Foundation and growth
UAE Exchange established its first branch and operations in Abu Dhabi, UAE in the year 1980.
In 1993, UAE Exchange became a SWIFT member and over the following two years opened operations in Oman and Kuwait, as well as launching transfer, gold card, and banknote services. In 1999, it launched retail operations in India, which was to become the largest operation outside its home base, with 330 branches by 2015. It opened offices in Bangladesh, the United Kingdom, and Sri Lanka over the following three years.
In 2001, it launched Xpress Money, a money transfer service in the UK. Xpress Money was later extracted into the wider group.
In 2003, the business added Australia to its network, and it also launched services for the corporate (B2B) sector.
In 2004, it introduced online money transfers.
Between 2005 and 2009 it opened offices in Hong Kong, Uganda, Jordan, Canada, New Zealand, and China, as well as purchasing MoneyDart Global Services in the United States. The business also launched an online money transfer brand, Money2anywhere.com. XPay; a mobile bill payment application was also purchased in India.[5]
In 2009 it became an Authorised Payment Institution with the UK financial regulator Financial Services Authority (which later became the Financial Conduct Authority).[6]
International re-branding
In 2018, [UAE Exchange] began re-branding to "Unimoni" at locations outside of the United Arab Emirates. This initially started with its retail presence in India, Fiji, Canada and Australia.[7][8] Markets such as Hong Kong and Tanzania, as well as further afield have also since been re-branded as Unimoni.[9][10]
In October 2018, UAE Exchange partnered with telecommunications company Ooredoo.[11]
In March 2019 Sudhir Shetty left the business. Prior to his role as president of the business which he had held since 1991, he had served as its chief operating officer.
Finablr and its collapse
Mid 2019 Finablr began co-branding businesses within its estate which included UAE Exchange.
On 16 March 2020, UAE Exchange suspended all new transactions citing "certain operational challenges" in an emailed statement.[13] Although the statement issued by the business fails to mention it directly, the challenges referenced likely pertain to the near-collapse of its parent Finablr earlier that same day.[14]
On 16 March 2020, Finablr, of which UAE Exchange is a part, was suspended from the London Stock Exchange as it announced it was in danger of collapse having identified circa $100m (£81m) of undisclosed financing, which meant it no longer had any certainty over its financial position. Simultaneously, Promoth Manghat, Group CEO left the business.[15] The business also stated that it was no longer able to provide certain payment processing services, however, failed to address what services this entailed.