The document discusses the state of the Indian fintech landscape. It notes that the fintech industry in India has reached significant scale, with over $800 billion in annual payments transactions. Fintechs have contributed greatly to the Indian economy and played an important role in providing financial services to more Indians. However, the document also notes that profitability is a major challenge for many fintechs, with over 70% of respondents believing most may not be profitable in the next 2-3 years. It emphasizes the need for fintechs to focus on unit economics and design for profitability from the start. The regulatory framework in India is also discussed as being supportive but needing continued improvements in consistency, communication, collaboration and calibration to further foster
From account opening to insurance underwriting to payments to peer-to-peer lending, FinTechs are innovating across areas and offering differentiated customer experience. India Fintech Ecosystem has been growing well over the last five years and many of these successful startups are now getting ready for international rollouts.
www.thedigitalfifth.com
Is the Finance Technology (FinTech) sector ready for breakout? Read Deloitte India’s detailed report that thoroughly examines the continuously evolving market and the key factors that are leading FinTech companies to success. However, the journey will not be easy for most companies due to the challenges mentioned in the report.
This document analyzes the breakout potential of India's FinTech sector across six segments - Payments, Credit, Investment Management, Personal Finance Management, BankTech and InsurTech. It finds that payments and lending are poised for short-term breakout as FinTechs target cashless digital payments and address the credit gap for retail and MSME lending. Other segments like investment management, insurance, and personal finance currently target niche markets but have potential to break out in the medium term. Key factors driving India's FinTech growth include steady economic growth, low financial services penetration, lagging public sector banks/insurers, supportive digital infrastructure like Aadhaar and India Stack, growing VC funding, and the regulatory push for
Startupbootcamp FinTech India Trends Report 2017Kanish96
The FinTech ecosystem in India has evolved significantly since its emergence and has witnessed a shift from its traditionally competitive nature to a more collaborative one, where both startups and incumbents are looking for growth through partnerships.
The document discusses the evolution of the FinTech sector in India. It notes that strong governmental support through initiatives like India Stack, Startup India, Jan Dhan Yojana, Aadhaar adoption, and NPCI initiatives have provided a solid foundation and boosted adoption of FinTech. While regulations still pose challenges, the outlook is positive given India's large unbanked population and strong tech ecosystem. Collaboration between startups and financial institutions is growing as they recognize the benefits of working together over competition.
PwC and Startupbootcamp are stationed at the heart of the FinTech ecosystem in India.
Startupbootcamp scouts for and supports promising, early-stage startups in the country, while
PwC advises a wide-range of corporate and institutional clients on leading FinTech issues. For its
first program in India, Startupbootcamp FinTech analysed more than 1000 startups from across
the world. Through ‘FastTrack events’ / roadshows in 18 cities, we were also able to gain valuable
insights that helped us better understand the FinTech landscape as it stands today. On the other
hand, PwC consults clients of all levels in BFSI - from large Financial Service Organisations to
FinTech companies. This combined vantage point provides a unique view of the emerging trends
in the FinTech space, particularly in India. This report aims to provide key insights into the
evolution of the FinTech sector in India by utilizing PwC’s intelligence and experience in this area
as well as insights from Startupbootcamp’s application data from its first program in India
India FinTech report 2019 - Executive summaryMEDICI
India FinTech Report 2019 offers an in-depth look at what makes the Indian FinTech ecosystem vibrant by taking a deeper dive into Government, Regulatory, and Private sector initiatives.
Download the Executive Summary here: https://bit.ly/2ugRke5
Download the main report here: https://bit.ly/2EjGclm
India FinTech Report 2020 - 2nd edition, Executive SummaryMEDICI Inner Circle
- India has emerged as one of the fastest growing FinTech hubs in recent years, with hundreds of new startups being founded each month.
- Government initiatives like demonetization boosted digital payments and the growth of FinTech companies in India.
- However, the FinTech revolution needs to also drive financial inclusion, especially reaching underbanked and unbanked communities in rural areas. Most startups currently do not operate in those segments serving people with incomes of less than $1,300 per year.
- For FinTech to fully enable financial inclusion in India, costs need to be reduced through technology while also creating incentives and financial education for rural populations to use digital payments and services.
From account opening to insurance underwriting to payments to peer-to-peer lending, FinTechs are innovating across areas and offering differentiated customer experience. India Fintech Ecosystem has been growing well over the last five years and many of these successful startups are now getting ready for international rollouts.
www.thedigitalfifth.com
Is the Finance Technology (FinTech) sector ready for breakout? Read Deloitte India’s detailed report that thoroughly examines the continuously evolving market and the key factors that are leading FinTech companies to success. However, the journey will not be easy for most companies due to the challenges mentioned in the report.
This document analyzes the breakout potential of India's FinTech sector across six segments - Payments, Credit, Investment Management, Personal Finance Management, BankTech and InsurTech. It finds that payments and lending are poised for short-term breakout as FinTechs target cashless digital payments and address the credit gap for retail and MSME lending. Other segments like investment management, insurance, and personal finance currently target niche markets but have potential to break out in the medium term. Key factors driving India's FinTech growth include steady economic growth, low financial services penetration, lagging public sector banks/insurers, supportive digital infrastructure like Aadhaar and India Stack, growing VC funding, and the regulatory push for
Startupbootcamp FinTech India Trends Report 2017Kanish96
The FinTech ecosystem in India has evolved significantly since its emergence and has witnessed a shift from its traditionally competitive nature to a more collaborative one, where both startups and incumbents are looking for growth through partnerships.
The document discusses the evolution of the FinTech sector in India. It notes that strong governmental support through initiatives like India Stack, Startup India, Jan Dhan Yojana, Aadhaar adoption, and NPCI initiatives have provided a solid foundation and boosted adoption of FinTech. While regulations still pose challenges, the outlook is positive given India's large unbanked population and strong tech ecosystem. Collaboration between startups and financial institutions is growing as they recognize the benefits of working together over competition.
PwC and Startupbootcamp are stationed at the heart of the FinTech ecosystem in India.
Startupbootcamp scouts for and supports promising, early-stage startups in the country, while
PwC advises a wide-range of corporate and institutional clients on leading FinTech issues. For its
first program in India, Startupbootcamp FinTech analysed more than 1000 startups from across
the world. Through ‘FastTrack events’ / roadshows in 18 cities, we were also able to gain valuable
insights that helped us better understand the FinTech landscape as it stands today. On the other
hand, PwC consults clients of all levels in BFSI - from large Financial Service Organisations to
FinTech companies. This combined vantage point provides a unique view of the emerging trends
in the FinTech space, particularly in India. This report aims to provide key insights into the
evolution of the FinTech sector in India by utilizing PwC’s intelligence and experience in this area
as well as insights from Startupbootcamp’s application data from its first program in India
India FinTech report 2019 - Executive summaryMEDICI
India FinTech Report 2019 offers an in-depth look at what makes the Indian FinTech ecosystem vibrant by taking a deeper dive into Government, Regulatory, and Private sector initiatives.
Download the Executive Summary here: https://bit.ly/2ugRke5
Download the main report here: https://bit.ly/2EjGclm
India FinTech Report 2020 - 2nd edition, Executive SummaryMEDICI Inner Circle
- India has emerged as one of the fastest growing FinTech hubs in recent years, with hundreds of new startups being founded each month.
- Government initiatives like demonetization boosted digital payments and the growth of FinTech companies in India.
- However, the FinTech revolution needs to also drive financial inclusion, especially reaching underbanked and unbanked communities in rural areas. Most startups currently do not operate in those segments serving people with incomes of less than $1,300 per year.
- For FinTech to fully enable financial inclusion in India, costs need to be reduced through technology while also creating incentives and financial education for rural populations to use digital payments and services.
Digitising Consumers in India - BCG & Matrix Studyssuserf1f48a
The document discusses trends in the Indian consumer technology space. It notes that the Indian economy has grown rapidly in recent decades and the pandemic further accelerated digital adoption. As incomes rise in India, discretionary spending is also increasing. The consumer technology sector has seen significant investment and growth, with over $250 billion in valuation and 40 unicorns. Emerging trends include the increasing relevance of omni-channel retail, social commerce, marketplace platforms surpassing search engines, and demand for quicker delivery options. Future growth is expected to come from categories like beauty, food, FMCG and furniture. Success for companies will depend on identifying customer needs, optimizing costs, expanding distribution and building capabilities for scale.
The document provides an overview of the ConsumerTech landscape in India. It discusses key trends shaping the space such as the democratization of online commerce, the increasing relevance of omni-channel, social media and marketplaces becoming important search sites, the rise of quick commerce, and shifting consumer preferences. The summary also outlines challenges and opportunities for companies in India, including scaling startups from 0-10 and driving sustainable growth from 10-100. The ConsumerTech sector in India has seen significant value creation with $250Bn in valuation and over 40 unicorns.
(1) BigTech companies like Facebook, Apple, Google and Amazon are transforming fintech through partnerships and offerings of financial services without becoming banks. They are unbundling traditional banking by offering payments, lending, wealth management and other services.
(2) The COVID-19 pandemic has made HNW clients more risk averse and focused on goals and financial protection. They are increasingly adopting virtual and digital tools from wealth managers and expect more personalized engagement.
(3) Neobanks are gaining popularity among younger consumers through offerings like savings accounts and UPI payments. Startups are also providing wealth management services through turnkey asset management platforms (TAMPs) that offer modular investment products and advisory services.
The document discusses open banking and its potential in India. It defines open banking as an ecosystem that provides users access to their financial data from multiple institutions via application programming interfaces (APIs). This allows third parties to build applications and services on top of banking data with user consent. The key points discussed are:
- Open banking moves banking services from closed proprietary systems to an open model where data and services can be shared through APIs.
- It allows for more personalized services, innovation, and a 720-degree view of customers through data sharing with consent.
- Banks can play different roles like producers, integrators, distributors or platforms to monetize open banking. Revenue models may include fees, revenue sharing
The Indian FinTech market is expected to reach $1 trillion in assets under management and $200 billion in revenue by 2030, representing a 10x growth over the next decade. FinTech funding in India recorded a 3x increase in 2021. Key drivers of growth include expanding financial inclusion, increased digital payments adoption, and a need for holistic solutions and new asset classes. India is recognized as a leading global FinTech hub due to a supportive ecosystem and regulatory environment. The FinTech sector is led by payments, lending, wealthtech, and insurtech and will be accelerated by emerging areas like neo-banking, blockchain, and cryptocurrency.
Fintech: finance accounting and technology.pptxsubhakantskm
The document provides an introduction to a seminar on fintech and its impact on the Indian economy. It discusses the following key points:
- Fintech has transformed traditional finance through technology, enhancing efficiency, accessibility, and user experience. It includes innovations like online banking, cryptocurrency, and mobile payments.
- Fintech has emerged in phases from 1866 to the present, with developments like the credit card, ATMs, digital finance, cryptocurrency, and the integration of technologies like blockchain and machine learning.
- The fintech industry in India has grown rapidly from $922 million in 2016 to a projected $5.65 billion in 2022, with many Indian fintech companies emerging.
Technology and digital transformation continue to be
central to the futuristic design and vision for finance.
Across industries and sectors, technologies such as
advanced data analytics, robotics, blockchain and
Artificial Intelligence (AI) are creating new opportunities
and driving finance transformation
The FinTech sector has grown rapidly in last few years and is on track of ever evolving track. Prior to 2008 financial crisis, the traditional banking sector was the only playground available for financial needs. The financial crisis collapsed the traditional banking & financial mechanism and paved the way for more secure and updated financial transaction which led to emergence of FinTech, which has altered the economic viability of traditional banking sector participants to originate loans, translating into contraction of the credit supply for individuals and SMEs.
Today, financial markets & services are flooded with technology driven innovation, whereby new non-depository institutions- referred to as peer-to-peer financing, loan based crowdfunding platform, marketplace lenders (MPL) - providing loans of various types and duration to end users through online and mobile channels. Some of these companies lend from their own corpus/balancesheet, while some serve as brokers between investors and borrowers, commonly referred to as “Platform Lenders”.
Payments has been the frontrunner in the large scale consumer adoption of Fintech in India, aided by the spread of smartphones and mobile internet at affordable price points. Most FinTech players started out by identifying a niche/use case for building a customer base ( e.g. Paytm for online payments, Ola Money for cab payments, Airtel Money for phone bills etc.) and then expanding onto other services.
Indian regulatory authorities including RBI, SEBI & IRDA have adopted an accommodative stance towards an emerging Fintech sector without bringing in prohibitive guidelines to over regulate the sector. Despite catching up with the rapidly evolving eco system, Indian regulators have adopted a consultative approach and have been proactively foreseeing the need for adequate regulations, especially in the areas concerning public funds i.e. peer-to-peer lending, crowd funding and alternative currencies.
Financial services contribute to economic growth and development by facilitating banking, investment, savings, insurance, stock markets, debt, and equity shares.
Visit: https://m1nxt.blogspot.com/2023/11/stay-informed-latest-financial-services.html
India's fintech growth story continued strongly in 2021 but saw a drop in funding in mid-2022 due to macroeconomic conditions. Going forward, the future of fintech in India will be shaped by existing secular themes like increasing digital infrastructure and data access, emerging themes like the open architecture of Account Aggregator and ONDC increasing data availability, and vertical-specific themes. Payment fintechs will be disrupted by UPI enablement of credit cards and expansion of P2M payments, while lending fintechs will benefit from increased transaction data to underwrite merchant loans. Regulators continue supporting innovation through visions like 'E-Payments for Everyone' while increasing compliance requirements for fintechs.
