Gold loan demand is expected to spike after lockdown: Indel Money CEO

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Pledging of household gold is expected to go up across states with the gradual easing of lockdown restrictions, according to Umesh Mohanan, Executive Director and CEO, Indel Money, a Mumbai-based NBFC.

He says that customers are strapped for cash to honour committed outflows. The virus has been deadly this time with rising infection rate, caseloads and number of deaths, forcing people to borrow more. All these have added to the financial woes of the common people, he adds. Edited excerpts of an interview:

What is the outlook on gold loan for the current fiscal? And what will drive the growth of gold loans?

The outlook for gold loan demand is positive and the demand will be fuelled by healthcare requirements, pandemic-driven uncertainty, the limitations of the banking sector to serve gold loan demand at the earlier pace due to decreased gold prices and end of 90 per cent LTV lending on last March 2021, apart from increased credit crunch due to the prevailing policies.

Our gold loan book has registered around 40 per cent growth in FY20-21. We expect around 50 per cent plus growth in FY21-22, thanks to our expanded geographical presence.

Has there been growth in the gold loan business in April and May of FY22 compared to the same period last year?

The branches in locations with reduced restrictions on movements have witnessed larger pent-up demand in comparison to last year. The industry has been growing at over 25 per cent. Gold loan demand is expected to spike after the lockdown and the post-lockdown demand growth is expected to surpass growth registered during the post lockdown period last year.

Also read: Borrowers to get option to repay a part of the Gold (Metal) Loan in physical gold

Recently, gold loan NBFCs auctioned record tonnage of pledged gold through auctions. Does this point to the growing credit risks for firms offering short-term loans?

Truly, at this point when cash flow is constrained for the common consumer, the facility to keep their gold live by remitting interest and continuing at their original LTV would be a better option than the short-term loans. The consumers have to settle interest along with principal within a short period of time, and correspondingly re-pledge at relatively lower LTV. This will result in huge cash outflow for the customer, in comparison with the longer-tenure schemes.

What are your plans for the company?

We are planning to explore various options such as capital injection by the group holding company, raising funds through public NCDs and PE/VC placement for our expansion. We have recently opened 25 branches across Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. We also have plans to enter Maharashtra and Gujarat with our conventional brick-and-mortar format by Q4 FY21-22. We are also planning to set up a support hub in all major cities to spread our doorstep gold loan facility which functions through the network of virtual branches.

We are planning to launch pre-paid cards. Our disbursals are fully automated because of our tie-ups with banks through our app. Existing customers can use our portal or mobile app to extend the exposure of the gold pledged with us on the basis of the prevailing LTV.

We will set up an automated process in which customers can manage the credit line according to their preferences. We are also planning to expand our online gold loan facility to take the branches to the homes of customers as the upper segments of MSMEs are not comfortable visit gold loan company branches during the gold appraisal process.

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Even gold-obsessed Indians are now pouring billions into crypto

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The cryptocurrency aficionados’ mantra that Bitcoin is equivalent to digital gold is winning converts among the world’s biggest holders of the precious metal.

In India, where households own more than 25,000 tonnes of gold, investments in crypto grew from about $200 million to nearly $40 billion in the past year, according to Chainalysis. That is despite outright hostility toward the asset class from the central bank and a proposed trading ban.

Richi Sood, a 32-year-old entrepreneur is one of those who swerved from gold to crypto. Since December, she’s put in just over 1 million rupees ($13,400) – some of it borrowed from her father – into Bitcoin, Dogecoin and Ether.

And she’s been fortunate with her timing. She cashed out part of her position when Bitcoin smashed through $50,000 in February and bought back in after the recent tumble, allowing her to fund the overseas expansion of her education startup Study Mate India.

Also read: Cryptocurrency: Investors can wait till clarity emerges

“I’d rather put my money in crypto than gold,” Sood said. “Crypto is more transparent than gold or property and returns are more in a short period of time.”

She’s part of a growing number of Indians — now totalling more than 15 million — buying and selling digital coins. That is catching up with the 23 million traders of these assets in the U.S. and compares with just 2.3 million in the U.K.

The growth in India is coming from the 18-35 year old cohort, says the co-founder of India’s first cryptocurrency exchange. Latest World Gold Council data indicated Indian adults under age 34 have less appetite for gold than older consumers.

