Zenwork raises ₹1,200 crore from Spectrum Equity

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Zenwork, a digital tax compliance and regulatory reporting platform, has raised ₹1,200 crore from Spectrum Equity, a US-based growth equity fund focused on internet-enabled software and information services companies.

“We will use the proceeds to accelerate product innovation, expand to newer markets and increase the headcount,” Sanjeev Singh, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Zenwork, has said.

The company, which has about 80 employees now, would more than double the workforce to 200 people by the end of 2022.

Announcing the raising of funds at a press conference here on Tuesday, he said the company would develop products to meet the growing business demand for modern, automated technology solutions to address regulatory compliance.

“We raised ₹1,200 crore Spectrum Equity, which has experience in scaling regulatory tech and fintech software and data businesses. Their support will help us navigate this next growth chapter,” he said.

“This strategic alliance gives an opportunity for us to invest heavily in our Tax1099 and ‘Compliancely’ platforms as we look to be the digital tax compliance partner of choice to all businesses,” he said.

The firm presently generates the bulk of its business from the US.

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PNB Housing Finance plans fund raising up to ₹2,000 crore via NCDs

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PNB Housing Finance Limited (PNBHFL) proposes to go in for a fund raise of up to ₹2,000 crore through non convertible debentures (NCD) route. This proposal will be taken up at the upcoming board meeting of PNBHFL on November 2, sources said.

This plan to go in for fund raising via NCD route — in tranches — on private placement basis comes on the heels of the PNBHFL Board deciding not to proceed with the ₹4,000 crore preferential allotment deal with Carlyle Group and other marquee investors.

Preferential allotment deal falls through

It may be recalled that the PNBHFL-Carlyle Group deal had hit a roadblock after a proxy advisory firm had red flagged the preferential allotment on the pricing front, contending that it was not in the interest of the promoter (PNB) as well as the minority shareholders of PNBHFL.

Market regulator SEBI had soon after this intervened and asked PNBHFL not to go ahead with the planned preferential issue until the valuation of the shares is done by an independent registered valuer.

Also see: PNB Housing locked in lower circuit after it shelves stake sale plan

PNBHFL had fixed the preferential allotment price at ₹390 per share, lower than the stock price prevailing at that time. The company had preferred an appeal before the securities appellate tribunal (SAT) on the SEBI letter.

A two-member bench of the SAT on August 9 gave a split verdict and directed that its interim order of June 21 will continue till further orders. SAT also restrained PNB Housing Finance from disclosing the voting results (of shareholders) on the fund raise plan.

Post the SAT’s split verdict, SEBI had filed an appeal at the Supreme Court against this verdict.

SC dismisses SEBI appeal

Meanwhile, the Supreme Court on Wednesday dismissed the SEBI appeal against the SAT’s order in the PNBHFL’s ₹4,000 crore capital raising deal with Carlyle Group and other investors, stating that the appeal has become infructuous due to subsequent developments.

A bench headed by Justice L Nageswara Rao was informed by the counsel for PNBHFL that the housing finance company had decided not to proceed with the preferential allotment of shares and warrants to Carlyle Group and that an application has also been moved before SAT for withdrawal of its appeal against a SEBI directive.

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Amazon pumps in ₹450 crore into payment unit in India

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Amazon Pay India Private Limited, the online payment business of e-commerce giant Amazon, has raised ₹450 crore from Amazon Corporate Holdings Private Limited, Singapore, and Amazon.com Inc Limited, Mauritius.

According to documents submitted by the payments company to the Ministry of Corporate Affairs, the bulk of the funding have come from Amazon Corporate Holdings Private Limited, Singapore. The documents reviewed by BusinessLine was sourced from Tofler.

For the said equity, the two companies have purchased 45 crore shares at a nominal amount of ₹ 10 each.

In May, BusinessLine had reported that Amazon Pay received fresh funding of ₹225 crore.