FinTech Research Global & Future of FinTechSaba Fatima
The document discusses predictions for the future of FinTech globally and in India from 2019-2025. Experts predict increased investment in artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies. Financial institutions and FinTech companies will focus on improving security and fraud prevention through new authentication tools. Contactless payments are expected to continue growing in popularity. Loyalty programs may evolve to allow rewards redemption directly at point of sale. The FinTech industry is expected to create new jobs in areas like data science, cybersecurity, and customer support, while some traditional finance jobs may be displaced. In India specifically, the FinTech market is predicted to double by 2020, and services like peer-to-peer lending are seen as having strong growth potential.
The "India Digital SME Credit Report 2023," a collaboration between GetVantage and Redseer Strategy Consultants, reveals that a significant credit deficit of approximately $220 billion is impeding the economic progress of digitized businesses. Despite an infusion of $53 billion in FY22 and an estimated $165 billion being serviceable after accounting for unviable businesses, the current working capital deficit remains at $112 billion. The report predicts that the demand for credit will surpass $570 billion in the next five years as the number of digital SMEs doubles. This deficit hampers innovation, job creation, scaling, and efficiency building among new-economy businesses. The report underscores the crucial role of alternative financing platforms, such as revenue-based financing, in addressing this gap and fostering economic growth.
Mercer Capital's Value Focus: FinTech Industry | First Half 2017Mercer Capital
Mercer Capital’s quarterly newsletter, FinTech Watch, provides an overview of the FinTech industry, including public market performance, valuation multiples for public FinTech companies, and articles of interest from around the web. This newsletter focuses on FinTech segments, including payment processors, technology, and solutions companies, examining general economic and industry trends as well as a summary of M&A and venture capital activity.
Mercer Capital's Value Focus: FinTech Industry | Fourth Quarter 2022 Mercer Capital
Mercer Capital’s quarterly newsletter, FinTech Watch, provides an overview of the FinTech industry, including public market performance, valuation multiples for public FinTech companies, and articles of interest from around the web. This newsletter focuses on FinTech segments, including payment processors, technology, and solutions companies, examining general economic and industry trends as well as a summary of M&A and venture capital activity.
The 10 best emerging fintech startups in 2018Merry D'souza
Fintech in India is a unique because it is young, growing rapidly, and is fuelled by a large market base. Insights Success "The 10 Best Emerging Fintech Startups in 2018", Our magazine journey begins with the Cover story; CASHe, which provide immediate short-term personal loans to young professionals based on their social profile, merit and earning potential using its proprietary algorithm-based machine learning platform.
Financial services contribute to economic growth and development by facilitating banking, investment, savings, insurance, stock markets, debt, and equity shares. These services help private entities and individuals save funds, compete in the market, and protect against risks and ambiguity. They also contribute to the GDP and promote liquidity. Financial services generate employment, reduce the cost of transactions and borrowing, and minimise asymmetric information.
Visit: https://m1nxt.blogspot.com/2023/11/stay-informed-latest-financial-services.html
This document discusses forward-looking statements and contains some non-IFRS financial measures. It notes that forward-looking statements are based on current information and assumptions, which may prove to be incorrect, and are subject to risks and uncertainties. It also states that non-IFRS measures should be considered in addition to IFRS measures. The document contains information from other sources that has not been verified by Tencent.
Financial Distribution Summit 2014 CII's 3rd International Conferenceelithomas202
The CII theme of 'Accelerating Growth, Creating Employment' for 2014-15 aims to strengthen a growth process that meets the aspirations of today's India. During the year, CII will specially focus on economic growth, education, skill development, manufacturing, investments, ease of doing business, export competitiveness, legal and regulatory architecture, labour law reforms and entrepreneurship as growth enablers.
1) The rise of FinTech has been enabled by a "perfect storm" of increasing customer expectations for digital services, expanded venture capital funding, reduced barriers to entry, and faster technological advancement.
2) While customers are embracing FinTech providers, with over 50% using at least one non-traditional firm, traditional firms still hold advantages in areas like convenience and service quality.
3) Both traditional and FinTech firms struggle to meet customer expectations on important interactions like digital transactions, transparency, convenience, and proactive updates. Improving these "moments of truth" is key to boosting customer experience and revenue potential from influential younger customers.
Digitising Consumers in India - BCG & Matrix Studyssuserf1f48a
The document discusses trends in the Indian consumer technology space. It notes that the Indian economy has grown rapidly in recent decades and the pandemic further accelerated digital adoption. As incomes rise in India, discretionary spending is also increasing. The consumer technology sector has seen significant investment and growth, with over $250 billion in valuation and 40 unicorns. Emerging trends include the increasing relevance of omni-channel retail, social commerce, marketplace platforms surpassing search engines, and demand for quicker delivery options. Future growth is expected to come from categories like beauty, food, FMCG and furniture. Success for companies will depend on identifying customer needs, optimizing costs, expanding distribution and building capabilities for scale.
The document provides an overview of the ConsumerTech landscape in India. It discusses key trends shaping the space such as the democratization of online commerce, the increasing relevance of omni-channel, social media and marketplaces becoming important search sites, the rise of quick commerce, and shifting consumer preferences. The summary also outlines challenges and opportunities for companies in India, including scaling startups from 0-10 and driving sustainable growth from 10-100. The ConsumerTech sector in India has seen significant value creation with $250Bn in valuation and over 40 unicorns.
(1) BigTech companies like Facebook, Apple, Google and Amazon are transforming fintech through partnerships and offerings of financial services without becoming banks. They are unbundling traditional banking by offering payments, lending, wealth management and other services.
(2) The COVID-19 pandemic has made HNW clients more risk averse and focused on goals and financial protection. They are increasingly adopting virtual and digital tools from wealth managers and expect more personalized engagement.
(3) Neobanks are gaining popularity among younger consumers through offerings like savings accounts and UPI payments. Startups are also providing wealth management services through turnkey asset management platforms (TAMPs) that offer modular investment products and advisory services.
The document discusses open banking and its potential in India. It defines open banking as an ecosystem that provides users access to their financial data from multiple institutions via application programming interfaces (APIs). This allows third parties to build applications and services on top of banking data with user consent. The key points discussed are:
- Open banking moves banking services from closed proprietary systems to an open model where data and services can be shared through APIs.
- It allows for more personalized services, innovation, and a 720-degree view of customers through data sharing with consent.
- Banks can play different roles like producers, integrators, distributors or platforms to monetize open banking. Revenue models may include fees, revenue sharing
The Indian FinTech market is expected to reach $1 trillion in assets under management and $200 billion in revenue by 2030, representing a 10x growth over the next decade. FinTech funding in India recorded a 3x increase in 2021. Key drivers of growth include expanding financial inclusion, increased digital payments adoption, and a need for holistic solutions and new asset classes. India is recognized as a leading global FinTech hub due to a supportive ecosystem and regulatory environment. The FinTech sector is led by payments, lending, wealthtech, and insurtech and will be accelerated by emerging areas like neo-banking, blockchain, and cryptocurrency.
Fintech: finance accounting and technology.pptxsubhakantskm
The document provides an introduction to a seminar on fintech and its impact on the Indian economy. It discusses the following key points:
- Fintech has transformed traditional finance through technology, enhancing efficiency, accessibility, and user experience. It includes innovations like online banking, cryptocurrency, and mobile payments.
- Fintech has emerged in phases from 1866 to the present, with developments like the credit card, ATMs, digital finance, cryptocurrency, and the integration of technologies like blockchain and machine learning.
- The fintech industry in India has grown rapidly from $922 million in 2016 to a projected $5.65 billion in 2022, with many Indian fintech companies emerging.
Technology and digital transformation continue to be
central to the futuristic design and vision for finance.
Across industries and sectors, technologies such as
advanced data analytics, robotics, blockchain and
Artificial Intelligence (AI) are creating new opportunities
and driving finance transformation
The FinTech sector has grown rapidly in last few years and is on track of ever evolving track. Prior to 2008 financial crisis, the traditional banking sector was the only playground available for financial needs. The financial crisis collapsed the traditional banking & financial mechanism and paved the way for more secure and updated financial transaction which led to emergence of FinTech, which has altered the economic viability of traditional banking sector participants to originate loans, translating into contraction of the credit supply for individuals and SMEs.
Today, financial markets & services are flooded with technology driven innovation, whereby new non-depository institutions- referred to as peer-to-peer financing, loan based crowdfunding platform, marketplace lenders (MPL) - providing loans of various types and duration to end users through online and mobile channels. Some of these companies lend from their own corpus/balancesheet, while some serve as brokers between investors and borrowers, commonly referred to as “Platform Lenders”.
Payments has been the frontrunner in the large scale consumer adoption of Fintech in India, aided by the spread of smartphones and mobile internet at affordable price points. Most FinTech players started out by identifying a niche/use case for building a customer base ( e.g. Paytm for online payments, Ola Money for cab payments, Airtel Money for phone bills etc.) and then expanding onto other services.
Indian regulatory authorities including RBI, SEBI & IRDA have adopted an accommodative stance towards an emerging Fintech sector without bringing in prohibitive guidelines to over regulate the sector. Despite catching up with the rapidly evolving eco system, Indian regulators have adopted a consultative approach and have been proactively foreseeing the need for adequate regulations, especially in the areas concerning public funds i.e. peer-to-peer lending, crowd funding and alternative currencies.
Financial services contribute to economic growth and development by facilitating banking, investment, savings, insurance, stock markets, debt, and equity shares.
Visit: https://m1nxt.blogspot.com/2023/11/stay-informed-latest-financial-services.html
India's fintech growth story continued strongly in 2021 but saw a drop in funding in mid-2022 due to macroeconomic conditions. Going forward, the future of fintech in India will be shaped by existing secular themes like increasing digital infrastructure and data access, emerging themes like the open architecture of Account Aggregator and ONDC increasing data availability, and vertical-specific themes. Payment fintechs will be disrupted by UPI enablement of credit cards and expansion of P2M payments, while lending fintechs will benefit from increased transaction data to underwrite merchant loans. Regulators continue supporting innovation through visions like 'E-Payments for Everyone' while increasing compliance requirements for fintechs.
FinTech Research Global & Future of FinTechSaba Fatima
The document discusses predictions for the future of FinTech globally and in India from 2019-2025. Experts predict increased investment in artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies. Financial institutions and FinTech companies will focus on improving security and fraud prevention through new authentication tools. Contactless payments are expected to continue growing in popularity. Loyalty programs may evolve to allow rewards redemption directly at point of sale. The FinTech industry is expected to create new jobs in areas like data science, cybersecurity, and customer support, while some traditional finance jobs may be displaced. In India specifically, the FinTech market is predicted to double by 2020, and services like peer-to-peer lending are seen as having strong growth potential.
The "India Digital SME Credit Report 2023," a collaboration between GetVantage and Redseer Strategy Consultants, reveals that a significant credit deficit of approximately $220 billion is impeding the economic progress of digitized businesses. Despite an infusion of $53 billion in FY22 and an estimated $165 billion being serviceable after accounting for unviable businesses, the current working capital deficit remains at $112 billion. The report predicts that the demand for credit will surpass $570 billion in the next five years as the number of digital SMEs doubles. This deficit hampers innovation, job creation, scaling, and efficiency building among new-economy businesses. The report underscores the crucial role of alternative financing platforms, such as revenue-based financing, in addressing this gap and fostering economic growth.
Mercer Capital's Value Focus: FinTech Industry | First Half 2017Mercer Capital
Mercer Capital’s quarterly newsletter, FinTech Watch, provides an overview of the FinTech industry, including public market performance, valuation multiples for public FinTech companies, and articles of interest from around the web. This newsletter focuses on FinTech segments, including payment processors, technology, and solutions companies, examining general economic and industry trends as well as a summary of M&A and venture capital activity.
Mercer Capital's Value Focus: FinTech Industry | Fourth Quarter 2022 Mercer Capital
Mercer Capital’s quarterly newsletter, FinTech Watch, provides an overview of the FinTech industry, including public market performance, valuation multiples for public FinTech companies, and articles of interest from around the web. This newsletter focuses on FinTech segments, including payment processors, technology, and solutions companies, examining general economic and industry trends as well as a summary of M&A and venture capital activity.
The 10 best emerging fintech startups in 2018Merry D'souza
Fintech in India is a unique because it is young, growing rapidly, and is fuelled by a large market base. Insights Success "The 10 Best Emerging Fintech Startups in 2018", Our magazine journey begins with the Cover story; CASHe, which provide immediate short-term personal loans to young professionals based on their social profile, merit and earning potential using its proprietary algorithm-based machine learning platform.
Financial services contribute to economic growth and development by facilitating banking, investment, savings, insurance, stock markets, debt, and equity shares. These services help private entities and individuals save funds, compete in the market, and protect against risks and ambiguity. They also contribute to the GDP and promote liquidity. Financial services generate employment, reduce the cost of transactions and borrowing, and minimise asymmetric information.
Visit: https://m1nxt.blogspot.com/2023/11/stay-informed-latest-financial-services.html
This document discusses forward-looking statements and contains some non-IFRS financial measures. It notes that forward-looking statements are based on current information and assumptions, which may prove to be incorrect, and are subject to risks and uncertainties. It also states that non-IFRS measures should be considered in addition to IFRS measures. The document contains information from other sources that has not been verified by Tencent.
