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SAMA seeks public feedback on financing regulations update
SAMA seeks public feedback on financing regulations update

Argaam

time27-04-2025

  • Business
  • Argaam

SAMA seeks public feedback on financing regulations update

The Saudi Central Bank (SAMA) seeks public opinion on the draft rules for the "Executive Regulations of the financing companies control system', through the Public Consultation Platform 'Istitlaa', over a period of 30 days. The feedback will be reviewed after the deadline to finalize the regulations. This initiative aligns with SAMA's role in overseeing and regulating the financing sector, supporting its stability and growth by increasing the total financing a company can provide. The update includes support for companies applying for licenses by reducing the required bank guarantee amount when submitting applications. It also reviews the relevant provisions of related parties and clarifies conditions for the expiration of a financing company's license. Key elements of the update include regulating requirements for financing activities, enabling financing companies to increase liquidity and contribute to gross domestic product (GDP), reviewing the relevant provisions of related parties, acquisitions, public offerings, and conditions for founders and board members, and reducing the minimum bank guarantee required for licensing from 100% to 20% of the minimum capital.

Nayya Report Reveals $3 Trillion Employer Benefits Spend Is Failing to Deliver Value for Employees
Nayya Report Reveals $3 Trillion Employer Benefits Spend Is Failing to Deliver Value for Employees

Yahoo

time27-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Nayya Report Reveals $3 Trillion Employer Benefits Spend Is Failing to Deliver Value for Employees

New data exposes the massive financial waste from underused benefits programs, raising the question of whether offering them without radical systemic changes is doing more harm than good As employees tune out and benefits go unused, HR teams are forced into the role of financial educator in a system that was never built to be understood, bleeding value and eroding trust NEW YORK, March 27, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Nayya, the AI-powered benefits optimization platform, today released its 2025 Benefits Value Gap Report, exposing a hard truth for HR leaders and company executives: the $3 trillion employers spend annually on benefits is being drained by a system built on broken incentives and obsolete design. In fact, without modernizing the entire process, that investment may be doing more harm than good. According to Nayya's survey of 500 benefits-eligible employees, just one in ten understands the true value of their benefits. 70% of employees stick with the same benefits year after year, even after major life changes like new diagnoses or salary shifts—leaving valuable savings and protection on the table. Many don't view health benefits as part of their compensation at all. This disconnect isn't just inefficient—it's dangerous. It leaves employees financially exposed, drives up employer costs, and undermines the intended value of the benefits system itself. "If employees can't use or understand their benefits, why offer them at all?" asked Sina Chehrazi, founder and CEO, Nayya. "It's not just a communication problem—it's a systemic failure. Employers are pouring billions into plans that employees ignore, misuse, or don't even realize exist. We need a radical rethink of the system—and that starts with smarter, AI-native solutions that treat employees like consumers, not paperwork processors." The U.S. benefits system is buckling under the weight of inefficiency, waste, and misaligned incentives. While employers pour more than $3 trillion into benefits each year, a staggering 74% of employees don't understand what those benefits are worth—leading to billions in lost value. Prescription drugs alone are driving a projected 9–11% spike in benefits costs this year. Pharmacy benefit managers, originally designed to lower those costs, are now inflating them by as much as 30% through opaque rebate schemes and contracts too complex for most employers to audit. Without AI-powered support, employers overpay for benefits and spend 70-90% more administrative time than necessary fixing preventable errors. Meanwhile, voluntary offerings like accident, hospital indemnity, and legal plans see utilization rates below 30%, creating a vacuum where paycheck dollars quietly shift from employees to benefit provider bottom lines. Administrative waste adds another layer, with industry estimates suggesting employers spend between $50 and $70 per employee per month just to manage enrollment and administration. In the absence of smarter tools and clearer communication, the system continues to bleed value. "We're past the point where offering benefits alone is enough," said Sarah Liebel, President and COO, Nayya. "The system is bloated, broken, and confusing by design. But it doesn't have to be this way. With intelligent guidance and personalization, benefits can finally do what they were always meant to do: help people make better decisions, reduce financial stress, and live healthier lives. We are not just plugging gaps. We are building the future of benefits from the ground up." Nayya's data confirms what employees have long felt but couldn't articulate: the system isn't serving them. Across all income levels and life stages, workers are overwhelmed by complexity and under-supported at the moments they need it most. The result is billions of dollars wasted, growing financial stress, and missed opportunities for employers to drive engagement, loyalty, and ROI: Employers are spending an average of $16,501 per employee on health benefits—yet one in four employees believes those benefits are worth just $1,000 or less. Only 10% of workers accurately understand the value of what they're being given. This staggering perception gap means billions in employer investment are flying completely under the radar. Only 30% of employees make changes to their benefits each year, though most simply adjust existing coverage. Of that 30%, only 14% actively seek new benefits options. The result? Outdated coverage, missed tax savings, and thousands in lost financial protection—just because people don't know what to look for, or when to act. Nearly half of employees can't confidently explain core benefits like HSAs, FSAs, or even their own health insurance. Forty percent don't see benefits as part of their compensation at all, meaning employers are spending heavily on programs their people don't recognize as valuable or relevant. To fix this broken system, employers must rethink how benefits are delivered—focusing on personalization, guidance, and clarity. Nayya's AI-powered platform helps close this gap by delivering personalized, data-driven benefits experiences that improve understanding, drive utilization, and reduce waste. With over 1,000% user growth in the past three years and more than 2 million lives served, Nayya is helping employers reimagine how benefits can actually work. To access the full 2025 Benefits Value Gap Report, visit About NayyaFounded in 2019, Nayya is on a mission to connect people's most important information, so they can thrive in their health and wealth. Powered by AI, Nayya's platform transforms complex benefits experiences into intuitive, seamless, and ongoing interactions—meeting people's real-world needs. As a trusted platform to leading employers, Nayya unlocks long-term value through helping employees live more resilient lives. Backed by ICONIQ, Felicis Ventures, Workday Ventures, MetLife Ventures, and ADP Ventures, Nayya is ushering in the future of health and wealth for all. Learn more at Media Contactnayya@ View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Nayya Sign in to access your portfolio

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