“They find it far easier to invest in crypto than gold because the process is very simple,” said Sandeep Goenka, who co-founded ZebPay and spent years representing the industry in discussions with the government on regulation. “You go online, you can buy crypto, you don’t have to verify it, unlike gold.”

Regulatory issues

One of the biggest barriers preventing wider adoption is the regulatory uncertainty. Last year, the Supreme Court quashed a 2018 rule banning crypto trading by banking entities, resulting in a trading surge.

However, authorities show no signs of embracing cryptocurrencies. The nation’s central bank says it has “major concerns” about the asset class and six months ago, the Indian government proposed a ban on trading in digital coins – though it has been silent on the topic since.

“I am flying blind,” said Sood. “I have a risk-taking appetite, so I’m willing to take a risk of a ban.”

The official hostility though means many bigger individual investors are reluctant to speak openly about their holdings. One banker Bloomberg spoke to who invested more than $1 million into crypto assets said with no clear income tax rules at present, he was concerned about the possibility of retrospective tax raids if he was publicly known to be a big-ticket crypto investor.

He’s already got contingency plans in place to move his trading to an offshore Singapore bank account if a ban was to be introduced.

Increasing investment

To be sure, the value of Indian digital asset holdings remain a sliver of its gold market. Still, the growth is clear, especially in trading — the four biggest crypto exchanges saw daily trading jump to $102 million from $10.6 million a year ago, according to CoinGecko. The country’s $40 billion market significantly trails China’s $161 billion, according to Chainalysis.

For now, the increasing adoption is another sign of Indians’ willingness to take risk within a consumer finance sector that’s plagued with examples of regulatory short falls.

“I think over time everyone is going to adopt it in every country,“ said Keneth Alvares, 22, an independent digital marketer who has invested more than $1,300 in crypto so far. “Right now the whole thing is scary with regulation but it doesn’t worry me because I’m not planning to remove anything for now.”

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Jewellers can now repay part of gold loan in physical gold, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The RBI on Wednesday asked banks to provide an option to jewellery exporters and domestic manufacturers of gold jewellery to repay a part of Gold (Metal) Loans (GML) in physical gold. As per the extant instructions, banks authorised to import gold and designated banks participating in Gold Monetisation Scheme, 2015 (GMS) can extend GML to jewellery exporters or domestic manufacturers of gold jewellery.

GML is repaid in Indian rupees, equivalent to the value of the yellow metal borrowed.

Now, the Reserve Bank has reviewed the norms.

As per an RBI circular, “Banks shall provide an option to the borrower to repay a part of the GML in physical gold in lots of one kg or more.” subject to certain conditions.

One of the conditions is that the GML has been extended out of locally sourced or GMS-linked gold.

Also, the repayment had to be made using locally sourced IGDS (India Good Delivery Standard)/ LGDS (LBMA’s Good Delivery Standards) gold; and the yellow metal has to be delivered on behalf of the borrower to the bank directly by the refiner or a central agency without the borrower’s involvement.

Another condition is that the loan agreement should contain details of the option to be exercised by the borrower, acceptable standards and manner of delivery of gold for repayment.

RBI also asked banks to suitably incorporate all aspects into the board-approved policy governing GML along with concomitant risk management measures.

“Besides, the banks shall continue to monitor the end-use of funds lent under GML.” RBI added.

In 2015, the government had launched the Gold Monetisation Scheme to mobilise the yellow metal held by households and institutions in the country.



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Investment ideas to get the better of inflation

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With inflation in the doldrums between 2014 and 2020, Indian investors did not have to worry about whether they were investing in asset classes that fetched them a good real return (return over and above inflation).

But this is set to change, with sticky global inflation re-emerging, driven by a range of commodities from copper to cooking oil to steel.

Though RBI/MPC have been hoping that the spike in India’s CPI (Consumer Price Index) will be fleeting, it has proved stubborn averaging 6 per cent in the last twelve months.

So, if a resurgent global economy does trigger a high inflation phase, which assets should you own more of, to earn inflation-beating returns? Instead of relying on theory, we decided to rely on past data to find answers.

India encountered a long stretch of high CPI inflation averaging 10.4 per cent in the five year period from January 1 2009 to January 1 2014 and we ran returns on different assets to find the following.

Bonds, FDs?