Financial Distribution Summit 2014 CII's 3rd International Conferenceelithomas202
The CII theme of 'Accelerating Growth, Creating Employment' for 2014-15 aims to strengthen a growth process that meets the aspirations of today's India. During the year, CII will specially focus on economic growth, education, skill development, manufacturing, investments, ease of doing business, export competitiveness, legal and regulatory architecture, labour law reforms and entrepreneurship as growth enablers.
1) The rise of FinTech has been enabled by a "perfect storm" of increasing customer expectations for digital services, expanded venture capital funding, reduced barriers to entry, and faster technological advancement.
2) While customers are embracing FinTech providers, with over 50% using at least one non-traditional firm, traditional firms still hold advantages in areas like convenience and service quality.
3) Both traditional and FinTech firms struggle to meet customer expectations on important interactions like digital transactions, transparency, convenience, and proactive updates. Improving these "moments of truth" is key to boosting customer experience and revenue potential from influential younger customers.
Similar to state-of-india-fintech-union-2022.pdf (20)
Falcon stands out as a top-tier P2P Invoice Discounting platform in India, bridging esteemed blue-chip companies and eager investors. Our goal is to transform the investment landscape in India by establishing a comprehensive destination for borrowers and investors with diverse profiles and needs, all while minimizing risk. What sets Falcon apart is the elimination of intermediaries such as commercial banks and depository institutions, allowing investors to enjoy higher yields.
[4:55 p.m.] Bryan Oates
OJPs are becoming a critical resource for policy-makers and researchers who study the labour market. LMIC continues to work with Vicinity Jobs’ data on OJPs, which can be explored in our Canadian Job Trends Dashboard. Valuable insights have been gained through our analysis of OJP data, including LMIC research lead
Suzanne Spiteri’s recent report on improving the quality and accessibility of job postings to reduce employment barriers for neurodivergent people.
Decoding job postings: Improving accessibility for neurodivergent job seekers
Improving the quality and accessibility of job postings is one way to reduce employment barriers for neurodivergent people.
Abhay Bhutada, the Managing Director of Poonawalla Fincorp Limited, is an accomplished leader with over 15 years of experience in commercial and retail lending. A Qualified Chartered Accountant, he has been pivotal in leveraging technology to enhance financial services. Starting his career at Bank of India, he later founded TAB Capital Limited and co-founded Poonawalla Finance Private Limited, emphasizing digital lending. Under his leadership, Poonawalla Fincorp achieved a 'AAA' credit rating, integrating acquisitions and emphasizing corporate governance. Actively involved in industry forums and CSR initiatives, Abhay has been recognized with awards like "Young Entrepreneur of India 2017" and "40 under 40 Most Influential Leader for 2020-21." Personally, he values mindfulness, enjoys gardening, yoga, and sees every day as an opportunity for growth and improvement.
Seminar: Gender Board Diversity through Ownership NetworksGRAPE
Seminar on gender diversity spillovers through ownership networks at FAME|GRAPE. Presenting novel research. Studies in economics and management using econometrics methods.
Solution Manual For Financial Accounting, 8th Canadian Edition 2024, by Libby...Donc Test
Solution Manual For Financial Accounting, 8th Canadian Edition 2024, by Libby, Hodge, Verified Chapters 1 - 13, Complete Newest Version Solution Manual For Financial Accounting, 8th Canadian Edition by Libby, Hodge, Verified Chapters 1 - 13, Complete Newest Version Solution Manual For Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Chapters Download Stuvia Solution Manual For Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Ebook Download Stuvia Solution Manual For Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Solution Manual For Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Download Stuvia Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Chapters Download Stuvia Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Ebook Download Stuvia Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Financial Accounting 8th Canadian Edition Pdf Download Stuvia
Lecture slide titled Fraud Risk Mitigation, Webinar Lecture Delivered at the Society for West African Internal Audit Practitioners (SWAIAP) on Wednesday, November 8, 2023.
"Does Foreign Direct Investment Negatively Affect Preservation of Culture in the Global South? Case Studies in Thailand and Cambodia."
Do elements of globalization, such as Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), negatively affect the ability of countries in the Global South to preserve their culture? This research aims to answer this question by employing a cross-sectional comparative case study analysis utilizing methods of difference. Thailand and Cambodia are compared as they are in the same region and have a similar culture. The metric of difference between Thailand and Cambodia is their ability to preserve their culture. This ability is operationalized by their respective attitudes towards FDI; Thailand imposes stringent regulations and limitations on FDI while Cambodia does not hesitate to accept most FDI and imposes fewer limitations. The evidence from this study suggests that FDI from globally influential countries with high gross domestic products (GDPs) (e.g. China, U.S.) challenges the ability of countries with lower GDPs (e.g. Cambodia) to protect their culture. Furthermore, the ability, or lack thereof, of the receiving countries to protect their culture is amplified by the existence and implementation of restrictive FDI policies imposed by their governments.
My study abroad in Bali, Indonesia, inspired this research topic as I noticed how globalization is changing the culture of its people. I learned their language and way of life which helped me understand the beauty and importance of cultural preservation. I believe we could all benefit from learning new perspectives as they could help us ideate solutions to contemporary issues and empathize with others.
1. Elemental Economics - Introduction to mining.pdfNeal Brewster
After this first you should: Understand the nature of mining; have an awareness of the industry’s boundaries, corporate structure and size; appreciation the complex motivations and objectives of the industries’ various participants; know how mineral reserves are defined and estimated, and how they evolve over time.
5 Tips for Creating Standard Financial ReportsEasyReports
Well-crafted financial reports serve as vital tools for decision-making and transparency within an organization. By following the undermentioned tips, you can create standardized financial reports that effectively communicate your company's financial health and performance to stakeholders.
1. 1
Fintech Landscape - Mission Critical for Indian Economy
STATE OF THE FINTECH
UNION 2022
Balance between Sustainability, Innovation & Regulation
August 2022
3. Boston Consulting Group partners with leaders in business
and society to tackle their most important challenges and
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in Boston in 1977, and today invests actively in the USA,
India and China. Matrix Partners India was established in
2006, and invests across a variety of sectors including
consumer technology, B2B, enterprise & SaaS, and Fintech,
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Fintech Landscape Today: Too Big to Fail!
5. Fintech Landscape - Mission Critical for Indian Economy
01
08-21 22-83 84-88
02 03
Fintech
Landscape
Mission Critical for
Indian Economy
Unlocking the
full potential
Breaking the
compromise
Profitability, Innovation
and Governance
Action
Agenda
TABLE OF CONTENTS
6. State of the Fintech Union 2022 6
Executive Summary
T
he Indian Fintech landscape has
reached a scale to establish a strong
position in the Global financial
services market and be benchmarked for
its speed of innovation, customer inclusion
and growth. Clocking over $800 Bn+ annual
payments transaction value, Fintechs
have made a strong contribution to Indian
economy, and play a powerful role in the
provision of full-fledged financial services to
all Indians. We see this collective segment
to be mission critical for the $5 trillion Indian
economy
We have a game changing 5 years ahead
of us - the financial services landscape is
expected to have many strong actors on
the stage – large Incumbents, niche as
well as diversified Non-Banks, new-age
and mature Fintechs, Aggregators and
Financial Service Providers, integrated
multi-industry Ecosystems and Technology
& Data partners. COVID has pressure tested
the business models and balance sheet
strength of Indian Fintechs. While some
businesses went through closure, a sizeable
number of Fintechs have survived and
demonstrated their “immunity” to withstand
such adverse events. Funding inflows
went through a plunge of nearly 40-50%
when COVID hit, driven by weaker Foreign
investor funding, but the rebound post
that (70-80%+) has given some runway
to Fintechs. As we see a ‘funding winter’
coming, Fintechs will need to re-evaluate
their financials and enable cost controls as
needed, to be able to continue innovative
investments and scale
Our survey with 125+ Founders/CXOs of
top Fintechs and Incumbents revealed that
product expansion, ARPU and monetization
are the key priorities and biggest challenges
for the industry today. More than 70% of
respondents believe most Fintechs may not
be profitable in the next 2-3 years. While
scale is an important driver of profitability,
early stage focus on ‘unit economics’ is a
critical orientation needed. With the race
for customer acquisition, and surging
funding over the last 5 years, profitability
and compliance has been an after thought
for many players. As the industry matures
and regulatory controls strengthen, “Fin” in
Fintech will become big and bold.
As we move ahead, there are a few key
imperatives for our Fintech founders:
• Profitability from Day 2: “Fin” as
important as “Tech” – While customer
acquisition and growth is important,
deeper understanding of banking
revenue pools and designing for
profitable operations from the get-go
will be critical to success
• Embrace compliance by design, not as
an afterthought! – While profitability
will give runway, compliance will help in
creating sustainable growth models.
Communicate early & proactively with
regulators to shape enabling provisions
for new business model
• Win your customer’s trust – Be known for
taking hard decisions because they are
right
• Tap domestic capital markets – Debt
investor contribution, corporate treasury,
hedge funds, etc. Repivot to domestic
capital and equity partnerships with large
incumbents when global forces dry up
• Grow together – Build a strong
partnership DNA and leverage incumbent
knowledge and expertise in the innovation
journey
Incumbents have an important role as well:
7. 7
Fintech Landscape - Mission Critical for Indian Economy
Executive Summary 07
• Joint innovation and mentorship –
Jointly innovate in compliance and
governance areas (e.g., cyber security),
while also guiding and mentoring
Fintechs
• Set-up to live in a two-speed world
– Build partnership BUs, enhance
and simplify operations, technology
and processes, while maintaining
governance and risk controls
• Proactively participate in open network
models – Embrace data democratization,
open credit enablement (OCEN),
Account Aggregator models. Invest in
layering private innovation on public
features to drive economic and strategic
advantage
• Contribute to a more inclusive policy
framework – Active involvement with
regulators as they develop and advance
financial sector, to promote engagement
with Fintechs and ease collaboration
India’s regulatory policy framework and
infrastructure has been a poster child
for the global financial services industry.
As we move towards a maturing fintech
landscape, these “4C’s & a B” of policy
enablers will go a long way in supporting
the industry:
• Consistency: Improve clarity and
consistency across regulating bodies
(e.g., KYC norms),
• Communication: Continue active
dialogue through fintech ‘sounding
board’, while keeping pace with ongoing
innovations, ambiguity and challenges
Fintechs are facing
• Collaboration: Easing restrictions,
building clear market standard
interfaces to facilitate collaborative
business models, and simplifying go-to-
market of these models
• Calibration: Differentiated regulatory
approach for ‘early-stage’ vs ‘scaled-up’
Fintechs for regulatory supervisioning,
introducing ‘Reg labs’ for controlled
environment operations and testing
• Benchmarked to Global: Capture
learnings that enabled growth in Global
markets and ensure we are moving in
tandem and not behind the curve on
innovation, policy and infrastructure
advancements
8. State of the Fintech Union 2022 8
State of the Fintech Union Report 2022 10
Fintech Landscape
Mission Critical for Indian Economy
01/03
10. State of the Fintech Union 2022 10
Indian Fintech Industry: Leaping forward fast
India: #3 in Fintech strength Significant strides in UPI
Canada 2,770
Australia 2,640
China 2,530
USA
UK 8,870
UPI Transaction Value for CY212
$800 Bn+
UPI Transaction Volume for CY212
35 Bn+
UPI Transactions Value growth2
97%
India 7,460
Source: 1. Traxcn data as on Jul’22 2. UPI data from NPCI, CAGR represents value increase from CY19-21
# Fintechs as on Jun’221
CAGR of number of Fintechs over CY 2019-2022
16%
15%
20%
7%
9%
10%
22,290
11. 11
Fintech Landscape - Mission Critical for Indian Economy
And occupying a significant space in the Global Fintech Landscape
Source: Tracxn data as on Jul’22, Cumulative data from Jan’17 to Jul’22
Funding ($)
(Jan’17 - Jul’22)
# Deals
(Jan’17- Jul’22)
#Listed FinTechs
as on Jul’22
#Unicorns
as on Jul’22
129 Bn
5,843
174
172
40 Bn
1,951
52
30
37 Bn
794
60
36
29 Bn
2,084
37
23
7 Bn
282
51
6
5 Bn
429
59
4
USA India
UK Canada
China Australia
14%
share of Global
Fintech Funding
#2
on Deal volume
#4
in Unicorn
strength
12. State of the Fintech Union 2022 12
Rapid surge in new Fintechs over the last 5 years
0.1 0.1 0.1
0.2 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.4 2.2 0.8 4.0 2.1 4.2 3.2 9.8 3.4
2008 2012 2018
2010 2016
2006 2014 2020
2009 2013 2019
2011 2017
2007 2015 2021 2022 H1
8,000
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
# Fintechs in India
Source: Traxcn data as on Jul’22
Coinswitch, Cred Avenue,
Open, Oxyzo
Annual Equity Funding ($Bn)
Many large fintechs had started operations from 2008, with Neobanks being the recent entrants. While the number of
fintechs scaled up between 2014 and 2021, funding was low till 2015 after which the sector received rapid funding boost.
