Home GCC Bahrain BNP Paribas to scrap Bahrain as Middle East HQ and cut jobs The move comes as competition intensifies between Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Riyadh for regional financial dominance by Reuters October 19, 2024 Image credit: Nathan Laine/ Getty Images French lender BNP Paribas is planning to reduce headcount in Bahrain and scrap Manama as its Middle East and Africa (MEA) head office, after deciding all its local offices in the region would report to Paris, two sources close to the matter said. Staff were told during a conference call this week that the changes would lead to a reduction in the workforce in Bahrain by early next year, one of the sources said. The decision by France’s biggest bank to scrap its MENA headquarters comes as competition intensifies between Dubai and Abu Dhabi in the UAE and Riyadh in Saudi Arabia for regional financial dominance. BNP Paribas, which has offices in these three cities as well as in Kuwait, Qatar, and Morocco, wants to avoid the appearance of favouring any of the cities in the growing regional rivalry, one of the sources said. “BNP Paribas which has been operating in Bahrain for over 50 years, will maintain its significant presence in the country and pursue its local business development,” the bank said in a statement to Reuters on Wednesday. “The BNP Paribas Group is constantly adapting its set-up in all the countries where it operates, according to evolution in the markets, technology, customer needs and its risk policy,” it added. Bahrain, a vibrant financial hub in the 1970s and 1980s, has struggled since the rise of Dubai in the early 2000s. BNP Paribas’ Bahrain base, which provides corporate and institutional banking and investment solutions, as well as Islamic banking services, employed 261 people as of the end of last year, according to the bank’s annual financial report. Read: South African lender Investec opens office in Dubai’s financial centre Tags Bahrain BNP Paribas Dubai job cuts You might also like Bahrain’s ATME aims transforming regional markets with asset tokenisation From humble beginnings to global heights: Sheikh Mohammed’s journey unveiled in new biography Naser Taher on MultiBank Group’s global strategy and future outlook Imtiaz appoints global giant Legrand for automation solutions across 18 waterfront projects