Zerodha gets Sebi’s approval to set up an AMC, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Zerodha has received a licence from capital markets regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), to set up an Asset Management Company (AMC).

The in-principle approval from Sebi will allow the Bengaluru-based startup to launch its own mutual funds, founder and chief executive Nithin Kamath tweeted on Wednesday.

Zerodha is India’s largest retail broker by registered users.

“So, we just got an in-principle approval for our AMC (MF) license. I guess now comes the hard part (sic),” Kamath tweeted.

Zerodha had applied to the capital market regulator in February 2020, just months after Sebi allowed fintech firms to enter the MF business.

A spokesperson for Zerodha did not offer comment.

Flipkart cofounder Sachin Bansal’s fintech venture Navi has also received regulatory approval to launch its own AMC.

In December 2019, Sebi eased regulations for fintech startups planning to enter the MF industry. It said entities with a net worth of Rs 100 crore and five years of being profitable were eligible to sponsor MFs.

AMCs should also maintain their minimum net worth continuously and not only towards the end of the year.

Earlier, entrants needed to have five years of experience in the financial services business and demonstrate three years of profitability, as well as maintain a net worth of Rs 50 crore.

“It’s a great move, no question. Zerodha had also applied for a licence, but Covid-19 slowed the market. We need more players to come to this market to foster innovation,” Kamath told ET in an interview in January, on Sebi’s relaxations.

“The entry barrier has stopped many (from entering the MF industry). The problem with mutual funds today is that they are very complex for retail investors. With newer players coming in, I think the products will become simpler and innovative,” Kamath had said.

The move comes at a time when Sebi has given approvals to firms such as Bajaj Finserv and discount broker Samco to launch MFs.

Navi recently applied to Sebi to launch as many as 10 new MFs, all of which are set to be passively managed. These funds mirror the performance of an underlying index and typically do not need a fund manager.

Zerodha has led the pack of new-age fintech brokers including Groww, Upstox and Paytm Money, which have seen strong traction on their platforms by retail investors as millions of Indians flocked to stock investments, attracted by the Nifty and the Sensex recording peaks repeatedly since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic.



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PhonePe receives insurance broking licence

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PhonePe has received an insurance broking licence from the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI). Last year, PhonePe entered the insurtech sector with a limited ‘corporate agent’ licence, which allowed the company to partner with only three insurance companies per category. With the new ‘direct broking’ licence, PhonePe can distribute insurance products from all insurance companies in India.

It also allows PhonePe to offer personalised product recommendations to its 300-million user base, and a bigger portfolio of insurance products for Indian consumers.

Digital transactions grew 80% in last 250 days: Razorpay report

PhonePe forayed into the insurance segment in January 2020 as a ‘corporate agent’ and has since launched offerings in general insurance, term insurance and health insurance.

On the direct broking licence, PhonePe’s Vice-President and Head of Insurance Gunjan Ghai said, “This licence is a big milestone in our insurance journey. We are building a full-service platform through innovative products in partnership with insurers. This move will lead us closer to our goal of becoming a one-stop destination for insurance needs.”

Government notifies law to shed holding in public sector general insurance company

PhonePe is a digital payments platform where users can send and receive money, recharge mobiles, DTH, data cards, pay at stores, make utility payments, buy gold, and make investments. PhonePe forayed into financial services in 2017 with its product Gold, which allows users to buy 24-karat gold securely on its platform.

PhonePe has since launched several mutual funds and insurance products like tax-saving funds, liquid funds, international travel insurance and Corona Care, a Covid-focused insurance product, among others. PhonePe also launched its Switch platform in 2018; customers can place orders on over 600 apps including Ola, Swiggy, Myntra, IRCTC, Goibibo, RedBus and so on, from the PhonePe app. PhonePe is accepted at 20-plus million merchant outlets across India.

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From Amazon to Zomato, a big crowd at RBI doors for payment aggregator licence, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: A slew of companies harbouring fintech ambitions have made a beeline to the Reserve Bank of India to become licensed Payment Aggregators (PAs) under the central bank’s upcoming regulatory regime for non-bank payment providers.

Firms that have applied for authorisation or in advanced stages of submitting their proposals to the RBI include the Tata group, Amazon, Reliance Industries, Dutch payments startup Adyen, Paytm, BharatPe, PhonePe, CC Avenue, Razorpay, Cred, Zomato, PayU, Worldline, Pine Labs and CAMSPAY, sources involved in the diligence process told ET.

At least 30 firms are learnt to have submitted their proposals, sources said, indicating that the number of applicants could increase before the September 30 deadline for existing and new non-bank firms to apply.

The firms that will be authorised to operate as PAs in India will be under the direct purview of RBI in rendering payment services to merchants, in a step that many industry insiders said would lead towards a more standardised and regulated payments ecosystem.