Earlier this month, Amazon Pay, which is competing against search-engine giant Google’s payments arm Google Pay said that it had managed to acquire five crore customers in India who are using its UPI platform.

Mahendra Nerurkar, CEO and VP Amazon Pay, claimed that customers are using the Amazon app to pay at 2 crore local shops by scanning any UPI QR code.

“In the last one year, over 75 per cent of our customers using Amazon UPI are from tier-2 and -3 cities, showing the growing reach of UPI,” the company claimed.

Amazon Pay allows its customers to recharge their phone, DTH, send money to contacts, pay salaries to household help, pay for shopping on Amazon.in. It has even extended the services for customers who want to open their fixed deposits.

Also read: Majority of consumers looking to buy 5G compatible smartphones: Amazon survey

Amazon Inc has been pumping money into its Indian entity. Amazon India had raised ₹ 915 crore from its holding company, Amazon Corporate Holdings Private Limited and Amazon.com.incs Limited Company.

Since 2013, Amazon Inc. has committed to invest around $6.5 billion in its Indian operations. In the recent past, Amazon has announced the expansion of its operations network in India. It plans to set up 10 new fulfilment centres, 5 new sortation centres, nearly 200 delivery stations, and over 1 lakh seasonal jobs to help meet customer demand.

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Vauld raises $25 million Series A led by Valar Ventures

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Cryptocurrency platform Vauld has raised $25 million Series A led by Valar Ventures, a VC firm founded by Peter Thiel, Andrew McCormack, and James Fitzgerald. Other investors like Pantera Capital, Coinbase Ventures, CMT Digital, Gumi Cryptos, Robert Leshner, and Cadenza Capital also participated in the round.

The funding will be used to support its international growth and licensing as well as expand its retail crypto banking and investing platform. Vauld will also use this capital to hire at least a hundred new team members.

Vauld has built a platform for people to globally access and grow capital through lending and trading cryptocurrencies. In partnership with its respective exchange and custody partners, Binance and BitGo, Vauld claims to have users in over 160 countries. The company has raised a total of $27 million in funding till date.

“We’ve seen great momentum with Vauld and we attribute it to both our technology as well as our customer support. This capital will help propel Vauld to the next level of growth,” said Darshan Bathija, Vauld co-founder and CEO.

While Vauld is headquartered in Singapore, the majority of its team is based in India. The company claims to have seen more than 200x growth in its global user base over the last year. Vauld reported 124.4 per cent quarter-over-quarter growth in AUM between the first quarter of the fiscal year 2021 to the second quarter of the fiscal year 2021.

“Valar’s focus is on transformative financial services companies. What cemented the deal is Vauld’s global positioning and ambitions and the vision Darshan and his team have. We look forward to Vauld benefiting from our understanding of how to build a global business across Europe, Asia, and North America,” said Andrew McCormack of Valar Ventures.

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IndusInd Bank to raise ₹30,000 cr

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Private sector lender IndusInd Bank plans to raise up to ₹30,000 crore through debt and equity.

“Raising funds through debt securities or equity instruments or convertible debt securities in any permitted mode…for an aggregate amount not exceeding ₹30,000 crore…,” it said in a stock exchange filing on Saturday.

The permitted modes of fundraising include through Qualified Institutions Placement, American Depository Receipts, Global Depository Receipts programme, or combinations on a private placement basis thereof as may be decided by the board.

The bank will be raising ₹30,000 crore or its equivalent amount in such foreign currencies as may be necessary, subject to approval of the shareholders of the bank and receipt of other governmental / regulatory / statutory approvals, as per the filing.

The proposal was cleared by the bank’s board in its meeting on July 24. It will also seek approval from shareholders for this.

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Novo raises $40.7 million in the largest Series A funding for neobanks

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Novo, a preferred business banking partner for SMEs, start-ups and freelancers, has raised $40.7 million (₹302 crore) in a Series A round of funding, making it the highest Series A funding for neobanks.

