Banking & Financial Services
A regulated banking platform at the centre of three corridors.
Trade finance, transaction banking, investment banking, and private wealth. Positioned around the flows that most matter to the Indian Ocean’s real economy.
The platform
Built around the flows that matter.
IFC Oman’s banking framework is built around the four activities that move real capital through the Indian Ocean: trade finance for the Gulf, South Asia, and East Africa corridor, project lending into Oman’s growth economy, cross-border remittances, and the institutional banking infrastructure that underpins everything else.
The aim is to be the regulated address for international banks that already finance these flows, and the regulated home for the Omani institutions that are increasingly active on the same routes. One licence, one rulebook, one set of independent courts. A platform built for institutions that need certainty before they commit capital.
Heritage and ambition, in one frame
The argument
Three reasons banks are looking at Oman now.
01
The trade corridor argument
The Gulf, South Asia, and East Africa corridor is one of the world’s most active trade lanes. The Sultanate of Oman is the only GCC state with coastline on both the Arabian Sea and the Gulf of Oman. Port infrastructure, particularly the Port of Sohar and Salalah’s free zone, handles substantial container and bulk cargo volumes. For banks financing commodity, manufacturing, and logistics flows across this corridor, Oman is a natural operating point. IFC Oman’s regulatory framework is designed for that positioning.
02
A neutral jurisdiction for regional syndications
Cross-border syndicated loans and project finance facilities involving lenders and borrowers from multiple jurisdictions need a neutral seat for agent bank functions and security trustee arrangements. IFC Oman’s common law jurisdiction, English-language courts, and political neutrality make it a credible and practical choice for structuring regional financing transactions.
Legal certainty
03
Access to Oman's growth economy
Oman’s government has committed to significant infrastructure and energy investment as part of Oman Vision 2040. Privatisation of state assets, the development of special economic zones, the expansion of renewable energy capacity, and the growth of logistics infrastructure all generate bankable project finance and corporate lending opportunities. An IFC Oman-licensed bank can participate in those transactions with a regulated presence inside the jurisdiction.
The opportunity
An economy at an inflection point.
Oman Vision 2040 sets ambitious targets for economic diversification, foreign direct investment, and infrastructure development across manufacturing, logistics, tourism, and energy transition. Each of those sectors generates demand for banking services: project finance, trade finance, treasury management, and institutional lending. IFC Oman is the platform through which banks can establish a regulated presence to participate in that opportunity.
BBB-
Oman sovereign investment grade rating
What you can do here
Six regulated banking activities.
IFC Oman’s regulatory framework permits the following banking and financial services activities, subject to licence authorisation by the IFC Oman Regulatory Authority.
01
Investment banking
Capital markets origination, M&A advisory, structured finance, and debt and equity issuance for Omani and regional clients.
02
Corporate and institutional lending
Bilateral and syndicated loans to corporate borrowers, project finance facilities, and leveraged finance.
03
Trade finance
Letters of credit, guarantees, documentary collections, and structured commodity finance serving the Gulf, South Asia, and East Africa trade corridor.
04
Treasury and liquidity management
FX, interest rate products, and liquidity management services for institutional clients and corporate treasuries.
05
Private banking and wealth management
Relationship-led wealth management for high-net-worth individuals and family offices, operating alongside IFC Oman’s wider private client ecosystem.
06
Correspondent banking
Correspondent and clearing relationships supporting financial institutions with limited direct market access to the Sultanate of Oman and the Gulf.
The legal architecture
A neutral seat for cross-border syndications.
Cross-border financing transactions need a jurisdiction that all parties trust. IFC Oman’s common law framework, English-language documentation, and independent courts are designed for that role. Agent bank functions, security trustee arrangements, and inter-creditor agreements sit naturally inside the jurisdiction without re-characterisation under civil law.
Tax treatment
Exempt from corporate income tax for up to 50 years.
IFC Oman-licensed banks operating within the centre are exempt from Omani corporate income tax on income from eligible activities under the IFC Oman Founding Law, for a period of up to 50 years from the law’s enforcement date. Interest paid by IFC Oman Establishments to non-resident lenders is also exempt from Omani withholding tax.
The exemption applies to eligible activities defined in the regulations. Coverage includes transfer pricing standards, double taxation treaty access, and alignment with OECD substance requirements.
Next step
Explore banking at IFC Oman.
Speak to the licensing team. A single point of contact across regulatory authorisation, structuring, and onboarding.