COVID further boosted payments space, leading to 210% spike in funding between CY 2020 and 2021. With rising funding
and valuations, we have a seen an acceleration in the rate at which Fintechs have become unicorns vs the past
Unicorns as of Jul’22, placed on their start date
Groww, Acko, Digit
PhonePe, Zeta
Razorpay,
OfBusiness
Bill Desk
Pine Labs
Mobikwik
Policybazaar
PayTM, Zerodha
ChargeBee
BharatPe, Coin DCX,
Slice, CRED
One Card
13. 13
Fintech Landscape - Mission Critical for Indian Economy
Thriving ecosystem couple with a surge in digital adoption has
catapulted the market to a high growth and valuation trajectory
With many of them moving up the valuation pyramid
Source: Tracxn data as on Jul’22 ,excludes early stage Fintechs which have valuation below $1Mn
Decacorn (>$10 Bn)
Unicorns ($1-10 Bn)
Soonicorns ($0.5-1 Bn)
Century Club FinTechs
($100-500 Mn)
Minicorns ($1-100 Mn)
1
7
5
39
200
Indian Fintech
landscape in 2020
Indian Fintech
landscape in 2022
1
22
12
41
380
Managing Director &
Partner, BCG
Erande.Yashraj@bcg.com
Yashraj Erande
Indian fintechs are reaching scale and industry is moving towards becoming mission
critical, thus having a national role to play in achieving India’s pursuit of 5Tr economy.
Fintechs and conventional players will co-exist as the need to work together is
becoming imperative to provide a holistic experience to customer with best of both
worlds. Having good compliance systems will smoothen the process of collaborating
as willingness of partners to collaborate with compliant fintechs will be higher.
14. State of the Fintech Union 2022 14
And creating their niche, by driving inclusion
LendingTechs PayTechs WealthTechs
Source: Invest India report 22’, BCG Analysis
NTC coverage UPI Adoption Activating clients
New-to-credit customer share
Market share in
UPI transaction value
Market share in active
broking clients
36%
22%
93%
7%
80%
20%
Fintechs Fintechs
Fintech
broking
Banks Banks
Traditional
broking
15. 15
Fintech Landscape - Mission Critical for Indian Economy
Breakthrough customer coverage, garnering investor interest
1. Phone Pe’s (market leader) MAUs for Jun’21 and Apr’22 2. Groww’s (market leader) MAUs for Mar’21 and Mar’22 3. NiyoX’s registered base for Aug’21 and Jul’22
Source: 1. PhonePe’s report Apr’22, Press search 2. Credit Suisse - Sensor Tower Data - Mar’22 3. Press Search
Digital payments (MAU - PhonePe1
)
Digital investments (MAU - Groww2
)
Neo-Banking (#Customers - NiyoX3
)
Fintech customers in India
125 Mn+
4.5 Mn+
2.5 Mn+
165 Mn+
9 Mn+
4 Mn+
2021 2022
Growth Rate
32%
100%
60%
16. State of the Fintech Union Report 2022 16
Fintech industry has received a booster funding shot – Maturing,
but still in high growth phase
Angel & Seed Series A,B,C Series D+
Source: Tracxn data as on Jul’22
Equity funding and deal count in
India has been on a rise
While Series D+ funding has grown,
~60% is still in Angel, Seed & Series A-C
Funding series split in India (%)
• Equity funding into Indian fintechs has grown at a CAGR 26% over last 4 years, but more rapidly so from 2020
onwards, fueled by the post-pandemic impact of high growth via increased digital services adoption.
• The increasing number of late-stage financing rounds is another indicator of increased maturity of Indian fintechs
14% 19% 18%
6%
7%
58%
86%
44% 52%
48%
23%
38% 42%
45%
9.8
3.5
4.2
4.0
CY 17 CY 19 CY 21 CY 22 H1
Deal Amount ($Bn)
# Deals
26%
521
228
372
302
CY 14 CY 16 CY 18 H1 CY 22
CY 20
17. 17
Fintech Landscape - Mission Critical for Indian Economy
Global investors taking a strong seat at the funding table
Note: Indian Investor funding refers to deals in which each investor is headquartered in India and Global Investor funding refers to deals in which each investor is headquartered outside India. Offshore arms of
foreign entities set up in India are tagged as Indian. Deals in which there is a mix of Indian and Foreign Investors have been split in respective categories using the same ratio as for regular Indian & Global deals
Source: Venture Intelligence data for CY 21, Tracxn data CY 21
Global investor
funding in 2021
Overall
funding in 2021
Indian investor
funding
$9.8 Bn
$6.3 Bn
$3.5 Bn
• Indian Fintech growth story continues to hold strong, with ~150 deals/quarter & $9.8 Bn funding in 2021
• However, last few quarters have seen multiple shifts, largely owing to macroeconomic conditions, i.e., impending
possibility of recession and high inflation globally
18. State of the Fintech Union 2022 18
Valuation profile tilting from Payments to Lending & WealthTech
FY211
FY25E2
Note: Valuation profile does not add up to 100% as the remaining sits in SaaS
Source: 1.Tracxn, Valuation 2019 onwards 2. Capital IQ, Tracxn, Press Search, projections done considering the growth rates by segments and further expected trends
India Fintech Valuation split by segments (%)
With PayTechs having caused disruption in most areas, Lending & WealthTechs are now next in line
50% 22%
PayTechs
13% 35%
LendingTech
15% 18%
WealthTech
6% 10%
Neobanking
11%
InsurTech 10%
19. 19
Fintech Landscape - Mission Critical for Indian Economy
Winter around the corner coupled with Tech Nationalism
COVID-19 driven income
inequities- bias for
consumer protection
over innovation
• Backlash against
BNPL, PPI cards
• Reg. concerns re
“excess” algorithmic
unsecured lending
• ~$2.2 Mn average
total cost of a data
breach1
• High cost of
techno-legal solutions
for preventing data
misuse
• Q1 FY22 witnessed
largest decline in
quarterly funding
since 20181
• 45% valuation
decline (QoQ) for
Indian fintechs in
Q1 CY221
Rising demand for
data protection to
increase compliance
costs
Looming liquidity
retreat drying up
funding inflows
Geopolitical tensions
to enhance bias for
localization
• Data localization
policies have
doubled from 67 to
144 in last 5 years
• Increasing barriers to
cross border scale/
data flows2
Source: 1. In 2021, World Bank Report, IBM Report, Inc 42, LNRS Report 2022, Reuters, UN Report 2. Winter Wardrobe, BCG PICUP Conference 2022 presentation
20. State of the Fintech Union 2022 20
Recent funding headwinds seen Globally and in India
Global equity funding declined by 28%,
with an equivalent decline in deal flows
While in India, dip has been a bit
steeper at 36% decline
47.4
Jan-Mar’21 Jan-Mar’21
Apr-Jun’21 Apr-Jun’21
Jul-Sep’21 Jul-Sep’21
Oct-Dec’21 Oct-Dec’21
Jan-Mar’22 Jan-Mar’22
Apr-Jun’22 Apr-Jun’22
#Global deals #Deals
Global deal amt ($Bn) India deal amt ($Bn)
128 127
142
124 133
95
48.1 45.5
53.4 54.4
27.9 1.6 1.7
2.7
3.8
1.9 1.6
-28%
-36%
Source: Preqin, Tracxn data as on Jul’22, BCG analysis , 1. Oct’21-Jun’22, 2. Dec’21-Jun’22
• Over the last 9 months1
, $35.6 Bn has been pulled out by FPIs from Indian markets’, rupee is depreciating and at all
time low of INR 79/$, prompting FPIs to withdraw money before further devaluation.
• A steep drop in funding of 36% from Q4 CY21 to Q2 CY22 is seen in India, which is in line with Global dip.
• The amount of dry powder with institutional investors (PE/VCs) has grown by $3.2 Bn in last 6 months2
, indicating the
potential flow of capital with improvement in macroeconomic fundamentals.
846
874
912 991 1,019
723
21. 21
Fintech Landscape - Mission Critical for Indian Economy
While most firms struggle, few firms flourish during downturns
14% of companies improved growth and margin
in downturns, while 44% declined in both...
…and the performance gap
between them is substantial
14%
14%
Increasing sales growth Revenue growth
(CAGR)2
Change in
EBIT Margin2
A
A A
B B B
Falling sales growth
Expanding
EBIT Margin
Shrinking
EBIT Margin
44% 28%
8.8%
+14pp
+7pp
2.9pp
-4.7% -4.4pp
1. Average across last four U.S. downturns since 1986; based on performance compared to three-year pre-downturn baseline for U.S. companies with at least $50M sales 2. Annualized revenue growth during the
downturn period 3. Compared to three-year average pre-downturn EBIT margin | Source: S&P Compustat and Capital IQ, BCG Henderson Institute
22. State of the Fintech Union 2022 22
Profitability, Innovation
and Governance
Breaking the compromise
02/03
24. State of the Fintech Union 2022 24
Indian Fintech industry has reached COVID herd immunity
Pushed industry towards many new innovative product
launches
Increase in UPI payments in
2021 vs 2019
Increase in retail digital lending from $110 Bn in
2019 to $200 Bn in 2021
‘High digital portability’ of Fintech business models made
COVID a growth catalyst
Rapid digital transition, driven by customer pull
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22, BCG analysis
3x
1.8x
Drove uptick in adoption of Fintech products and services
by broader customers segments like SME, Insurance, etc.
Unlocked new incumbent partnership opportunities, and
eased collaboration due to accelerated digitization by
traditional players
Covid has pushed
the industry towards
digital payments and
launching of multiple
innovative products
— CXO, Fintech
Covid has accelerated
things - Internally
processes have
changed, backend
operations are more
streamlined
— MD, Bank
25. 25
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Lending players have closed one or more
business lines.
Unsecured lending took greatest hit due to
deterioration of asset quality
Caused a brief deterioration in asset quality coupled with
disruption in on-ground collection efforts
Headwinds experienced in some areas
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22, BCG analysis
Many business models challenged during COVID
20%
Forced business model re-imagination in high credit risk &
people intensive Fintech business models
Created concerns on investment climate, tightened
availability of funding. Capital shift towards profitable unit
economics reducing runway for new Fintechs
Credit risk has
increased- via rise
in insurance claims/
default due to death
— CXO, Fintech
Collection effort on
ground was disrupted.
In India tele-collection
is challenging
— MD, Bank
Certain segments stress tested more than others
26. State of the Fintech Union Report 2022 26
The last few months have been challenging for Fintechs in general with the “funding winter” approaching and pressure on demonstrating
profitability, besides customer acquisition. Fintechs that have a proven value proposition and business model will need to be prepared
to operate in the new environment and in a different context to sustain and thrive.
Long road to profitability for Fintechs
% Respondents
who believe
Fintechs will be
profitable in next
2-3 years
20-30%
Outlook more positive for Paytechs
Note: Q: Do you believe most fintechs in your sector will operate profitably in the next 2-3 years?
N=102 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
PayTechs
Lending fintechs
WealthTech
Neobanking
InsurTech
24%
24%
32%
20%
21%
Fintechs not going to
turn profitable any time
soon. Fundamentally,
business drivers are
not in the right place –
not easy to pivot from
growth to profitability
— CXO, Bank
Fintechs are operating
in the mode of getting
customers and then
creating a business
model
— CEO, Fintech
27. 27
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Product Expansion and Hiring are top priorities
Note: Q: What are the top priorities for you and your business? (Rank in order)
N=102 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
What are the top priorities for you and your business?
Product expansion Fundraising
Hiring right talent Internal controls
Improving
customer service
Cost reduction
Top 3 priorities Bottom 3 priorities
% Respondents
mentioning this as a
priority
82% 36%
61% 44%
75% 44%
28. State of the Fintech Union Report 2022 28
Challenges in fintech and incumbent collaboration
Fintech-Incumbent collaboration requires
some unlocks
Incumbents are perceiving Fintechs as partners and complementary capabilities. collaboration is seen as a powerful tool to bring
together, reach, innovative products and seamless customer experience. However, there are many challenges seen. Regulatory clarity
on what Fintechs and incumbents can do comes across as a strong enabler of efficient collaborative models. Other challenges to
collaboration seen are low capacity of incumbents, preparedness of incumbent tech stack, low trust factor, risk sharing, data sharing
and customer ownership
Low tech
maturity of
uncumbent
Note: Q: What are the challenges in fintech and incumbent collaboration?
N= 102 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
(% Respondents who agree)
57%
Regulatory
hurdles/
challenges
53%
Misalignment
of incentives
51%
Operational
complexity
54%
— CXO, Bank
— Founder, Fintech
— CEO, Fintech
The issue is to be able to
extend our oversight into
the partner. Regulation
should extend to Fintechs
in principle, not on paper
Lack of alignment on key
measurable goals - Incumbents
track profitability, Fintech
focuses on valuation & scale
A lot of incumbents want to
partner but are not ready.
Incumbents are slow to push
the boundary of customer
experience
29. 29
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Regulations highly effective in safeguarding risks and providing
level playing field
Strong positive sentiment on
regulatory environment along...
...however, few areas of
enhancement felt
82%
Safeguard risks
40%
Are consistent
72%
Provide level
playing field
35%
Provide flexibility
Note: Q: What are your thoughts on the regulatory environment in your business area?