“For long, the operations of PAs in India have been seen as a blind spot for regulations,” said a payments industry insider. “RBI’s PA/PG rules in this regard were introduced to ensure a standard for those firms offering payment service to merchants.”

“There is a feeling that any internet firm with a mass consumer base will be applying for a PA licence as the eligibility barrier is low and missing out on approval can limit any future expansion in offering fintech services,” the source said.

Under the new rules, any firm acquiring merchants would compulsorily need RBI approval to operate as a licensed PA, the source added.

The central bank’s new Payment Aggregator/Payment Gateway guidelines – introduced formally in March 2020 – mandate that only firms approved by RBI can acquire and offer payment services to merchants. Regulated banks do not need any separate approvals.

As per RBI rules, the eligibility criteria for a firm applying for PA authorisation is a minimum net worth of Rs 15 crore in the first year of application and going up to Rs 25 crore by the second year.

The firm also must fulfil ‘fit and proper’ criteria as well as be compliant with global payment security standards under PCI DSS, an information security protocol maintained by payment firms across the world.

“PhonePe has been operating as a Payment Aggregator, offering payment services to merchants on our network. In line with the RBI guidelines, we would be applying for the PA licence to continue offering payment services to our merchant partners,” a PhonePe spokesperson said.

According to Ramesh Narasimhan, Head – Digital Commerce, Worldline India, “Ingenico ePayments India – a Worldline brand, is in the process of directly applying for the Payment Aggregator license well before the deadline as we remain committed to deepening the reach of online payment solutions in India.”
Spokespersons for Adyen, Razorpay and Cred did not offer comment. Other firms cited earlier in the story did not respond to ET’s email. RBI also did not comment.

Newly listed Zomato said in exchange disclosure that it had already incorporated a wholly owned subsidiary to handle digital payments and payment gateway services.

Sources told ET that many leading e-commerce marketplaces, global payment firms, existing PGs and domestic consumer internet firms are also in line to apply for authorisations.

ET could not independently confirm these names.

“There is almost a sense that RBI is inundated with the rush of applications,” a second source aware of the matter said. “The indication has been that RBI will take a ‘First In, First Out’ approach in scrutinising different proposals. This means that the overall scrutiny process is likely to take a few months.”

“The regulator will also allow firms to continue their operations until they communicate the fate of the respective proposals. For a PA operating in India whose application has been turned down, the expectation is that RBI will offer a window to wind down its operations,” the source, who is the chief executive of one of the firms applying for authorisation, told ET.

RBI defines PAs as entities that facilitate e-commerce sites and merchants to accept various payment instruments from the customers for completion of their payment obligations, without the need for merchants to create a separate payment integration system of their own.

PGs are defined as entities that provide technology infrastructure to route and facilitate processing of an online payment transaction without any involvement in handling of funds.

The motive of the new PA/PG guidelines could also be to have a better supervisory control over payment operations of internet and e-commerce firms in India.

The applicability for PA/PG authorisation could be made ‘on-tap’ after the initial set of approvals, a third source said.



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Policybazaar gets insurance broking licence from IRDAI

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Web-aggregator Policybazaar on Friday said it has got approval from regulator IRDAI to undertake insurance broking, a development that will help the company augment business and expand bouquet of services.

With this development, the company will surrender its web-aggregator licence to Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) and undertake business including insurance aggregation under the broking umbrella.

“We received our licence to be a broker for which we have been in touch with the regulator for the last three years,” PolicyBazaar.com CEO Yashish Dahiya told PTI.

Venturing into new segments

The broking licence will allow the company to venture into segments which it could not do in the past like claims assistance, offline services, and establish Points of Presence network.

From a revenue perspective, he said, “as a web aggregator we were not paid for life insurance renewals.” As a broker, he said, the company will be entitled for commission as well as fee for web aggregation.

Also read: Serum Institute of India picks up stake in PolicyBazaar

With the help of broking licence, he said, “we will be able to do claims settlement and many other things and we will use this opportunity very wisely.” Policybazaar has a market share of 25 per cent in the life insurance segment while 10 per cent in health insurance.

The parent company PB Fintech also promotes Paisabazaar.com, which is an online credit comparison portal.

PB Fintech had attained the status of a unicorn in 2018 when it raised $200 million in a Series-F round led by Japan’s SoftBank. A company valued at over $1 billion is called a unicorn.

Other investors include the likes of Info Edge, Premji Invest, Temasek, Ribbit Capital, Chiratae, Inventus Capital Partners, True North, Tiger Global, Wellington and Steadview.

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Pension funds: PFRDA revises sponsor’s capital requirement criteria

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Pension fund regulator PFRDA is keen that sponsors and pension funds set up by them are strong enough to ride the current growth wave in the pension sector. Towards this end, it has tweaked the capital requirement norms for sponsors of Pension Funds, stipulating higher paid-up capital and networth for those looking to set up such funds.

