The bank’s initiatives improve scalability, compliance, and resilience while enabling future integration with alternative rails and infrastructures through modular, always-on architecture.
Maldives Premier Bank (MPB), a recently established (May 2026) financial institution, is building out its international banking capabilities as part of its early-stage digital infrastructure strategy.
On 29 June 2026, the bank disclosed efforts to scale up cross-border payments operations, focusing on improving connectivity, resilience, and scalability as transaction volumes grow.
As a new entrant, MPB needs to establish secure and compliant access to global financial messaging networks while minimizing onboarding complexity. The bank also needs an architecture capable of supporting future expansion into additional payment rails and market infrastructures without requiring significant reengineering. Ensuring continuous availability and meeting regulatory expectations around transaction monitoring and sanctions compliance were additional priorities.
To address these requirements, MPB implemented a set of API-driven financial messaging capabilities designed to streamline integration and support long-term scalability. Key elements include:
- API-based connectivity to global financial messaging networks, enabling standardized integration and faster deployment
- End-to-end onboarding support, including testing, certification, and production rollout
- Always-on infrastructure designed for high availability and resilience in cross-border transactions
- Modular architecture to support integration with alternative payment rails and market infrastructures
- Built-in support for compliance functions such as sanctions screening, fraud monitoring, and payment traceability
- Scalability to accommodate increasing transaction volumes without major system redesign
The bank’s Chief Executive Officer, Arah Sadava, said the bank prioritized appointing “a … provider capable of delivering a complete onboarding process” while maintaining “secure and resilient connectivity,” adding that the approach allows for “expand[ing] connectivity … over time” and supporting international payment services.
The implementation introduces a unified interface for financial messaging and positions the bank to extend connectivity beyond traditional networks as needed.
Barry Rodrigues, EVP (Payments), Finastra, the vendor appointed by MPB, said the implemented platform enables “API-driven access to … market infrastructures” and supports “interoperability with … payment rails,” describing it as a foundation for banks seeking to scale cross-border payment capabilities.