N=102 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
% who agree/neutral that
regulations
% who disagree that
regulations
Regulators are
also adjusting and
understanding the new
models. Have been
fairly supportive in
audit situations, it’s a
learning curve for all
— Co-Founder, Fintech
30. State of the Fintech Union 2022 30
— CXO, Fintech
— President, Fintech
— CXO, SFB
Data management guidelines
are absolutely needed. They
will be a larger version of
data localization and have to
gradually evolve
AA is the step in the right
direction towards open
banking. Needs policy push for
cross-sector adoption
Half the battles are won if KYC
is sorted fully digitally. Country
level regulators can come
together and decide a common
framework. Simplification and
harmonization are needed
However, industry can benefit from clarity and harmonization
Top areas with greatest need for harmonization and clarity
% respondents who believe in need
of harmonization across sectors
% respondents who
believe in need of clarity
Note: Q: Which areas of regulations need clarity? (Multi-select); Q: Cross-sector harmonization across the following regulations will unlock value (Agree-disagree)
N=102 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
63%
91%
50%
97%
30%
72%
Customer data
management
KYC
Cloud and data
localisation
Account Aggregator
framework 91%
31. 31
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
— CXO, Fintech
— CEO, Fintech
AA will be a game changer
- will open up a lot of
things. Needs policy
push and some form of
compensation structure to
be incorporated though
Bureau access will enable
product innovation and
process efficiencies going
forward
Indian Regulators have introduced many progressive moves
• Account Aggregator framework touted to be a baby step towards open banking and a powerful cross-sector enabler and a
consent-based architecture.
• NHS hailed to create the UPI moment for health distribution, with opportunities for InsurTechs to create interfaces and apps for
customers to access records, health services, thereby facilitating innovation in underwriting using this new data.
• Access to credit bureau information seen to positively impact industry via better risk assessment and reduced cost in procuring
alternate data points
Account
Aggregator
model
National
Health
Stack
Allowing
bureau
access to
Fintechs
93% 85% 81%
Top 3
progressive
regulatory
moves
% respondents
with positive
outlook
Note: Q: What is your outlook on the following regulations and their impact on the industry?
N=102 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
Respondents view on Top 3 Progressive Regulatory moves
32. State of the Fintech Union 2022 32
• AA framework enables consented data sharing & empowers all players in the ecosystem to enhance penetration
• To win increased consumer awareness & high participation from players is necessary
• Operationalization with encrypted data sharing, strong access controls & accountability systems will be crucial
• It opens doors to additional services- portfolio management, wealth & insurance, taxation provided by players within ambit
of RBI, SEBI & IRDAI
Global Learning Exhibit #1: Data - India’s AA framework is a step ahead
in enabling secured sharing, democratization and sachetization
Account
Aggregator
(AA)
Joining AA
ecosystem is
voluntary , but
mandatory sharing
of data by members
But, can change
under draft data
protection bill.
Consultation
paper favors data
retention with
regulated entities
Direct sharing
of data with
financial
institutions
banned
Subject to
Personal Data
Protection Act
Singapore
Financial Data
Exchange (SFDX)
Routed through
licensed agency
Joining is
voluntary
Joining is
voluntary , but
mandatory
sharing of data
by members
Joining is
voluntary , but
mandatory
sharing of data
by members
Banks seek
to access to
customer data
from FinTechs
MyData
Pursuant to
Customer Data
Right and Open
Banking Regs
On accreditation
from regulators
India China Singapore Korea Australia
Source: Credit Suisse
Centralized
sharing of
customer data
Customer
consent for data
sharing
Mandatory
sharing of
customer data
by incumbent
lenders to 3rd
party
Fintech and
other financial
institutions
partnership to
share customer
data
33. 33
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Board
independence
& composition
Attention
to internal
governance
Scale-based
audits
Better
readiness for
regulatory
reporting
Fintechs need to bring more attention to governance
Compliance certification on demand, external advisor and scale-based audits may help fintechs be compliant as well as agile at the
same time. Once scale is achieved, Fintechs may outgrow advisors and over a period, it may be advisable to get independent directors
on the board. Having right culture from the get-go may help Fintechs get right systems and processes in place upfront. Fintechs can
proactively report their governance practices and initiatives to break the myth and perception of poor governance, and garner trust,
both from customers as well as regulators
<20%
% Respondents who
believe Fintech governance
at par with Incumbents
Top suggestions to
strengthen governance
Note: Q: Fintechs are at par with incumbents in terms of governance mechanism?
N=102 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
Some form of
compliance
certification can be
evolved for fintechs.
Scale based audit
mechanism can also
be thought about,
based on revenue,
customers etc.
— CXO, Fintech
Once scale is achieved,
fintechs should
outgrow advisors, get
an NBFC license
— CXO, Fintech
35. 35
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Hiring Talent and Product expansion are top priorities
Note: Q: What are the top priorities for you and your business? (Rank in order)
N=38 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
% Respondents mentioning
this as a priority
79%
Hiring right talent
76%
Product
expansion
53%
Geographical
expansion
58%
Regulatory
impact on
business model
Lending
36. State of the Fintech Union 2022 36
Unsecured lending poised for further disruption
Supply chain financing
Unsecured loans
Cards/BNPL
Gold/housing loan
27%
28%
29%
Unsecured lending features
as the biggest area likely to
be disrupted, whereas a small
set of players believe the
same will happen for secured
loans like Gold Loan and
Mortgage
Note: Q: Which areas in Financial Services are most likely to be disrupted? (Select top 5)
N=50 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
8%
% Respondents who believe this
area will be disrupted
Which areas
of lending are
most likely to
be disrupted?
Principal, BCG
Bachani.Nisha@bcg.com
Nisha Bachani
We have seen rapid disruption in unsecured lending over the last few years, along customer experience,
analytics based credit decisioning and cost to serve. As we advance coverage across NTC, while more
can be done in strengthening risk algorithms, there is immense opportunity to disrupt the secured
space as well. Digitalization of physical assets, dematerialization of financial assets and implementing
standard operational protocols for E2E process (e.g., marking lien real time via third party platforms) can
enable growth in this space, reduce systemic risks and also facilitate quick access via LSPs.
Lending
37. 37
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
% Respondents who believe this is a top challenge
CAC and Asset quality are the biggest challenges for
players today
— CXO, Bank
— Co-Founder, Fintech
CAC is a big concern now -
trying to bring customers
through partnerships than
direct acquisition
Next 2 years are going to be
tough on the borrowing cost
perspective. Interventions
by Central bank and inflation
are going to be areas to
watch out
66% 33%
50% 89%
50% 56%
37% 22%
34% 22%
Regulations
CAC
Asset quality
Competitive
intensity
Scalability
of business
models
Fintechs have been crisis tested over the past few years, which has resulted in increasing asset quality and collection practices at par
with incumbents. Leveraging technology like AI/ML seen important to help get risk-based pricing models right in a country with diverse
customers and customer needs. In addition, availability of risk capital is a challenge and opening up debt markets and building debt
securitization frameworks to enable Lending Fintechs to borrow beyond equity markets will help drive sustainable growth
Note: Q: Which of the following areas pose a challenge to sustainability in your sector?
N=16 Incumbents: N=34 Fintechs as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
Top challenges Fintechs Incumbents
Lending
38. State of the Fintech Union Report 2022 38
Collaboration between Incumbents and Fintechs brings
greater value
Fintech abilities lie in distribution, technology and alternate data. But with respect to collections, those with physical reach
may have an edge. While regulations provide opportunities to licensed fintechs to tap the fast growing market in India, three key
enablers seen to further their growth journey - 1. Having a level playing field vs incumbents, 2. Opening up opportunities to raise risk
capital, and 3. Providing more latitude for smaller fintechs to innovate, in controlled sandbox environment if needed.
Note: Q: Which areas have maximum potential for fintechs and incumbents to collaborate? Are current regulations supportive of collaboration between incumbents and lending fintechs in the following areas?
N=50 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
% Respondents who believe
this area has high potential
% Respondents who believe few
areas need further enhancement
Technology & data services
78%
Sourcing & distribution
76%
Underwriting & credit
40%
Collection
40%
Underwriting and Credit scoring
39%
Collection
41%
Top areas with potential for incumbent-
fintech collaboration
Top areas where Regulations can be more
supportive of collaboration
Lending
39. 39
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
While certain regulatory moves are lauded by all,
some enablers needed as well
Regulation
% respondents
with positive
outlook Perspectives of respondents
40%
Digital Lending
Guidelines
• 70% players believe this will adversely impact innovation
• 75-80% believe it will curtail bad lending practices and
improve portfolio quality
• Need regulatory framework enabling healthy
partnerships, with guardrails to check systemic risk
36%
New credit card
guidelines
• 50% respondents believe this will improve credit card
penetration
• 35% fintechs keen to apply for a CC certificate of
registration
• However, 75% believe restricting transaction data
sharing will negatively impact co-branded cards model
82%
Credit Bureau access to
NBFCs and Fintechs
Respondents believe this will enable -
• Better Risk assessment (87%)
• Reduced cost in procuring alternate data points (72%)
• Enhanced customer onboarding experience (67%)
Note: N=50 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
Lending
40. State of the Fintech Union 2022 40
APAC regulators leverage interest capping, fund sourcing restrictions and limiting credit enhancements
Lending on
FinTech’s balance
sheet?
Ability to
offer credit
enhancement to
lending partners
Cap on
lending rates
Other lending
related restrictions
India
Without
lending
license
FLDGs
restriction
(WIP);
loading PPI
through
credit lines is
banned
• Late payment
penalties
• Restricting access
to credit bureau to
regulated entities
• Prohibiting
FinTechs from
branding as
banks/‘Neo banks’
China
For specific
products
Without
lending
license
Through
licensed
agencies
(insurance, fin
guarantee)
• 30% loan retention for online
lending Platform
• No one-click purchases
• Ban on plaltform branding for
3rd party product cross sale
• 25% cap for Banks on
sourcing from single online
platform
Singapore
NA
Australia
NA
NA
Source: Asia Fintech Sector Report, Credit Suisse, Central Banks, Press Search
Presence of
unregulated &
partially regulated
players can lead
to increased the
systemic risk
Exhaustive
& periodic
reporting, coupled
with effective
supervision,
tailored to the
Fintech’s scale can
help minimize risks
Global Learning Exhibit #2: Regulators restrict Fintech’s
balance sheet lending to protect consumer interest
41. 41
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise 41
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
42. State of the Fintech Union 2022 42
Managing Director, Matrix Partners
Vikram@matrixpartners.in
Vikram Vaidyanathan Profitability in lending is not a post-facto thought. Key is to get the basics right:
continuously improve underwriting models, leverage tech to reduce opex and have a
clear plan to reduce cost of funds with scale. Fintechs are battle-tested survivors of
multiple debt crises, will continue to learn and emerge out of them stronger
Perspectives on enabling a growth path ahead
Expand access to alternate forms of capital, through India’s debt and securitization market:
Fintechs should demonstrate clear value to debt investor, price risk effectively and enhance
governance and reporting standards to achieve high velocity of debt funding. Frameworks that will
enable discovery and funding of these new borrower entities will be required to make this happen
Unlock value of partnerships: Clear guardrails for fintech-incumbent partnerships on customer
experience, risk management and governance can unlock significant value by combining the expertise
of incumbents with innovation of Fintechs
Accelerate Industry enablers - Data democratization and open finance: Account Aggregator
framework and OCEN are set to transform lending. Acceleration of AA adoption by the ecosystem and
expanding to other data sources beyond banks will unlock industry ability to drive better access and
algorithmic risk-based lending through open market platforms like OCEN
Data management and compliance by design: Proactive compliance, customer data management can
help fintechs alleviate RBI’s consumer risk protection concerns. Fintechs can seek an opportunity to
set benchmarks for tech driven compliance by design
Scale based guidelines for Fintechs: Opportunity to create scale-based guardrails for fintechs
(similar to NBFC construct); Smaller fintechs in early stages of innovation/product testing may need
more latitude to operate and innovate while fintechs reaching scale should be subjected to the right
standards of regulations and governance
Lending
43. 43
Fintech Landscape - Mission Critical for Indian Economy 43
Perspectives on enabling a growth path ahead
Need to get to a meaningful scale for sustainability and
profitability and justify upfront investment in tech and infra;
One important factor to help scale is access to wider capital
markets
— VC Investor
Framework for debt securitization and ratings is the need
of the hour to drive velocity/throughput that attracts
retail investors, corporate treasury and debt hedge funds.
Need a wider debt syndication marketplace
— Co-Founder, Fintech
In a diverse market like India, key is to match right-priced
borrower risk to investor/lender risk. Using technology
effectively, can get access to data, reduce associated cost of
credit and losses, which thereby improves the overall quality
of portfolio
— Co-Founder, Fintech
Partner, BCG
V.Vipin@bcg.com
Vipin V
Lending space, especially the unsecured space, is growing at a rapid pace with scaling up of digital operating
models, alternate data based underwriting etc. and fintechs are well positioned to ride on this growth. Moreover,
credit models of fintechs have been stress-tested during Covid phase and the good ones have been able to bring
down their delinquencies to pre-covid levels. Next few years present a great opportunity for Fintechs to penetrate
the market by focusing on underserved segments with the strong backing of Bank/ NBFC partnerships. Fintechs
might outpace many leading NBFCs/ banks in terms of lending volumes over the next few years
Lending
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
45. 45
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
% Respondents mentioning this as a priority
Product expansion and Hiring talent are top priorities
PayTechs seem to be focusing on product expansion and cross-selling as it is challenging to create sustainable profits, given the
current regulatory regime. Even globally, it is natural for payment companies to extend into other product lines. Growing monthly
active user base and thinking about cost reduction, with primary driver as technology are the other top priorities heard
Product expansion
Regulatory impact on business model
Hiring right talent
Note: Q: What are the top priorities for you and your business? (Rank in order)
N=22 Payment as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
Cost reduction
Improving Customer Service
Opportunity to
innovate as more and
more guardrails are put
by regulators; market
access and share
comes out and can also
be a good opportunity
to charge premium
— CXO, Fintech
95%
59%
77%
50%
45%
Payments
46. State of the Fintech Union 2022 46
Which areas in Payments are most likely to be disrupted
Disruption expected in P2P and P2M payment flows, less
on acquiring
UPI has been a big disrupter in the
Indian Payments landscape.. The
next wave of disruption is expected
to come from rapid explosion of
digital merchant payments (as 75%
merchants are now covered via QR)
and through greater penetration &
UPI enablement of Credit cards
RBI’s 2025 payment vision targets
a 3X growth in digital payments
transactions, and value of digital
payments turnover to be 8X vs
GDP, with a fundamental reduction
of cash in circulation.
