Finance Middle East & Africa 2024

Sponsors & Partners

Sponsors

Amazon Web Services (AWS) is the world’s most comprehensive and broadly adopted cloud, with more than 200 fully featured services available from data centers globally. Millions of customers—including the fastest-growing startups, largest enterprises, and leading government agencies—are using AWS to lower costs, increase security, become more agile, and innovate faster.

Red Hat is the world’s leading provider of enterprise open source solutions—including Linux, cloud, container, and Kubernetes. Red Hat delivers hardened solutions that make it easier for enterprises to work across platforms and environments, from the core datacenter to the network edge.

TSYS, a Global Payments company (NYSE: GPN), is a leading payments technology company delivering innovative software and services to customers globally—driving the world's leading commerce ecosystem. We bring the payment stack for the future—scalable for growth in innovation value and market penetration—to financial institutions, fintechs and retailers so they can realise the full power of payments.

With unmatched expertise, we operate in more than 75 countries around the world, processing billions of transactions each year. Beyond the transaction, we power seamless end-user digital experiences and enable API-centric collaboration, innovation and growth to continuously transform as the future payments partner you need.

Headquartered in Georgia, United States, with approximately 27,000 team members worldwide, Global Payments’ operations span North America, Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia and Latin America.

Temenos (SIX: TEMN) is the world’s leading open platform for composable banking, creating opportunities for over 1.2 billion people around the world every day. We serve over 3000 banks from the largest to challengers and community banks in 150+ countries by helping them build new banking services and state-of-the-art customer experiences. The Temenos open platform helps our top-performing clients achieve return on equity three times the industry average and cost-to-income ratios half the industry average.

Supported by

The Chamber of Thrift Banks (CTB) is the umbrella organization of the country's thrift banks.

Organized in 1974, the chamber has 37 member-banks with over 2,500 branches nationwide. Its mission is “to provide an institutional medium through which the members can collectively assist and cooperate with one another, with other members of the banking sector, and with the National Government and its instrumentalities, more particularly the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) to promote, develop, expand and strengthen the role of savings and loan associations, private development banks and savings and mortgage banks (otherwise known as thrift institutions), in the accumulation of savings, enhancement of trade, commerce, industry and agriculture, and in the economic development of the country.”

It supports its members by ensuring that its various concerns are brought to the attention of the right government institution or regulating body, particularly the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).

CTB helps ensure a manageable, if not better, operating environment for thrift banks, and has been at the forefront of advocating appropriate legislative and regulatory reforms, thereby influencing the statutory and regulatory framework.