A sponsor – individually or jointly– of a pension fund should have atleast ₹25 crore in paid-up capital on the date of making application as a sponsor and positive tangible networth of at least ₹ 50 crore on the last date of each of the preceding five financial years, the PFRDA has now ruled.

“The way we see growth in pension sector in last few years, we believe that in days to come it will grow even further. We felt the sponsors should be adequately capitalised and then only the pension funds they set up can perform well. This has prompted us to bring this change as earlier they could apply with networth of ₹25 crore,” Supratim Bandyopadhyay, Chairman, Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA), told BusinessLine.

He also said that all existing pension fund managers – eight of them – will be given six months time to conform to the new dispensation of having networth of at least ₹50 crore. Hitherto, the minimum networth requirement for them was placed at ₹25 crore, and some of them were already at levels above the ₹25 crore threshold.

Pension AUM

India’s pension assets under management (AUM), which recently crossed the ₹6-lakh crore mark, has been growing at frenetic pace of over 30 per cent. The PFRDA sees the overall AUM at this growth rate touch ₹30 lakh crore by 2030. ByMarch-end 2021, PFRDA expects pension AUM to touch ₹7.5-lakh crore.

Pension AUM cross ₹6-lakh crore: PFRDA Chief

This latest PFRDA move to enhance the capital requirement of sponsors comes at a time when the pension regulator is expected to soon open an ‘on tap’ window of 30-40 days for those looking for pension fund manager’s licences.

The on-tap window could also prompt some of the existing mutual fund players to take a serious look at the pension sector and enter this space, say market observers.

Another important reason why sponsors and pension funds need to be capitalised better is the PFRDA plan to allow pension funds offer minimum assured return scheme (MARS) products to customers. As such assured return scheme would entail risk, it is better to be well capitalised to take care of eventualities, said experts.

ThePFRDA had recently come up with a Request for Proposal for appointment of a consultant to help the regulator design the MARS.

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Banks coming together for new umbrella entity for retail payments

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Two leading private sector lenders HDFC Bank and Kotak Mahindra Bank seem to be readying plans for a new pan-India umbrella entity (PUE) licence for retail payments.

HDFC Bank late on Thursday night said it has executed an agreement for subscribing to 4,995 equity shares of the face value of ₹10 each fully paid up issued by Ferbine Private Limited for a consideration of ₹10 per equity share.

“Post investment, bank will hold 9.99 per cent of the equity shareholding of Ferbine,” it said in a regulatory filing. The acquisition for cash consideration of ₹49,950 will be completed by February end, HDFC Bank said.

Umbrella entity for retail payments could see robust response

Earlier in the evening, Kotak Mahindra Bank too had said it picked up 9.99 per cent stake in Ferbine.

Promoted by Tata Sons Private Ltd, Ferbine was incorporated on January 18, 2021, to make an application to RBI for the PUE licence.

“The main business of the company would be to operating a pan-India umbrella entity for retail payment systems, as would be allowed/licensed by RBI, subject to approval of the PUE application,” Kotak Mahindra Bank said in the filing.

Retail payment systems: RBI opens doors to private sector

The acquisition in Febrine Private Limited by Kotak Mahindra Bank is likely to be completed on or prior to February 26, 2021.

“It may be noted that the Bank may participate in future capital raise by Ferbine,” the bank said.

RBI deadline

The announcement comes just ahead of the RBI deadline for accepting applications for umbrella entity for retail payments by February 26, 2021.

Earlier, So Hum Bharat Digital Payments had announced that it is in talks with private sector lender YES Bank for a 9.99 per cent equity investment and will work together on the proposed new umbrella entity.

Other banks, including State Bank of India, are also understood to be evaluating and applying to the RBI under the guidelines.

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HDFC Bank to pick up 9.99% stake in Ferbine

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HDFC Bank on Thursday said it executed an agreement for subscribing to 4,995 equity shares of the face value of ₹10 each fully paid up issued by Ferbine Private Limited for a consideration of ₹10 per equity share.

“Post investment, bank will hold 9.99 per cent of the equity shareholding of Ferbine,” it said in a regulatory filing.

The acquisition for cash consideration of ₹49,950 will be completed by February end, HDFC Bank said.

Kotak Mahindra Bank picks up 9.99% stake in Ferbine Private Ltd

Earlier in the evening, Kotak Mahindra Bank too said it has picked up 9.99 per cent stake in Ferbine.

Promoted by Tata Sons Private Ltd, Ferbine was incorporated on January 18, 2021, to make an application to RBI for the PUE (pan-India umbrella entity) licence.

For Tatas, Chandra’s 5th year at the helm may be best yet

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