Table of Contents
- • What Happened: The Legal Basis
- • Why “Capital Market Authority” and Not Just a Name Change?
- - 1. Broader Product Coverage
- - 2. Alignment with International Standards
- - 3. Vision 2031 Implementation
- • What This Means for Your CISI Exams
- - Terminology Changes
- - What Stays the Same
- - Exam Strategy
- • The UAE’s Regulatory Structure in 2026: A Clear Map
- • What Should You Do Now?
If you work in UAE finance, you may have noticed a quiet but significant change at the start of 2026: the Securities and Commodities Authority (SCA) — the federal regulator that has overseen UAE capital markets since 2000 — was officially reconstituted as the Capital Market Authority (CMA) on January 1, 2026.
This is not just a name change. It signals a fundamental expansion of the regulator’s mandate, and it has direct implications for your CISI exam preparation, your professional licensing, and how you understand the UAE regulatory landscape.
What Happened: The Legal Basis
Under Federal Decree-Law No. 32 of 2025, the UAE government dissolved the SCA and established the CMA as its successor entity. The transition was immediate — all existing SCA licences, registrations, and regulatory approvals automatically transferred to the CMA without any re-application process.
The key provisions include:
- All SCA regulations remain in force unless explicitly replaced by new CMA regulations
- Existing licensed entities (brokers, fund managers, advisors) retain their licences under the CMA
- Ongoing enforcement actions initiated by the SCA continue under CMA jurisdiction
- The CMA Board was appointed with an expanded mandate covering digital assets, ESG products, and market infrastructure
Why “Capital Market Authority” and Not Just a Name Change?
The rebrand from “Securities and Commodities” to “Capital Market” is deliberate. It reflects three strategic shifts:
1. Broader Product Coverage
The SCA’s original mandate focused primarily on traditional securities (equities, bonds) and commodities. The CMA’s mandate explicitly extends to:
- Digital assets and tokenised securities — aligned with the UAE’s VARA framework and crypto regulation
- Derivatives and structured products — more comprehensive oversight of OTC markets
- Sustainable finance instruments — green bonds, ESG-labelled sukuk, and carbon credit trading
2. Alignment with International Standards
By adopting the “CMA” title — already used by the Saudi Capital Market Authority — the UAE positions itself alongside established international regulators. This simplifies cross-border regulatory cooperation, particularly within the GCC where Saudi Arabia’s CMA sets the regional benchmark.
3. Vision 2031 Implementation
The rebrand is a direct output of the UAE’s long-term economic diversification strategy. As the UAE moves beyond oil dependency, the capital markets become a critical engine for funding infrastructure, technology, and sustainability initiatives.
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What This Means for Your CISI Exams
This is where the rebrand gets practical. If you are studying for the UAE Financial Rules & Regulations (FRR) exam or any CISI module covering UAE regulation, you need to understand the implications:
Terminology Changes
- “SCA” → “CMA” throughout regulatory questions. Expect CISI workbooks to be updated in the next edition cycle.
- “Securities and Commodities Authority” → “Capital Market Authority” in full-form references
- Regulatory framework names may be updated (e.g., “SCA Board of Directors’ Decision” → “CMA Board Resolution”)
What Stays the Same
- The regulatory substance is unchanged — same rules, same penalties, same compliance requirements
- AML/CFT obligations under the CMA mirror those previously under the SCA
- CISI certification requirements mandated by the regulator remain identical
- Exam pass marks are unaffected
Exam Strategy
If you are sitting your CISI exam in mid-2026:
- Study from the latest workbook edition to ensure you have updated terminology
- If your workbook still references “SCA,” the exam will likely accept both terms during the transition period — but prioritise “CMA” in your answers
- Focus on understanding the regulatory principles rather than memorising specific entity names. The principles haven’t changed.
For complete exam preparation, see our UAE FRR course and study hour estimates.
The UAE’s Regulatory Structure in 2026: A Clear Map
Understanding where the CMA fits alongside other UAE regulators is essential for any CISI exam:
| Regulator | Jurisdiction | What It Covers |
|---|---|---|
| CMA (formerly SCA) | Mainland UAE (federal) | Equities, bonds, derivatives, funds, digital assets |
| DFSA | DIFC (Dubai free zone) | All financial services within DIFC |
| FSRA | ADGM (Abu Dhabi free zone) | All financial services within ADGM |
| CBUAE | Nationwide | Banking, insurance, payments, monetary policy |
| VARA | Dubai (mainland) | Virtual assets and crypto exchanges |
For a deeper comparison of UAE regulators, see our article on SCA vs DFSA: Understanding UAE Financial Regulators.
SCA → CMA Quick-Reference Cards
What Should You Do Now?
If you are a UAE-based finance professional, here is your action plan:
- Update your vocabulary. Start using “CMA” instead of “SCA” in professional communications, compliance reports, and client-facing documents.
- Check your workbook edition. If you are preparing for the UAE FRR exam, ensure your study materials reference the CMA. Older editions referencing “SCA” are still largely accurate but may cause confusion on exam day.
- Monitor new CMA regulations. The CMA is expected to issue updated regulations on digital assets and ESG products throughout 2026. These may appear in future CISI syllabus updates.
- Review your firm’s compliance documentation. Internal policies, compliance manuals, and regulatory filings should be updated to reference the CMA.
The SCA-to-CMA transition is not a disruption — it is an evolution. The UAE’s capital markets regulator is maturing to match the ambition and complexity of one of the world’s fastest-growing financial centres. For CISI-certified professionals, this is a validation of the industry’s trajectory: more products, more regulation, and more demand for qualified, licensed talent.
Frequently Asked Questions
1 When did the SCA become the CMA?
The Securities and Commodities Authority (SCA) was officially reconstituted as the Capital Market Authority (CMA) on January 1, 2026, under Federal Decree-Law No. 32 of 2025.
2 Does the SCA to CMA change affect my CISI qualification?
Your existing CISI qualifications remain fully valid. However, exam syllabi referencing 'SCA' are being updated to 'CMA' in new workbook editions. Expect exam questions to use the new terminology from mid-2026 onward.
3 What is the difference between the CMA and the DFSA?
The CMA (formerly SCA) is the federal capital markets regulator covering mainland UAE. The DFSA regulates financial services exclusively within the DIFC free zone in Dubai. Both operate independently with separate licensing requirements.
4 Do I need to re-register or re-license under the new CMA?
No. Existing SCA licences, approvals, and registrations automatically transferred to the CMA. No re-application is required.
5 Why was the SCA rebranded to CMA?
The rebrand reflects the regulator's expanded mandate under UAE Vision 2031 — moving from a securities-focused 'Authority' to a comprehensive 'Capital Market Authority' overseeing equities, bonds, derivatives, digital assets, and sustainable finance products.
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