The independent tech company that enables small businesses to open accounts in minutes without a minimum balance requirement has raised the capital from Valar Ventures along with Crosslink Capital, Rainfall Ventures, Red Sea Ventures and BoxGroup.

Founded in 2016 by Tyler McIntyre and Michael Rangel, Novo has a client base of over one lakh SME customers. A neobank is a bank that is 100 per cent digital and does not operate physical branches.

Commenting on the funding, Michael Rangel, Co-Founder & CEO, Novo, said in a statement, “Novo has witnessed deeper investor interest in recent times, especially owing to the pandemic enhancing the role of virtual support ecosystem. India, being one of the fastest growing economies, is a vital market for us. Novo is focussed on creating jobs in India in support operations and building advanced technology, enabled by our funding partners. Presently, Novo has a strength of over 50 employees in India and plans to triple it to 150 by this financial year (FY22).”

Ajar Upadhyay, Director of Operations – India, Novo, said, “At Novo, we have support operations in India across Gurgaon, Ahmedabad and Bengaluru. The funding will be utilised to expand operations, banking, product and, most importantly, engineering verticals and enhance hiring across key and support roles in India.”

Prior to this Series A round, Novo had raised $6.7 million in its seed Round from Crosslink Capital, Red Sea Ventures, Hack VC, RRE, Rainfall, and the Stanford Law School Venture Fund.

Novo brings banking services to the largely underserved communities of freelancers, start-up founders, and small business owners.

At no hidden charges, Novo allows its clients to open business checking accounts in an enviable span of minutes and assures them of safe and secure transactions. The funding will enhance Novo’s platforms and services to provide a compelling banking experience to its clients.

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Bank of Maharashtra plans to raise up to Rs 2,000 crore through QIP, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: State-run Bank of Maharashtra is looking to raise up to Rs 2,000 crore through qualified institutional placement (QIP) route before July-end, its Managing Director and CEO A S Rajeev said. In April this year, the Pune-based lender had received board approval to raise Rs 5,000 crore by way of QIP/rights issue/ preferential issue or by issuing Basel III bonds.

“We are planning to raise around Rs 2,000 crore equity through QIP immediately. The process has already started and we will raise it before July-end,” Rajeev told in an interaction.

The base size of the issue is Rs 1,000 crore and it has a greenshoe option of another Rs 1,000 crore, he said.

Following this equity raise, the government’s holding in the bank will reduce to below 85 per cent from 94 per cent currently, and the capital adequacy ratio will improve to 17-18 per cent from around 14.49 per cent as of March 31, 2021, Rajeev said.

This fund will be deployed for expansion of the loan book, which the bank is looking to grow by 16-18 per cent to around Rs 1.25 lakh crore in this fiscal from Rs 1.08 lakh crore as of March 31, 2021, he said.

Of the total loan book of the bank at present, the share of corporate loans is 37 per cent and of retail, agriculture and MSME (RAM) segment is 63 per cent, he said adding, “We want the ratio of RAM to the corporate segment to be 65:35 during the current fiscal.”

The bank is envisaging a 20-25 per cent growth in the retail, agriculture and MSME (RAM) segment this year.

The lender’s corporate loan size is close to Rs 40,000 crore and it is targeting to grow it by another Rs 10,000 crore in this financial year. It has a sanction pipeline of Rs 25,000 crore in the corporate and MSME segments for the current fiscal, he said.

“We have churned our portfolio with improvement in the share of lending to better-rated corporates. This will minimise the delinquencies and attract lower capital requirement,” Rajeev added.

In the corporate segment, the bank will continue lending to better-rated corporates, including sunrise sectors such as infrastructure, pharmaceuticals and FMCG, he said.

Under the government’s Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS), the bank’s total disbursement, so far, is around Rs 2,100 crore, and it plans to lend another Rs 500 crore this year.

