
Food Finance
The new frontiers in banking include mobile payments, blockchain, inclusion and … agriculture?
Islamic finance took a hit in 2020 but is preparing for the next surge of growth through innovation, standardization, and M&A activity.
As we wave goodbye to 2020, Global Finance presents the most popular stories from throughout the year.
Global Finance is now making complete digital editions of each new issue available to all GFMag.com visitors. These editions include all editorial and advertising content exactly as it appears in the printed version.
The December power transmission auction will be the first launched by the Brazilian government in 2020.
The fourth installment of a Global Finance FAQ web series on Islamic finance.
Did politics play a role in the cancellation of Ant Group's IPO?
The third installment of a Global Finance FAQ web series on Islamic finance.
The second installment of a Global Finance FAQ web series on Islamic finance.
Stripe's acquisition is part of a wider trend of African fintech startups defying the odds during the global pandemic to bag multimillion-dollar M&A deals.
The first installment of a Global Finance FAQ web series on Islamic finance.
Seychelles' central bank governor Caroline Abel tells Global Finance that the central bank of Seychelles will focus on diversifying the economy after the pandemic passes and in the meantime is focused on stopping currency speculation.
Policymakers should carry on with stimulus measures and let cheap borrowing costs ease their fears, Fund officials say.
Billionaire wealth grew despite the global pandemic, particularly for those in tech, health care, and industrials.
NewCo will free the parent to soar in cloud services, IBM says.
Central banks in countries like Sweden, China, the UK, Uruguay, West Africa, Japan, Singapore, and France are piloting or experimenting with digital currencies.
While fintech was meant to democratize economic power, unconscious biases drove innovation and solutions were designed to generate revenue rather than improve everyone's lives.
Under the shadow of the pandemic, SWIFT has embarked on a revamp of its underlying technological infrastructure, which may be reliable, trusted and relatively secure, but is no longer fit for purpose in a highly interconnected and sped up world.
The platform will operate 24 hours per day, 365 days a year, including holidays and weekends.
Will a brutal decline in the Naira force the country to finally end its multiple-exchange-rate system?
Thailand's economy is being battered by the pandemic and political uncertainty.