POS/PG 12%
29%
P2M
12%
Prepaid & gift cards
28%
Payment SaaS
27%
P2P
Note: Q: Which areas in Financial Services are most likely to be disrupted? (Select top 5)
N=29 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
% Respondents who believe this area will be disrupted
Payments
47. 47
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
PayTechs feel that card regulation can be clearer as there are interpretation gaps between RBI & fintechs. Zero MDR regime believed
to have impacted sustainable profits, especially with lot of cashbacks, discounts being given away to combat current intense
competition. In addition, restrictions in credit linked to payments is seen as another pain point challenging the viability of business
Cost of compliance, CAC and Competitive intensity are
the top challenges
— Strategy Head, PayTech
— CXO, Small Finance Bank
Long wait on decision on
the Payment Aggregator
License, decision could
provide clarity to move
forward
Challenge is more from BU
perspective. UPI makes no
money, but overall Bank
makes more money in the
longer run due to digital
transactions. LTV of the
customer increases
Note: Q: Which of the following areas pose a challenge to sustainability in your sector?
N=9 Incumbents; N=20 Fintechs as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
% Respondents who believe this is a top challenge
73% 57%
68% 43%
55% 71%
27% 43%
23% 71%
Regulations
CAC
Competitive
intensity
Scalability
of business
models
Top challenges Fintechs Incumbents
High
compliance
cost
Payments
48. State of the Fintech Union 2022 48
P2P Fee NIL1
NA NIL NA
Varied with
commercial
arrangements
Upto RM5K:
NIL>RM5K:
50 cents
NIL1
NA
S$0.2 to
S$0.5 per
tnx
NA
~0.5 %
(Chargeable
by acquirer)
Consultation
in progress
1.5-1.8%
0.45% No cap Cap: 0.5%
MDR Cap is based
on merchant sales
Ranges from 0.5%
to 0.9%
Interchange
Cap: 0.675%
Rupay MDR:
NIL
Other MDRs:
0.4- 0.9%
Cap: Rmb
13/0.35%
No cap
Subject to
commercial
agg.
Interchange
Cap: 0.08%
No cap
Interchange
Cap:0.14%/0.21%
(domestic/
international)
P2M/
Corporate
fees
Credit
cards
Debit
cards
India China Singapore Korea Australia Malaysia
MDRs/interchange fees across markets have been capped and have been trending downwards
MDRs and Fee in most cases are capped at <1% of the transactions value
Global Learning Exhibit #3: Payments - Regulators cap
and reduce MDRs to propel product offering expansion
1- For UPI in India
Source: Credit Suisse
49. 49
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
PayTechs looking to lending as holy grail for monetization
Note: Q: Are you exploring any alternate revenue sources? What other revenue sources are you exploring?
N=29 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
Are you exploring any
alternate revenue source What other revenue source are you exploring?
Paytechs are looking
to tap into alternate
revenue sorces
~70%
Lending emerge to be the clear winner as an alternative revenue source
7%
46%
36%
18% 9%
Selling
Technology
solution
Lending Wealth
Management
Distribution
Ad
Revenue
Insurance
Distribution
Pursuing Non considering
Considering
43%
50%
64%
27%
25%
75%
58%
17%
25%
Payments
50. State of the Fintech Union 2022 50
While tokenization seen in a positive light, players
need support on other regulatory moves
% respondents with
positive outlook
Regulation
Respondents’ perspective
on implications
Few players have a positive outlook on recent regulations
21%
Restricting BNPL Models Constrains innovation in space
66%
Tokenization of card transactions Helps minimize data leaks & brings
transparency but increases compliance
cost and cancellations
34%
Zero MDR 80% believe banks and PSPs most
impacted
31%
Credit Card and Debit Card – Issuance and
Conduct Directions
Limits role of non-bank and fintechs in
driving penetration
Note: N=29 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
Payments
52. State of the Fintech Union 2022 52
Perspectives on enabling a growth path ahead
Monetization of payments: Need to enable economic attractiveness for Fintechs to continue
to invest in payment innovation. Currently economic models are highly restrictive and zero
MDR regime puts pressure on Paytechs to focus on alternate sources of revenue and limits
investment in innovation
Credit on payments: Credit embedded within payments is key to drive growth and penetration of
payments in a sustainable way. UPI has disrupted peer to peer and peer to merchant debit payments
and with the enablement of credit cards on UPI, it is set to turbocharge credit card industry further
with a manifold expansion of the acceptance reach
Widening of P2M acceptance: While UPI has kicked off a digitization wave of payments, significant scope
for further penetration in P2M payments; need to reach larger merchant base and continuously drive
formalization and digitization of additional value chains
Monetization beyond core: Payment service providers role has expanded beyond core processing to
lending, book-keeping, cash flow management, etc. to drive sustainability. PayTechs will continue to
unlock value through other value-added services
Payments
53. 53
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Partner, BCG
Mandhata.Vivek@bcg.com
Vivek Mandhata
India has attained word leadership in payment innovation through UPI, QR
acceptances, etc. We have several fintechs setting the standards at scale. However
there are still many areas where significant potential exists to increase digital
payments penetration especially in the P2M space. Enabling more merchants,
formalization will also unlock the potential of finance embedded in payments. Greater
flexibility in economic models can turbo charge investments into payment innovation
Perspectives on enabling a growth path ahead
Intersection between payments, tech and consumer is the
area where huge revenue pools are going to be available.
Play between payments and data coming together to open
opportunity across the world
— Co-Founder, Fintech
Monetization is a key challenge faced by paytechs. Paytechs
should tap into alternate revenue sources and continue
thinking about cost reduction, primary driver being technology
— CXO, Fintech
Identifying where the lazy money is lying and becoming
the preferred choice of the consumer for transaction is
the way for profitability. Lazy money is in credit right now,
so have to find seamless ways of giving credit
— Co-Founder, Fintech
Payments
54. State of the Fintech Union 2022 54
Insurance
2c
State of the Fintech Union Report 2022
55. 55
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Hiring talent and product expansion emerge as top priorities
Product expansion, especially in Health claims processing solutions and Managed care are touted for growth. Current tech solutions and
innovation has been limited in these areas, focusing largely on distribution. However, as players expand, tech led solutions is expected
to drive greater penetration. Similarly, better experience and VAS such as wellness linked products will be the key differentiators of
winners vs laggards
2c
Note: Q: What are the top priorities for you and your business? (Rank in order)
N= 27 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
Product
expansion
Geographical
expansion
87% 73% 60% 53%
Regulatory impact
on business model
Hiring right
talent
% Respondents mentioning this as a priority
Insurance
56. State of the Fintech Union 2022 56
Health Insurance most ripe for disruption
Top new avenues
respondents believe should
be allowed:
Data based pricing in Health
& Life >> 84%
Value added services such
as wellness linked products
>> 75%
Enable white labeled
insurance products >> 73%
Pay per use motor
insurance pricing >> 71%
Note: Q: Which areas in Financial Services are most likely to be disrupted? (Select top 5)
N= 27 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
Which areas in Insurance are most likely to be disrupted?
Health Life Motor
45% 16% 14%
% Respondents who believe this area will be disrupted
Associate Vice President,
Matrix Partners
Anish@matrixpartners.in
Anish Patil 2022 can be the watershed moment for Insurtechs in India. Heightened consumer
awareness post COVID, new product innovation and increased regulatory support are
clear tailwinds for insurers and insurtechs alike. Low CAC, strong underwriting and a
solution-first mindset will be key for insurtechs to win in the long run. Expect significant
growth in health, commercial and contextual insurance products
Insurance
57. 57
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Regulations, CAC and Scalability are the key
challenges today
— CXO, Bank
— CXO, FinTech
— Co-Founder, FinTech
Business models are still
complex – CAC is high,
digital acquisition not
adopted in a big way
Regulations are stringent.
But they are not impeding.
Regulation isn’t the primary
blocker
Insurance regulator is
thinking rightly about
launching insurance
companies – new licensing
models might come up like
banking
Note: Which of the following areas pose a challenge to sustainability in your sector?
N=12 Incumbents; N=15 Fintechs as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
% Respondents who believe this is a top challenge
92% 58%
83% 67%
58% 25%
50% 58%
42% 67%
Regulations
Top challenges Fintechs Incumbents
CAC
Competitive
intensity
Scalability
of business
models
Loss ratios
Insurance
58. State of the Fintech Union 2022 58
Significant opportunity for Fintech-Incumbent collaboration
Sourcing/distribution, underwriting, wellness
services - most preferred areas for collaboration
Easing of investment restrictions
would facilitate better collaboration
100%
96%
93%
85%
78%
Sourcing/
Distribution
UW using
alternate
data (HI/Life)
Wellness
services (Health)
Risk based
pricing (Motor)
Retirement
Planning (Life)
respondents
agree that relaxing
investment
restrictions of
insurers ability to
invest in insurtech,
will lead to more
collaboration
~70%
Note: N=27 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
Insurance
59. 59
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Regulations supportive of Fintech-Incumbent
collaboration in most areas
Sourcing/Distribution Risk based pricing (Motor)
Tele consultation (Health) Underwriting using alternate
data (Health & Life)
Areas where regulations
are supportive
Areas where regulations
can be more supportive
% Respondents
who believe so
% Respondents
who believe so
Note: Q: What are your thoughts on the regulatory environment in your business area?
N= 27 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey ‘22
Overall, regulations are perceived to be supportive in most areas, except wellness services and underwriting using alternate data.
While incumbents have a more optimistic view on regulatory support, Fintechs believe potential to create more supportive frameworks
in retirement planning, tele consultation and risk based pricing besides the above two.
67% 42%
50% 42%
Insurance
60. State of the Fintech Union 2022 60
Strong positive sentiment on recent regulatory moves
Regulation
% respondents with
positive outlook Respondents’ perspective on implications
71%
Pay per use pricing in Motor Allows larger play of InsurTechs in product
structures and distribution
75%
67%
National Health Stack
Sandbox
Creates new opportunities for InsurTechs
like technology interfaces for records
access, ecosystem connection
infrastructure, underwriting innovation
Has enabled growth of innovative
products but needs relaxation of
guidelines (E.g.- Quick approval, ‘use &
file’ for products/services)
70%
Easing new insurer application Reduction in minimum capital to help
fintechs, micro-insurers
84%
Data based pricing in Health Will unlock growth and value-based
pricing; Enables efficiency and profitability
Note: N=27 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
Insurance
61. 61
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Forward looking regulatory moves creating growth
unlocks
Introduction of new age add-ons for Motor Own
damage cover
• Pay as you drive (switch-on/switch-off
insurance according to need)
• Pay how you drive (the better you driver
lesser the premium)
• Floater policy for 2-wheelers and private
cars belonging to the same owner
Expected to accelerate insurance penetration
3+ year vintages PV, 2W
Usage based
insurance
Guideline Potential impact
Insurers across product lines (Life, GI, Health)
allowed to use and file products
Accelerates the product introduction timelines
Greater flexibility launch innovative products
with differentiated features, pricing - in line
with evolving demands of the customer, and
assist in increasing insurance penetration
Simplified
product filing
guidelines
Insurers can directly empanel hospitals for
cashless treatment without registration with
Registry of Hospitals in the Network of Insurers
(ROHINI)
Insurers can expand the network of hospitals
(PPN - preferred provider network) providing
cashless facilities, thereby improving access
to quality health-care and best medical
infrastructure.
This initiative will help in expanding the network
especially in Tier-2+ locations
Flexibility in the
empanelment
of cashless
hospitals
Source: IRDAI, web search, BCG analysis
Insurance
62. State of the Fintech Union 2022 62
Perspectives on enabling a growth path ahead
Embracing a new regime through partnerships and collaboration: InsurTechs and Insurers, with deep
integration, can build highly efficient and scalable operating models, and drive growth. Besides distribution,
data-based UW, AI/ML based claims prevention and management are key areas for collaboration
Leveraging changing regulatory landscape: IRDAI is introducing several significant regulatory changes to drive
greater penetration, digitalization, and improved customer service. This will have large implications on how
insurers and InsurTechs collaborate. Responding to these changes swiftly will be the key to leverage these
changes
Going beyond insurance, to services and solutions: Gradual shift from pure-play insurance to more
comprehensive “one-stop” solutions, providing ecosystem and holistic plays to customers. This is also leading
to emergence of B2B plays, where InsurTechs need to build solutions for Insurers to offer services in a plug-
and-play manner
Unlocking the “UPI” moment in retail health: National health stack at scale can unlock significant potential
for insurers, customers and providers with better experience, better products, lower costs (frauds) and
can transform reach of retail health. InsurTechs will have a significant opportunity to utilize the platform for
creating innovations and integrating with the insurers
Product flexibility: Product simplicity has long been an ask of customers especially in health and life;
InsurTechs can play a significant role in driving flexibility in product structures and pricing for better
economics as well as for customer value
Insurance
63. 63
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Perspectives on enabling a growth path ahead
Only a few players will survive in the agent distribution
model. The model to go for is Cross-sell. Someone who
sells motor might not be able to cross sell health. So it is
essential for insurance players to build this skill
— CXO, Insurance Co.