Rajeev said the bank’s exposure to the healthcare sector is Rs 2,000-2,400 crore, which is 2 per cent of the total advances portfolio. In April and May, it had already disbursed over Rs 225 crore to the sector.

“We intend to double our portfolio under the healthcare sector and make it 4 per cent of our total advances portfolio during the current fiscal. We have also come out with two to three products in tune with the RBI policy,” he said.

Last month, the RBI had announced an on-tap term liquidity facility of Rs 50,000 crore under which banks can provide fresh lending support to a wide range of entities from the healthcare segment.

The government has also announced ECLGS 4.0, under which a 100 per cent guarantee cover to loans up to Rs 2 crore will be provided to hospitals, nursing homes, clinics, medical colleges for setting up on-site oxygen generation plants.

Rajeev further said since the exit from the RBI’s prompt corrective action (PCA) framework in January 2019, the lender has taken several steps to strengthen its balance sheet, which has resulted in a significant improvement in all its financial parameters.

“We have been successful in registering profits quarter on quarter since March 2019. Our net profit rose 41.39 per cent to Rs 550 crore during FY21 from Rs 389 crore in FY20. Operating profit also rose 39 per cent to Rs 3,958 crore in FY21 from Rs 2,847 crore last year,” he said.

The bank’s CASA (Current Account and Savings Account) improved to 54 per cent as of March 31, 2021, which according to Rajeev is one of the best in the banking industry.

The bank has also managed to bring its gross non-performing assets to 7.23 per cent as of March 31, 2021, from 18.64 per cent in September 2018, when it was under PCA. Net NPAs stood at 2.48 per cent as of March 31, 2021.

At present, market capitalisation of the bank stands at Rs 17,500 crore against Rs 3,948 crore as of March 2019, he said.

In FY22, the bank is targeting to bring down gross NPA to below 6 per cent and net NPA to below 2 per cent. Net interest margins (NIM) will remain above 3 per cent in this fiscal, he said.

It has set a recovery and upgradation target of Rs 2,500-2,600 crore during the current year. The lender is also expecting Rs 500 crore recovery from written-off accounts in this fiscal, Rajeev said.

The lender is looking at opening 200 banking outlets with a hub and spoke model in this fiscal, he added.



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Asirvad Microfinance raises $15 million from WorldBusiness Capital

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Asirvad Microfinance Ltd has mobilised $15 million (₹111.15 crore), 7-year commercial loan from US-based WorldBusiness Capital (WBC), Inc

“This transaction with an international institution coming at this challenging juncture certainly gives a boost to the microfinance sector and reiterates the resilience Asirvad has always shown,” Raja Vaidyanathan, MD of Asirvad Microfinance Ltd, said in a statement.

WBC’s loan is supported by the United States International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), the US Government’s developing finance institution. DFC partners with the private sector to finance solutions to the most critical challenges facing the developing world today.

Also read: Northern Arc Capital facilitates external funding for Asirvad Microfinance

Proceeds from the loan availed under India’s ECB norms will enable Asirvad to expand its business of providing small loans to low-income women business owners in rural areas to start and expand their income-generating business.

“With this funding, we look forward to helping rural women with economic opportunities to transform the quality of their lives,” said Yogesh Udhoji, CFO, Asirvad Microfinance Ltd.

The WBC loan will be Asirvad’s third long-term facility denominated in foreign currency from an international financial institution.

“Asirvad plays a vital role in providing this underbanked segment of the market with access to the financing they need to establish and grow their businesses. The financial institution has constructed a viable business model to meet the needs of woman-owned enterprises operating in rural areas,” said Rob Monyak, WBC’s Executive Vice-President and Chief Lending Officer for Eurasia/Africa Lending.

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Unfazed by Covid-19, fund raising for public issues jumped by 115% in FY21

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Pandemic does not seem to have affected fund mobilisation through capital market as Financial Year 2020-21 (FY 21) saw resources raising through public issue more than doubled. Mutual fund and corporate bond market also registered good growth; a Finance Ministry statement released on Wednesday.

