue of a lack of savings culture
  • the saying ~”spend what is in your pocket and the assistance is from God”
  • “more than 70% of Saudis don’t have any emergency savings at all” (!)
  • the State provision of pensions meaning that saving in a pension scheme is not the main modus operendi – enjoy life and spend now year by year rather than saving up to enjoy in the future
  • short-term savings examples in the culture
  • long-term savings culture across the Arab world
  • collective savings being traditional and existing in more than 60 countries around the world
  • at the end of a cycle no one owes anyone anything (cf debt-based systems where due to the interest margin between save and lend there is always increased debt every cycle)
  • how does trust work in the variety of collective savings schemes around the world?
  • what is key to establishing trust?
  • Hakbah’s model, key design features and very low default rate over its history (less than 0.7% default)
  • repayment of debts being historically important in England if not now in the “modernised” culture
  • the outlook for Fintech in Saudi
  • Hakbah’s plans and future ideas

And much much more 🙂

Share and enjoy!

  continue reading

257 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 389391855 series 2480363
Content provided by Mike Baliman. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mike Baliman or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Saudi Arabia is a country that increasingly confounds stereotypes and expectations – an example being a YouTuber who has visited every country in the world choosing it for his honeymoon. At the same time it has undergone a phenomenal journey literally in a lifetime from a very low economic standard of living to super-high. As a result, like China, it shares the “relatively blank canvas from which to start Finteching” but equally has it’s own unique issues notably eg in a country with centuries of little wealth and suddenly (on average) excess savings culture and the likes of pension provision are very distinct – or perhaps lacking.

Naif has had a wide and varied career before starting Hakbah a collective savings platform Fintech. Interestingly talking about different social models worldwide P2P was focusing in this “modern” “Western” way on the individual as the “unit of social currency” [and in passing re zeitgeist then became institutionalised on one side (the lending side) and then most became banks). Collective savings were A Big Thing in say the UK for some time where regionally folks would pool savings for others to get mortgages in “Building” (sic) societies. They remain A Big Thing in a still at heart traditional Arabian/Islamic culture.

In this show we dive into some historical and geographical aspects of Saudi Arabia – the 5th largest by land mass in the world in passing. Thence the unique aspects of Fintech in Saudi – one of which is a very rapid pace of development and another a very government-sponsored approach – and finally collective savings in more depth.

Topics discussed include:

  • the geography of Saudi Arabia – unique features and aspects one might not expect
  • tourist aspects and anecdotal reports from visitors
  • 19thC British women travellers to Arabia and the long lasting (and unexpected) consequences of their journeys
  • management of national oil wealth by the government as key to the economic consequences
  • Naif’s career journey
  • the influence of encountering 3rd stage cancer on Naif’s journey and motivation to start Hakbah
  • the genesis of deciding upon collective savings especially in a country without a savings culture
  • the background to the history of Saudi Arabia and particularly the formation of the country and the central bank
  • the long background in money changing due to centuries of pilgrims to Mecca
  • the Dutch starting the first bank branch
  • the first loan in Riyals
  • the central role of the central bank in all finance to this day
  • the national remittance system and immediate payments system outside of the “western” rails of visa/mastercard
  • the advanced nature of ease of using compared to other countries (UK for example)
  • 2018 as the real start of Fintech in Saudi
  • the central banks sandbox and first cohorts
  • verticals that were established
  • moving beyond batches/cohorts in the sandbox to continuous application
  • the national strategy for Fintech and government departmental support
  • key Fintech verticals with the greatest penetration in 2023
  • around 130 Fintechs at present
  • target of 525 by 2030
  • the complex issue of a lack of savings culture
  • the saying ~”spend what is in your pocket and the assistance is from God”
  • “more than 70% of Saudis don’t have any emergency savings at all” (!)
  • the State provision of pensions meaning that saving in a pension scheme is not the main modus operendi – enjoy life and spend now year by year rather than saving up to enjoy in the future
  • short-term savings examples in the culture
  • long-term savings culture across the Arab world
  • collective savings being traditional and existing in more than 60 countries around the world
  • at the end of a cycle no one owes anyone anything (cf debt-based systems where due to the interest margin between save and lend there is always increased debt every cycle)
  • how does trust work in the variety of collective savings schemes around the world?
  • what is key to establishing trust?
  • Hakbah’s model, key design features and very low default rate over its history (less than 0.7% default)
  • repayment of debts being historically important in England if not now in the “modernised” culture
  • the outlook for Fintech in Saudi
  • Hakbah’s plans and future ideas

And much much more 🙂

Share and enjoy!

  continue reading

257 episodes

All episodes

×
 
Loading …

Welcome to Player FM!

Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.

 

Quick Reference Guide