Islamic banks in Saudi Arabia display exceptional financial strength, with Al Rajhi Bank maintaining its position as the largest and strongest Islamic bank worldwide.
Islamic banks in Saudi Arabia display exceptional financial strength, with Al Rajhi Bank maintaining its position as the largest and strongest Islamic bank worldwide.
JPMorgan, ICBC and Bank of America led global corporate, investment and wholesale banking revenue in FY2024, underscoring a competitive shift as institutions prioritise growth, efficiency and innovation to redefine global banking leadership.
European banks have quietly closed the gap with their American rivals — and, on some measures of institutional strength, surpassed them, according to the World’s 1000 Strongest Bank Ranking. Yet Commerzbank, Germany’s third largest lender by asset size and strongest bank in Europe, illustrates why improved performance alone cannot substitute for structural reform: until the European banking union moves from ambition to architecture, Europe's gains will remain fragile.
Global CIW banking has entered an execution phase, where rank movement is driven by improvement across multiple dimensions, while the efficiency gap between Middle Eastern and Western institutions widens
European banks across 34 markets saw net profit grow by a factor of 4.4 between FY2020 and FY2025, driven by post-pandemic recovery and the European Central Bank’s (ECB’s) most aggressive rate-hike cycle in a generation between 2022 and 2023. As these growth tailwinds ease and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and ECB revise Euro area real GDP growth to between 0.9 and 1.1% in 2026, banks that built structural capacity during the windfall years now demonstrate more stable earnings, with banks in Belgium, Eastern Europe and the Nordics emerging as structural leaders.