“Despite the uncertainty prevailing in FY 2020-21 owing to Covid-19 pandemic, fund raising in FY 2020-21 was better than that in FY 2019-20 for both Public Issues and Rights Issues,” the statement said.

According to data compiled by the Ministry, fund raising through public issue jumped 115 per cent during FY 21 while growth was 15 per cent for rights issues. Similarly, number of unique investors across different kind of mutual fund grew by 10 per cent, while number of issues in Corporate Bond Market increased by 10 per cent in FY 2020-21.

Mutual funds

Assets under management (AUM) of Mutual Fund Industry increased by 41 per cent to ₹31.43-lakh crore as on March 31 of FY 21 from ₹22.26-lakh crore as on March 31, FY 20. During this period, the number of unique investors across Mutual Fund schemes also increased by 10 per cent to 2.28 crore from 2.08

With increasing expansion of the MF industry in smaller cities, the AUM from below top 30 cities increased by 54 per cent to over ₹5.35 lakh crore from ₹3.48 lakh crore. Investors in Mutual Fund industry may choose to invest in any of the 1,735 mutual fund schemes across categories as per their investment objective as on March 31, 2021.

Corporate bond market

Similarly, around 2003 issues of Corporate Bonds for an amount of over ₹7.82-lakh crore happened in FY 21, surpassing the amount raised (around ₹6.90-lakh crore). While the number of issues increased by 10 per cent during FY 21, the amount raised increased by 13.5 per cent as compared to the previous financial year.

Resource Mobilisation through Public and Rights Issues

(Amount is in Rs. Crore)

Particulars

2019-20

2020-21

 

No.

Amount

No.

Amount

1)Public Issues,

62

21,382.35

56

46,029.71

of which

 

 

 

 

Initial Public Offer (IPO)

60

21,345.11

55

31,029.71

Follow-on Public Offer (FPO)

2

37.24

1

15,000.00

2)Rights Issues

17

55,669.79

21

64,058.61

Total (1+2)

79

77,052.14

77

1,10,088.32

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Chennai-based NBFC Five Star Business Finance Limited raises ₹1700 crore

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Five Star Business Finance Ltd, a Chennai-headquartered non-banking finance company, has raised ₹1,700 crore ($234 million) from a consortium of global and Indian investment firms. The investment values the company at ₹10,300 crore ($1.4 billion).

The round included investment by existing investors in the company led by Sequoia Capital India, with participation from Norwest Venture Partners, and new investors led by KKR with participation from TVS Capital.

Five Star plans to use the capital to expand its lending business, the company said in a statement.

“In our mission of ‘Funding the unfunded,’ we have created a niche for ourselves empowering small businesses and the self-employed across corners of India by providing them with reliable and responsible funding alternatives. We aim to achieve this social goal through grass-root efforts without compromising on the pillars of asset quality and profitability that are needed to build a sustainable institution of scale,” D Lakshmipathy, Five-Star Business Finance Chairman and Managing Director D Lakshmipathy said.

Mix of investments

The investment will be made through a combination of primary infusion and secondary shares sales by existing investor Morgan Stanley Private Equity. The company’s other existing investors – Martix Partners and TPG Capital – will continue to stay invested.

“The company is a true pioneer in the market having supported the growth MSMEs for decades, playing an important role in India’s economy. Five Star is a terrific example of the type of solutions-oriented business that KKR looks to support through its Global Impact strategy and in India, and we look forward to working with Lakshmipathy and his team to build on Five Star’s long-term success,” Gaurav Trehan, Partner at KKR, said.

KKR’s investment, which is a part of its global impact strategy, marks KKR Global Impact Fund’s second investment in India and fifth in Asia Pacific.

Five Star looks to bridge the funding gap in the industry, which has about 60 million MSMEs, employs about 125 million people and accounts for more than 30 per cent of India’s GDP.

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