Product innovation for addressing niche segments,
data driven innovation across the value chain, use of
technology to enhance customer experience are crucial
levers for growth
— CXO, Fintech
Product simplification is a big unlock. But if you have strong
distribution, it isn’t a big requirement
— Co-Founder, Fintech
Managing Director
& Partner, BCG
Marathe.Aniruddha@bcg.com
Aniruddha Marathe
Insurance sector is at the cusp of break-out growth and the next phase
of growth will be driven by digital and data driven innovation in products,
distribution, claims and customer experience. The regulatory landscape is
also likely to evolve significantly and is likely to favor this change. Responding
swiftly to changing dynamics will be the key to success
Insurance
64. State of the Fintech Union 2022 64
Wealth
Management
2d
State of the Fintech Union Report 2022
65. 65
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Product, Hiring talent and Regulations are key priorities
88%
81%
88%
50%
Product Expansion
Hiring right talent
Regulatory impact on business model
Improving customer service
WealthTechs’ focus is on driving monetization via creating more alternatives and expanding into new assets for customers and
help in diversification. Industry feels more solutioning around the mass retail customer is required and that devising right entry
product for mass investors is needed. Also, user centric experience seen to be more important as players opine that true innovation
lies in technology used to deliver the product vis-a-vis the financial product itself. Financial literacy has a long way to go in India.
WealthTechs along with regulator feel the need to protect investor interests while striving to increase market participation
Note: Q: Which areas in Financial Services are most likely to be disrupted? (Select top 5)
N= 27 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
2d
Focus is to driving
monetization via
creating more
alternatives and
expanding into
new assets for
customers and help
in diversification
— CXO, Fintech
% Respondents mentioning this as a priority
Wealth
Management
66. State of the Fintech Union Report 2022 66
Players see opportunities for disruption in investment advisory, through helping customers avoid “money mistakes” and improve
longer term returns. Easing process for advisor fee collection, and providing access to AA ecosystem, with market wide depositories
information access, are key enablers needed
Advisory to drive the next wave of innovation
Note: Q: Which areas in Financial Services are most likely to be disrupted? (Select top 5)
N=20 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
% Respondents who
believe this area will
be disrupted
I strongly feel
that innovation
will happen at the
solutioning level.
There are not
enough options for
investors to deploy
capital where they
don’t have to apply
themselves.
— Cofounder, WealthTech
Potential
areas of
disruption
Investment advisory
45%
Mutual funds
18%
Crypto/NFTs
Exchange application 17%
Equity broking
13%
AMC
10%
Wealth
Management
67. 67
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
— CEO, Fintech
— CXO, Fintech
Regulator view is a lot
more from offline players
view point. Most of the
Fintechs are thinking from
an online perspective.
Good representation of
online/Fintech should be
compulsory
Monoline business in retail is
not doing good as customer
loyalty is going down. Cross
sell for higher ARPU always
help
Apart from Regulations, Monetization and CAC are key
challenges
Given the level of financial literacy in India, protecting investors interest is paramount for the regulator as well as the industry, as it
involves serving a mass market. Bar for paying fees or letting the platform make money is very high in India, relative to other countries.
Also, generating revenue from equity investors is hard for brokers. In the current competitive WealthTech space, optimizing AUM-
CAC would be a significate differentiator. Macro risks like a bear market might put off investor interest, affecting new investors
inflow and existing investors becoming inactive, thus hurting broking and MF industries
60%
Regulations
40%
CAC
25%
Competitive
intensity
45%
Monetization
35%
High compliance
cost
Note: Which of the following areas pose a challenge to sustainability in your sector?
N=20 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
Top industry challenges
(% respondents who believe this is a key challenge)
2d
Wealth
Management
68. State of the Fintech Union 2022 68
Key enablers needed to drive growth and innovation
(% Respondents
who agree)
Enabler
70%
Innovation in new asset classes (Crypto/NFT)
being affected by regulation uncertainty?
60%
Need for relaxation of RIA vs distributor
norms
65%
Tokenization of large ticket investments like AIF and
making available through market routes
Note: N=20 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
Associate,
Matrix Partners
Anand@matrixpartners.in
Anand Khetan DIY investing platforms have done well to drive penetration and onboard the first ~20M+ active
retail investors. Millennials are increasingly open to using tech to manage their finances as trust
on digital platforms has increased over the years. Assisted tech-enabled advisory on low-ticket
size investments in a cost-effective manner will likely be the path to get to the next 25-50M
investors. AA, KYC and other enablers will play a key role in this wave of innovation
20%
Regulatory framework is supportive with
respect to cross-border investments
55%
Relaxation in accredited investor norms to
unlock growth
45%
Customers will be willing to ‘pay for advice’
Wealth
Management
69. 69
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise 69
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
70. State of the Fintech Union 2022 70
Perspectives on enabling a growth path ahead
Advisory led innovation and monetization model: While a lot has happened in broking and
investments, the next big wave of innovation is expected to come from advisory, as retail customers have
higher return expectations. Easing out fee collection process by advisors, transparent pricing and opening
up AA ecosystem with participation of depositories, will help advisors drive true value for customers. This will
also require guardrails to build accountability for licensed advisors and a clear demarcation and tightening of
influencer-led advisory
Right solutions for Many India’s and driving financial literacy: User acquisition and engagement is yet to reach
the masses, activating new investor segments and increasing financialization of wealth by existing investors
through superior customer experience, tech-solutions to ‘mistake-proof’ decisions at scale and enabling
financial literacy in the investment journeys, will create the next big unlock of growth. Need to define right
entry products for mass customers as well to drive the next wave of adoption
Enabling sustainability of brokerage model: WealthTechs have more runway to show sustainability as
India’s growth story is still underpinned on penetration. However, moving from discount led acquisition
model, to monetization of customer transactions is essential going forward. Opening up new revenue
streams, e.g., order flow, easing out cross-border investments/trades and enabling players to move up
the value chain (distribution -> manufacturing) will drive sustainability of these players
Clear path forward for new asset classes: India has a long way to go in driving financialization of wealth into
mainstream asset classes, however there is rising interest in new, fractionalized asset classes with a resilient
talent pool and large Fintechs operating with caution. A clear framework and concerted push to demonstrate
proof of concept in these new asset classes (e.g., NFT, blockchain, fractional asset ownership) and improve
retail investor awareness will help industry stakeholders
Access to AA, for better advisory: Customer risk profiling is a key to success in wealth advisory.
Enabling greater access to customer data through account aggregator framework can enable better
and more customized personal financial management services
Wealth
Management
71. 71
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Perspectives on enabling a growth path ahead
Managing Director &
Partner, BCG
Jha.Mayank@bcg.com
Mayank Jha
Wealth in India will grow faster than GDP, and India is one of the fastest wealth creating nations in the
world. As wealth gets to more hands, it is imperative that fintechs are equipped with right business model
and regulatory support to build wealth and PFM solutions for the masses, where investors behaviour is
changing to move large sums digitally. Retailization of advisory services, right entry products and driving
long term wealth creation and preservation opportunities for investors will be a key unlock. Appropriate
monetization models, at par with global peers, needed for sustainability and innovation.
User centric experience more important. True innovation lies
in tech (UX/design) used to deliver the product vis-a-vis the
product itself
— MD, VC
Enablers like seamless onboarding of clients, joining the
account aggregator ecosystem for depositories is needed
— Co-Founder, Fintech
India still a penetration story, more so than any anywhere else
where it’s been a displacement story of fintechs displacing
into financial services. It is still early days, so it will need
investment
— VC Investor
Wealth
Management
72. State of the Fintech Union 2022 72
Neobanking
2e
State of the Fintech Union Report 2022
73. 73
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Significant activity seen in Neobanking ecosystem
28% 22% 67% 39%
39% 11% 67% 11%
Note: N=18 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
New tie-ups seen during the
last 12 months
Deposits, cards and savings products
leading the fray in new launches
5+ Deposits
2 to 5 Cards
1 to 2 Investment
None Other
Neobanking
74. State of the Fintech Union Report 2022 74
Product and hiring talent are top priorities
Expanding into lending/ asset-side products seen as a key driver to profitability. Seamless onboarding and frictionless customer
journey are major value propositions for collaboration with incumbents
64%
Regulatory impact
on business model
57%
Improving
customer service
86%
Product expansion
% Respondents mentioning
this as a priority
71%
Hiring right talent
Note: Q: What are the top priorities for you and your business? (Rank in order)
N= 18 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
Neobanking is more
about customer
centricity - money
management
experience, task
automation etc
rather than benefits
like increasing
returns
— CXO, Fintech
Neobanking
75. 75
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
CAC
67% 61% 33%
61% 28%
CAC, Regulations and ARPU are key challenges
— CEO, Fintech
— CXO, Fintech
India has led on many
aspects and we should
not fall behind when it
comes to digital banking
license
If going after the bottom half
of the population, liability
side revenue is not enough.
On the asset side, Neobanks
can make money, but in
medium to long term.. it will
be expensive
Regulations Competitive
intensity
ARPU Scalability of
business models
Profitability of neo-banks is one of the biggest challenges today, largely due to high CAC and low ARPU. Customer adoption is still
picking up in this sector, with only a few million customers who have an account. Activation of accounts, and scale up will take time,
as the space matures. Offering better efficiency, at a superior customer experience and trust will help increase productivity and
reduce CAC. Enablers like AA, and clarity on digital banking licensing framework can help drive sustainability.
Note: Q: Which of the following areas pose a challenge to sustainability in your sector?
N=18 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
Top industry challenges
Neobanking
76. State of the Fintech Union 2022 76
Eligibility to
Participate
Sandbox
Process
Evaluation
Open to “passporting”-access to foreign
players
Sandbox traditionally focused on both
startups & incumbents (vs only startups)
Need of Up-front License before entering
the sandbox
Different types of Sandbox (Sandbox
Express, Scalebox etc.)
Applications & enrolment throughout
the year (rather than slot-based
applications)
Maximum Sandbox journey duration
Maximum Extension beyond Duration
of Sandbox
Fintech Division as a decision-making
authority
Evaluation based on innovation
only (vs Innovation + Business case
consideration)
Exit feedback is formal & structured (vs
feedback at regular interval & informal/
unstructured exit feedback)
Variable
6m
India
Variable
12m
Bahrain
6m-12m
UAE
12m
Malaysia
Variable Variable Upto 12m
Variable
Hong Kong
6m
Variable
UK
12m
1m
Singapore
Global Learning Exhibit #4: Fintech Sandbox - Passporting, flexible
sandboxing and special regulatory units are key best practices
Source: Central Banks, Press search, RBI Framework for Regulatory Sandbox, 2021
1. “Viability” from RBI framework evaluation criteria assumed as Business case criteria 2. Assumed as no mention of exit feedback in RBI framework Best practices which India can adopt
1
2
77. 77
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Global Learning Exhibit #5: Tailored and multi-tiered
Sandboxing to expedite and enrich testing journeys
Dedicated sandbox case team
for scrutinizing and managing
process with case managers for
resolving queries, implementation
support
Digital Sandbox: For early-stage
innovation leveraging artificially
manufactured financial datasets,
API Marketplace
Scalebox (Proposed): A
digital sandbox pilot which
supports partnerships between
incumbents and FinTechs to help
testing firms scale innovation
technology
Tiered Sandbox Structure:
1. Sandbox focuses on providing
space to complex business
models where customization
is required to balance risk and
benefit of the experiment
2. Sandbox Express provides
fast track approval to low-risk
activities, relying on pre-defined
environment
Applicants without license are
allowed to participate in the
sandbox. Successful graduates
are required to obtain license
before exit
Two offering in Regulatory
Sandboxes:
1. Reg Lab offers specially tailored,
safe environment with reduced
regulatory requirements
2. Digital Lab offers digital
resources like data, APIs, system
etc. to validate participants
new solutions in secure &
standardized environment
UK Singapore UAE
Source: Financial regulators
78. State of the Fintech Union 2022 78
Global Learning Exhibit #6: Nearly 250 Digital
Challenger Banks Globally, 50 in APAC
Open, Jupiter, Niyo, P10 Bank,
Paytm Payments Bank
AI Bank, MYBank,
WeBank, XW Bank
Japan Net Bank, Jibun Bank,
Rakuten Bank, Sony Bank
Kakao Bank, K Bank,
Viva Republica, Toss
Ant Financial, Statrys, WeLab, ZA Bank, Mox, Pao Bank,
Livi, Neat, Insight Fintech HK, FusionBank
JazzCash, Sada Pay
BigPay
Arival, Aspire, Tonik
Timo Bank, TNEX
xxx xxx
xxx xxx
From Partnership From Non-FI1
Player
From FinTech From Independent
Archa, Douugh Bank. Hay
Bank, Joust, Up Bank
86400, DayTek Capital, In1 Bank, Judo
Bank, Parpera, Volt, Tyro, Xinja
FriMi
Vietnam
India
Pakistan
Sri Lanka
Malaysia
China
South Asia & SEA
East Asia & Oceania
Japan
South Korea
Line Bank, Next Bank
Taiwan
Hong Kong
Australia
Singapore
1. Including joint venture of players from multiple industries
Source: BCG analysis
79. 79
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Malaysia
MYBank | WeBank
XWBank | Suning Bank
Kontist | Fidor Bank |
Bitwala
Ally Bank | Chime
NBKC Bank | SoFi
Kakao bank | Toss
K bank
Nickel | Orange Bank
Hello Bank
Revolut | Monzo |
Starling Bank
Grab-SingTel | SEA Ltd
Ant Group
Digital banks : NA
Fintechs: Paytm
Payments Bank
Jupiter | Fi | Niyo
86 400 | Volt | Up
Boost-RHB Bank | GXS
Bank- Kuok Brothers
KAF Investment Bank
Global Learning Exhibit #7: Many countries have
introduced separate digital banking licenses
India
China
USA
South Korea
Singapore
Hong Kong
Australia
Germany
France
UK
Airstar Bank | Mox Bank
Ant Group | WeLab Bank
Source: Credit Suisse, BCG Analysis
| Separate Digital Licenses?