When inflation is on the rise, central banks usually raise policy rates to quell it. This makes it a bad time to own bonds, as rising rates lead to declining bond prices.

With the Indian economy in shambles post-Covid, RBI/MPC may be late in hiking their rates in response to inflation today.

But even if policy rates do not rise in a hurry, market interest rates (such as the 10-year g-sec yield) can spike if inflation is perceived to be sticky.

Had you held Indian government securities (proxied by the CCIL All Sovereign Bond Index) during the period from 2009 to 2014, you would have earned just a 3.2 per cent CAGR, a significant negative real return.

If you believe that high inflation is here to stay, it would be best to stay off long-term g-secs and long-dated corporate bonds.

Bank FD rates are usually a little higher than sovereign bond rates, but not enough to beat inflation.

This time around, with policy actions likely to be delayed, bank FD rates may not keep up with inflation.

RBI data on deposit rates of banks for 1 year periods, shows that in the 2009 to 2014 period, bank FDs returned a healthy 8.6 per cent, but this still lagged CPI inflation of 10.4 per cent. Today bank FD rates are scraping 5-6 per cent. They are unlikely to deliver real returns, should inflation spike.

Equities

Equities are said to be the best asset class for inflation-beating returns, based on the textbook premise that in the long run, stocks must deliver a return premium over bonds to compensate for higher risk.

While this may be true over 10-year plus holding periods, over shorter times, stock performance need not keep up with inflation rates.

Stock prices track earnings growth. Rising prices of industrial inputs such as petrochemicals, chemicals and industrial metals can hurt the profitability of companies using these inputs unless they are able to pass them on in full to their customers.

Given the weak demand outlook after the Covid second wave, Indian companies in a majority of commodity-using sectors are likely to see some profit impact from rising input costs. Commodity-mining or processing companies however, could enjoy windfall profits.

In a high-inflation scenario, selective bets on stocks of commodity processors may pay off better than those of commodity users.

In a recent India Strategy report, Motilal Oswal found that while 11 of the Nifty companies benefit from rising commodity prices, 13 are adversely impacted and the rest tend to be neutral.

A high inflation scenario may call for reducing bets on auto, FMCG, consumer durable companies while raising them on steel, cement and upstream oil plays.

Small and mid-sized companies may enjoy lower pricing power and may be more hurt by input inflation than industry leaders.

However, commodity companies by virtue of sheer size tend to dominate Nifty earnings, by contributing 36 per cent of the profit pool.

In the inflationary period from 2009 to 2014, the Nifty50 Total Returns Index and Nifty500 Total Returns Index managed a 17 per cent CAGR, easily beating the 10.4 per cent inflation rate.

But equity performance then was underpinned by a low starting point. In 2009, after a big bear market, Indian stocks traded at low valuations (Nifty50 PE was 13.3 in January 2009). Today, market valuations are at record levels of 29 times (Nifty50) after a multi-year bull market.

This makes high real returns from equities as a class less certain. A selective approach of betting on commodity-makers or companies with pricing power, may work better.

One of the viable routes to acquire such exposure is to invest in thematic commodity equity funds.

Commodity funds with an international flavour, which offer dual exposure to global commodity giants and the US dollar, have in the past proved good bets in inflationary times.

In the 2009-2014 period, Aditya Birla Sun Life Global Commodity Equities Fund- Agri Plan managed a 14.4 per cent CAGR.

Gold

Gold is supposed to be a classic inflation hedge. But gold for Indian investors hasn’t always kept pace with inflation on a year-to-year basis. Broadly though, inflationary trends globally do spark investor interest in gold. For Indian investors, periods of global crisis or commodity price surges are usually accompanied by Rupee depreciation.

With these twin tailwinds, high inflation years from 2009 to 2014 did prove bumper years for Indian gold investors. Gold ETFs delivered a 13.2 per cent CAGR.

Raising gold allocations is therefore a good idea if you believe in the return of inflation.

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Gold is good but Bitcoin’s better for $7.5 billion hedge fund, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Gold will surge to fresh highs in the next year, but investors seeking currency alternatives as global debt balloons should look to Bitcoin, according to a $7.5 billion hedge fund.

Both are likely to rally even as the Federal Reserve moves to taper asset purchases, said Troy Gayeski, co-chief investment officer and senior portfolio manager at SkyBridge Capital. The two are frequently compared by investors, with former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers saying cryptocurrencies could stay a feature of global markets as something akin to digital gold.

