Social media influencers in the UAE should be regulated before they can give investment advice says a financial advice group.
A survey of UAE investors by Friends Provident International (FPI) revealed that more than half of people would be confident taking financial advice from a social media influencer.
60% of Emiratis would be confident taking financial advice from an influencer said the FPI study, which highlights the need for much greater regulation of financial advice provided by celebrity social media influencers.
UAE social media influence
Social media influencers play an important role in financial advice in the UAE, the study found.
No fewer than 24% of individual investors say that they would be “extremely confident” in taking financial advice from a social media influencer.
An additional 27% say that they would be “somewhat confident” in doing so.
The figures vary markedly by nationality. At one extreme, 60% of Emirati investors would be “extremely” or “somewhat” confident in taking financial advice from a social media influencer.
At the other extreme, the corresponding figure is just 35% for Westerners. Some 46% of Westerners say that they would be “somewhat not confident” or “not at all confident” in taking financial advice from a social media influencer.
Investors were also asked to name which one provider of advice would make them feel better equipped to make decisions about their financial futures.
Social media influencers were named by just 6% of investors. Of increasing importance are friends/peers (13%), bank advisers (14%), independent financial advisers (26%) and family (31%).
Some 8% of investors rely entirely on their own research efforts, while 2% depend on other sources of advice in relation to their financial futures.
The extent to which investors rely on family members for advice about their financial futures varies widely.
Women (39%) are much more likely than men (27%) to use a family member as a sole source of advice.
The same is true of those who are aged 18-24 (36%) than those who are 45 or older (26%).
Investors with monthly incomes of AED10,000 or less (37%) depend on family members more than those with monthly incomes of over AED25,000 (22%).
David Kneeshaw, Group Chief Executive of International Financial Group Limited, said: “Individual investors in the UAE often place far too much weight on the views of social media influencers – who may be completely ignorant or paid to promote a particular idea or product.
“A concerted publicity campaign that highlights the benefits of professional advice is not all that is needed.
“As is the case in other countries in which FPI operates, there should be far greater regulation in the UAE that curbs the impact of social media influencers”