Rakuten Bank | Line Bank
Taiwan
80. State of the Fintech Union 2022 80
License Types for
digital banks
Requirements
for Digital
Licensing
Lending
Restrictions
(Additional
over Traditional
Banks)
Lending
Restrictions
Objective
Malaysia
Two types of licenses:
1. Digital Full bank (DFB)
2. Digital Wholesale
bank (DWB)
No access to
Physical branches
Deposit Cap:
Aggregate: S$50mn
Individual: S$75k
Financial growth of
enterprises and SMEs,
cost reduction, customer
convenience
Enhancing competition
and efficiency, customer
convenience
Enhancing competition
and efficiency, maintain
high levels of safety
and stability
Address gap in the unserved
& underserved segments
Promote affordable access to
financial solutions
South Korea
Subprime Lending Targets within
personal unsecured loans
Recommend to develop
proprietary credit scoring
system, leveraging ecosystem
big data
Digital Banking License
None
Singapore
Deposit Cap:
Aggregate: $2 Mn
Individual: $250K
Australia
No access to
Physical branches
Restricted Banking License Digital Banking License
DFB: Paid up capital
of SGD 1.5B
DWB: Paid-up capital
of SGD 100 Mn
Min. capital requirement of KRW
25 billion
Min. capital requirement
> AUD 3 Mn + resolution
reserve(~1 Mn) OR 20% of
adjusted assets
Initial min. paid-up
capital of RM100 Mn,
RM300 Mn after 5th yr
Unsecured lending
capped at 2x of monthly
income & simple
product offerings
for 1-2 yrs
Total asset capped at
$100Mn
Lending limited to
low risk products
Asset Capped at RMB 3 Bn
for 5 yrs
Target Customer
Segments to be unserved/
under-served population
Source: Credit Suisse, Rise of digital banking licenses-special report, BCG Analysis
Global Learning Exhibit #8: Digital banks typically
have specialized lending and liability restrictions
81. 81
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Respondents believe need for enablers in digital and
neo-banking space
% Respondents who believe
that there is a need for clarity
around interface between
incumbents and Neobanks
% Respondents who believe
that there is a need for
digital banking license
Current pain points to digital
banking with existing guidelines
Need for clarity on role of
neobank and bank partner
Need for digital
banking license
72%
Significant
regulatory
complexity
61%
Branch
footprint
regulation
44%
PSL Norms
39%
Minimum
capital
requirement
~83% ~94%
Differentiated license for digital
banks needs to come at the right
time. Even with the license, fintechs
will still have to invest a lot in
building trust
— CXO, Bank
As long as RBI can control and
manage digital banking license will
be useful to unlock value for the
industry
— CXO, Fintech
Note: N=18 as on 15th June 2022
Source: BCG Matrix SOFTU Survey’ 22
Neobanking
82. State of the Fintech Union 2022 82
Perspectives on enabling a growth path ahead
Enabling through a differentiated licensing framework: Providing enabling licensing frameworks
for digital banks, with clarity on allowances and restrictions, and driving their penetration in select
products and customer target segments that can ensure profitability will go a long way in driving
sustainability of the sector. Having a level playing field vs incumbents, to make sure there are no
‘unfair advantages’ will be important as well. Taking inspiration from other countries around product
and customer segment caps can be helpful
Innovation beyond experience: Neo-banks/digital banks are perceived to be exceptional in experience,
agile and innovative in communication. However, product innovation and value proposition in
customer’s mind still seems to be unclear, especially when replicability of some of the experience
dimensions is high. Driving customer awareness and demonstrating clear ‘value’ beyond traditional
banks that are also re-inventing themselves will be critical to scale ahead
Business model viability focus: While there is a lot of interest from players in India and Globally in the
digital / neo-banking model, profitable economic model is yet to be demonstrated by most players,
except a select few that are a part of large existing ecosystems. Low cost customer acquisition,
building sustainable pricing models and earning customer trust will be key in this process
Building trust with customers: As neo banks build scale, critical to build trust with consumers and
regulators around ability to deliver excellence in digital servicing for customers
Managing Director,
Matrix Partners
Vikram@matrixpartners.in
Vikram Vaidyanathan Millennials are adopting Neobanks as primary, secondary a/cs and resonate with the
value prop. Superior customer experience is critical to build trust among users. Banking
is a sticky and long-term business. ARPU will accrete over time as new-age players build
a deep asset-liability relationship and own mindshare of users
Neobanking
83. 83
Profitability, Innovation and Governance - Breaking the compromise
Perspectives on enabling a growth path ahead
Managing Director &
Partner, BCG
Chitkara.Neetu@bcg.com
Neetu Chitkara
With funding winter in sight, innovation and sustainable profitability are top
of mind for Neobanks. While customer adoption & engagement are important
innovation areas that can be explored, CAC optimization & ARPU expansion will
become crucial for sustainable profitability. Additionally, regulatory clarity and a
level playing field is necessary and will unlock growth in the sector
Collaboration between neobanks and traditional players
is seen as lucrative and being best of both worlds, owing
to complementary capabilities of neobanks. Cracking
partnership models is important
— CXO, Bank
Opex in banking business is high, fintechs should reduce
cost by using technology. Also, thinking from assets side
is important and it is imperative to get into lending
— Co-Founder, Fintech
CAC optimization and cost reduction by using technology
is essential. Consolidating ARPU across the distributed
products is a good way for monetization
— Co-Founder, Fintech
Neobanking
84. State of the Fintech Union 2022 84
Action Agenda
Unlocking the full potential
03/03
86. State of the Fintech Union Report 2022 86
Action Agenda: Fintech
Fintechs have demonstrated immense
innovation through technology,
algorithms and automation, however as
the industry matures, critical to have
a deep understanding of the financial
products, revenue pools and business
model intricacies so that they can
demonstrate ‘profitable unit economics’
potential early on. This will be key to
survival, and will give them a runway to
innovate and grow
Profitability from Day 2: “Fin” as
important as “Tech”
Tap domestic capital markets
Embrace compliance by design,
not as an afterthought!
Grow together
Build customer and
ecosystem trust
While profitability will give runway,
compliance will help in creating sustainable
growth models. Important to build
integrated governance practices across
the organization, reduce embedded risk
through automation, embed compliance
in product squads, create secure data
architecture giving back control to
customer, and communicate early &
proactively with regulator to shape
enabling provisions for new business model
Be known for taking hard decisions
because they are right… Stronger
internal governance practices, right
level of disclosure, being available for
key stakeholders (analysts, media,
regulators, influencers), having a strong
independent BOD, audit practices,
proactive and transparent reporting, etc.
will go a long way in proactively building
reputation and trust
Build right business case and metrics
for debt investor contribution, corporate
treasury, hedge funds, etc. Repivot to
domestic capital and equity partnerships
with large incumbents when global
forces dry up
Build a strong partnership DNA and
leverage incumbents in the innovation
journey, build in customer value focus,
incentives for collaboration and
overperformance, right internal policies,
customer protection practices and
controls to encourage incumbents to
engineer “win-win” business models
87. 87
Action Agenda - Unlocking the full potential
Approach Fintechs as partners rather
than competitors, jointly innovate in
compliance and governance areas
(e.g., cyber security) that will drive
advancement of the sector overall, while
also guiding and mentoring them on
governance models, regulatory access
and expertise
Joint innovation
and mentorship
Proactively support open
network models
Set-up to live in a
two-speed world
Contribute to a more inclusive
policy framework
Build partnership BUs to enhance and
drive penetration in business lines and
new customer segments, enhance and
simplify ops, tech and processes to
launch agile, rapid iterative business
models in partnership with Fintechs,
while maintaining governance and risk
controls
Embrace and actively contribute to data
democratization, open credit enablement
(OCEN), Account Aggregator models.
Invest in layering private innovation on
public features to drive economic and
strategic advantage
Active involvement with regulators as they
develop and advance financial sector,
to promote engagement with Fintechs,
ensure ease of collaboration, and overall
advancement of the financial inclusion and
growth agenda, leveraging their valuable
experience and perspectives on barriers to
innovation
Action Agenda: Incumbents
88. State of the Fintech Union Report 2022 88
Our regulatory framework
encourages innovation, level playing
field and sufficient risk controls,
however potential to improve clarity
and consistency across regulating
bodies (e.g., KYC norms inconsistent
across regulatory bodies, operational
execution and interpretation varies
across banks/non-banks Data
management and privacy, etc.)
Consistency Communication
Continue active dialogue through
fintech ‘sounding board’, while
keeping pace with ongoing
innovations, ambiguity and
challenges that the Fintechs are
facing, to help solve proactively
and build enablers
Calibration
While Fintechs are reaching a large scale
collectively, they are individually quite
diverse and small and are going through a
rapid pace of innovation and new launches.
A differentiated regulatory approach for
‘early-stage’ vs ‘scaled-up’ businesses for
regulatory supervisioning, introducing ‘Reg
labs’ for controlled environment operations
and testing, will be essential to promote
innovation, and avoid disruption and cost
of repivoting business models
Benchmarked to Global
As we advance our fintech industry
landscape, important to capture learnings
that enabled growth in Global markets and
ensure we are moving in tandem and not
behind the curve on innovation, policy and
infrastructure advancements
Collaboration
The future of the financial services landscape
will thrive with a material co-existence of
Fintechs and Incumbents, where the agility
and innovation of Fintechs, combined with the
capital might and strong traditional strengths
of Incumbents will bring the best of the
services to customers. Enabling collaborative
models, easing restrictions and simplifying
go to market of these will go a long way in
advancing the FS industry
Policy Enablers - Four C’s & a B
90. State of the Fintech Union 2022 90
YASHRAJ ERANDE
Managing Director & Partner, BCG
VIKRAM VAIDYANATHAN
NEETU CHITKARA
VIVEK MANDHATA ANISH PATIL
NISHA BACHANI
VIPIN V ANAND KHETAN
For further information, Contact
If you would like to discuss the themes and content of this report,
please contact:
THANU REDDY
Erande.Yashraj@bcg.com
Partner, BCG
Mandhata.Vivek@bcg.com
Principal, BCG
Bachani.Nisha@bcg.com
Associate Vice President, Matrix Partners
Anish@matrixpartners.in
Partner, BCG
V.Vipin@bcg.com
Senior Associate, BCG
Reddy.Thanu@bcg.com
Associate, Matrix Partners
Anand@matrixpartners.in
Managing Director & Partner, BCG
Chitkara.Neetu@bcg.com
Managing Director. Matrix Partners
Vikram@matrixpartners.in
91. 91
Fintech Landscape - Mission Critical for Indian Economy
This report is a joint initiative of Boston Consulting Group (BCG) and Matrix Partners India.
We thank all the participants of the SOFTU survey, 1-on-1 discussions and panel discussions for their valuable contributions
towards the enrichment of the report..
We are thankful to Jasmin Pithawala, Salonie Ganju and Sucheta Desai for marketing and communications support; and to
Jamshed Daruwalla, Saroj Singh, Vijay Kathiresan, Vivek Thakur, Soumya Garg, and Jahnvi Chauhan for their extensive design and
report production support.
We extend our sincere appreciation to Aniruddha Marathe and Mayank Jha for their contributions to enriching the report.
We also extend our appreciation to Anuj Jain, Shagun Bazaz, Stuti Murarka, and Vivek Parmeshwar for their contributions to the
report.
Yashraj Erande is a Managing Director and Partner in BCG’s Mumbai office and Head of Fintech practice in APAC Region, with expertise in
Financial Institutions, Business strategy and Data & Digital platform
Neetu Chitkara is a Managing Director and Partner in BCG’s Mumbai with expertise in Wholesale Banking, Insurance, Cybersecurity and
Digital Risk, Artificial Intelligence and Digital Products
Vivek Mandhatais a Partner in BCG’s Chennai office and has deep expertise in Payments, strategy and operations of Banks, Securities &
Insurance companies
Vipin V is a Partner in BCG’s Bengaluru office and has deep expertise in NBFC strategy, Fintech partnerships, and Digital business builds
Nisha Bachani is a Principal in BCG’s Mumbai office and has deep expertise in Bank, NBFC and Fintechs strategy design, Digital
transformation and new business builds
Thanu Reddy is a Senior Associate in BCG’s Bengaluru office and is a member of BCG’s Financial Institutions practice with experience in cost
optimization, organizational restructuring and Fintech strategy
Vikram Vaidyanathan is a Managing Director at Matrix Partners India, he leads the Fintech and Enterprise SaaS investing practices
Anish Patil is an Associate Vice President at Matrix Partners India and part of its Fintech investing practice
Anand Khetan is an Associate at Matrix Partners India and part of its Fintech investing practice
Acknowledgements
About the Authors