“We’re going to stick to Bitcoin and crypto because we just think there’s more upside,” Gayeski said in a telephone interview last week. While there’s more volatility, “you’re going to capture a little bit more juice than you will in gold from that same phenomenon,” he added

Investors are tracking commentary by the U.S. central bank as inflation ticks higher and policy makers move closer to paring the huge asset purchases that rescued the economy from the turmoil caused by the pandemic. The monetary support has driven the Fed’s balance sheet to a record, while muscular fiscal spending has boosted government debt. Both may pose an eventual risk to the dollar’s value, potentially burnishing the appeal of alternatives.

“All fiat-currency alternatives — which have all gone through fairly recent substantial corrections — are in a much better place now to handle that eventual taper and gradual slowing of money-supply growth, than they were as they were making higher-highs after higher-highs,” Gayeski said.

Both Bitcoin and gold have seen substantial swings this year, which unfolded amid a debate about whether the cryptocurrency was drawing demand away from bullion. The digital token soared to a record near $65,000 in April, before plunging. It was last around $36,000. Gold, meanwhile, came close to sinking into a bear market in March, but reversed course to erase year-to-date losses.

Leading Wall Street banks are divided on the relative merits of the pair — Citigroup Inc. has said gold is “losing luster” to cryptocurrencies, while Goldman Sachs Group Inc. made the case that the two assets can coexist. Tesla Inc. boss Elon Musk, whose tweets have roiled Bitcoin prices this year, said in May he supports cryptocurrencies over fiat, or paper, currencies.

Bullion, which hit a record above $2,075 an ounce last year, has now established a floor, according to Gayeski. A lot of the taper talk concerns have been pulled out of the market, and even when it’s announced, the Fed is not going to start to reducing the pace of its purchases until 2022, he said.

“Going forward, the probability of gold continuing an uptrend is fairly high, making new highs over the next year,” he said.

Even as signs of recovery accumulate, the Fed is still buying $120 billion of Treasury and mortgage-backed securities a month, and its balance sheet has surged toward $8 trillion, about a third of gross domestic product. Talk on tapering that support — which carries the potential to boost Treasury yields and the dollar, tarnishing gold’s appeal — is moving closer.

SkyBridge, a fund-of-funds manager, has a small exposure to a gold miner that’s leveraged to a continued gold price rally. Its primary exposures are to U.S. cash-flow-generative strategies, backed by tangible assets, distressed corporate credit and convertible-bond arbitrage among others. The company’s Bitcoin fund is up 51.2% since its inception last December through to June 1.

SkyBridge founder Anthony Scaramucci has teamed up with First Trust Advisors on an exchange-traded fund that plans to buy and sell Bitcoin, and Gayeski expects the Securities and Exchange Commission to approve the product by the fourth quarter of 2021 or the first quarter of next year.

“The only reason we exist professionally is to find interesting ways to generate attractive non-correlated returns that also have an attractive risk-reward profile,” said Gayeski. “The mix of strategies in our broader portfolio is amplified by having a small-but-meaningful position in alternatives to fiat currencies like Bitcoin.”



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Crypto versus gold debate rages on Wall Street as flows reverse, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Gold is back with a vengeance this month just as the crypto rally falls apart, refueling the Wall Street debate over the link between the two putative hedging assets.

Bullion funds have seen the biggest two weeks of inflows since October and prices are edging closer to $1,900 an ounce. In contrast, Bitcoin has plunged by almost 40% from a $63,000 peak and funds are recording outflows.

Yes, the weaker dollar and falling inflation-adjusted yields are big reasons for the gold revival. Elon Musk-spurred volatility, meanwhile, has snuffed out some of the speculative euphoria in Bitcoin, while undermining its ambition to attract the institutional crowd.

Yet, all this fascinates a market cohort that point out the parallels between digital gold and the real deal. They’re both viewed as inflation hedges, commodities in scarce supply and capture the cultural divide between young, tech-obsessed traders and boomer traditionalists.

Meanwhile, the likes of JPMorgan & Chase & Co. and ByteTree Asset Management say gold’s recent ascent appears to have come at least partly expense of Bitcoin as investors rotate between the two.

“There is still so much confusion between Bitcoin and gold,” wrote Charlie Morris, founder of ByteTree in a note. “They coexist, and they both thrive in an inflationary environment.”

In a report on shifting gold and Bitcoin trends, Morris suggested that fund flows are having an unusually large impact in boosting the gold price, and vice versa Bitcoin’s outgoing flows are depressing prices.

Past may be prologue: Earlier this year, Bitcoin funds pulled in institutional cash as money managers extolled a case for digital currencies to creep into gold’s spot in a portfolio. With the economic growth in full swing, more than $20 billion then left bullion-backed ETFs in the six months to April.

For some strategists, the bullion market is a starting place to divine their price forecast for Bitcoin. In a world where investors allocate gold and Bitcoin evenly to their portfolios and the two assets converge in volatility, it would imply a valuation of Bitcoin at $140,000, JPMorgan has previously estimated.

“Needless to say such convergence or equalization of volatilities or allocations is unlikely in the near future,” strategists led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou wrote.

Since the Covid-19 vaccine breakthrough triggered an economic rebound in November, exchange-traded funds tracking gold sold almost 12 million troy ounces through to the start of May, worth about $22.5 billion at today’s price.

Investors pulled almost $14 billion from the SPDR Gold Shares ETF (ticker GLD) in the period, helping cut total assets in the world’s largest gold ETF by 29%. Some $1.6 billion has flowed back into the fund to put May on course for the best month since July.

In day-to-day action, the direct link between gold and Bitcoin is hard to pin down, suggesting the connection is more about market psychology than real-money flows. The threat of price pressures and weakening dollar are good reasons for the metal’s current rally.

And while predictions for Bitcoin prices have been chastened by the selloff, the enthusiasm hasn’t gone away. Bloomberg Intelligence strategist Mike McGlone, who has a price target of $100,000 for Bitcoin, says there’s still a chance crypto can become a digital reserve asset and that makes it worth the risk.

“Gold may be losing its significance, so it may be simply prudent to diversify,” wrote McGlone. “The human nature of acknowledging a new asset class is what we see as a primary Bitcoin support.



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BlackRock says it is ‘studying’ crypto but cites volatility, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW YORK: BlackRock Chief Executive Larry Fink said on Wednesday it is studying cryptocurrencies like bitcoin to determine whether the asset class could offer countercyclical benefits.

In response to a shareholder asking whether the company would invest in bitcoin, Fink told its annual meeting: “The firm has monitored the evolution of crypto assets. We are studying what it means, the infrastructure, the regulatory landscape.”

BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager running roughly $9 trillion, is a long-term investor, Fink said. And crypto currencies could potentially play a role in long-term investing as an asset class similar to gold.

For now, it is too early to determine whether cryptocurrencies are “just a speculative trading tool” he said. He also noted that broker dealers are the ones making the most money from the volatility of many cryptocurrencies and their wide bid-ask spreads.

Earlier in the meeting, BlackRock said all of its 16 director nominees were elected with a majority of shareholder votes cast. It also said that executive pay had been backed by 93% of shareholder votes.

A shareholder resolution to convert the company into a public benefit corporation – with the aim of putting all stakeholders on equal footing with shareholders – was rejected, receiving only 2.3% of the vote. The vote was in line with what similar proposals have received this year at other big U.S. companies and financial firms.



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RBI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The country’s foreign exchange reserves surged to $576.98 billion as on March 31, 2021 from $544.69 billion at September-end last year, an RBI report said.

Foreign currency assets (FCA), a major component of the overall reserves, increased to $536.693 billion as at March-end 2021 from $502.162 billion, the report noted.

On balance of payments basis (excluding valuation changes), foreign exchange reserves increased by $83.9 billion during April-December 2020 as compared with $40.7 billion in the year-ago period, it said.

Foreign exchange reserves in nominal terms (including valuation changes) increased by $108 billion during April-December 2020 as against $47 billion in the corresponding period of 2019-20.

At the end of December 2020, the foreign exchange reserves cover of imports increased to 18.6 months from 17.1 months at September-end 2020, RBI said in its report on management of foreign exchange reserves — October 2020-March 2021, released on Wednesday.

The net forward asset (receivable) of the Reserve Bank in the domestic foreign exchange market stood at $68.2 billion as at March-end 2021.

As on March 31, 2021, the Reserve Bank held 695.31 metric tonnes of gold.

“While 403.01 metric tonnes of gold is held overseas in safe custody with the Bank of England and the Bank of International Settlements (BIS), 292.30 tonnes of gold is held domestically,” the report said.

In value terms (USD), the share of gold in the total foreign exchange reserves decreased from about 6.69 per cent as at September-end 2020 to about 5.87 per cent as on March 31, 2021. Gold reserves stood at $33.88 billion at end-March 2021 as against $36.429 billion by September 2020, the report said.



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India added 42.3 tonnes gold to its reserves in FY21

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India’s gold reserves went up by 42.3 tonnes in the one-year period ended March 31, 2021, against 40.45 tonnes in the year-ago period.

As at end-March 2021, the Reserve Bank held 695.31 tonnes of gold as part of its foreign exchange reserves management against 653.01 tonnes as at March-end 2020, as per the central bank’s “Half Yearly Report on Management of Foreign Exchange (Fx) Reserves.”

During the half year period (October 2020 – March 2021) under review, India’s Fx reserves increased from $544.69 billion as at end-September 2020 to $576.98 billion as at end-March 2021.

In value terms (US Dollar), the share of gold in the total Fx reserves decreased from about 6.69 per cent as at end-September 2020 to about 5.87 per cent as at end-March 2021, the report said.

As at March-end 2021, while 403.01 tonnes of gold (360.71 tonnes as at March-end 2020) was held overseas in safe custody with the Bank of England and the Bank of International Settlements (BIS), 292.30 tonnes of gold (unchanged from March-end 2020) was held domestically, RBI said.

At the end of December 2020, the foreign exchange reserves cover of imports increased to 18.6 months from 17.1 months at end-September 2020, the report said.

As per the report, the ratio of short-term debt (original maturity) to reserves, which was 18.9 per cent at end-September 2020, declined to 17.7 per cent at end-December 2020.

Further, the ratio of volatile capital flows (including cumulative portfolio inflows and outstanding short-term debt) to reserves declined from 68.0 per cent at end-September 2020 to 67.0 per cent at end-December 2020.

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Paytm launches ‘Wealth Community’ for young investors

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Home-grown digital financial services platform Paytm has launched a new video-based wealth community called the Paytm Wealth Community.

Paytm Wealth Community is an investing community based on video, and “will enable users to attend live sessions conducted by subject matter experts across an array of wealth topics like Stocks, F&O, IPO, ETFs, Mutual Funds, Gold, Fixed Income, and Personal Finance,” the company said in an official release.

“Users will be able to learn from experts, interact with them to clarify doubts, and also chat with other users on the platform to discuss various wealth-related topics,” it said.

The community is meant to tap young users and has been designed for the needs of the “new Indian investor.”

Artificial Intelligence: Financial services industry behind the curve in meeting customer expectations

In beta mode first

“The next 100mn capital market investors in India are expected to originate from social groups and investment communities. Paytm Wealth Community intends to be the leader in helping users save, invest & trade better,” the company said.

The “intuitive” platform will offer live video content on an interactive chat platform. Creators can conduct 30 to 60-minute sessions in multiple languages like Hindi, English, Gujarati and others.

The Paytm Wealth community is owned and operated by OCL Ltd (Paytm) and is initially being offered in beta mode on the Paytm Money platform. It will be offered in beta for select users for the next two months, followed by open access for all.

A limited set of creators have been onboarded by Paytm in beta. In a bid to ensure the safety of retail investors, all creators go through a comprehensive KYC onboarding and all content is recorded/checked, the company said. Over time, users will be able to create custom discussion rooms, set up their creator accounts and chat.

Paytm Money opens new Technology Development Centre in Pune

Community calendar

Varun Sridhar, CEO of Paytm Money, said, “Paytm Money was a natural choice for the Beta launch of Paytm Wealth Community, given our direct access to the broad investment community and reach across India. The Paytm team has implemented cutting edge video & community technology ensuring the platform is seamless, and the user communication is safe and secure. We are very excited by the potential positive impact it will have on how users engage, learn and invest.”

Users who have received access to the Paytm Wealth Community can explore the community calendar, which lists out all upcoming sessions and their details on the Paytm Money app. They can also share sessions on various social media platforms. Other interested users can download or update their Paytm Money app to the latest version and follow Paytm Money on social media platforms to get access to the live session links.

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