HSBC Survey, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Ishwari Chavan

Around 80% of global Indians surveyed are making investments of some sort in India, and the quantum is likely to increase, according to a survey by HSBC.

A majority of global Indians with investments in India have increased their investments in the past three years, with 59% planning to increase them over the next three years.

Friends, family in India was the main reason quoted by the respondents, followed by promoting positive change in India, which is being considered as an effective investment.

HSBC surveyed over 4,152 people, aged 18 and above, in nine markets. Financial contribution that ties three generations of global Indians to both India and to the countries that they were either born in, live in, or have settled in.

Nearly 71% said that it was important for them to invest in India. Global Indians, particularly in Hong Kong, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and the UK, likely value investing in India.

“There is a huge vibrancy, there are incredible opportunities in India and the youth in particular are just driving that vibrancy. There is huge untapped economic potential in India. The biggest untapped single market left in the world is India,” said Professor Jaideep Prabhu, JNU professor of business and enterprise as a collaborator of the survey.

The report highlighted that sustainability matters to global Indians, as 76% said that environmental or social initiatives are key factors in their investment decisions.

Meanwhile, 85% said they invest in their countries of residence, the figure being particularly high in Hong Kong at 95% and the UK at 90%. Stocks and shares at 47% and property at 46% are the most common asset classes.



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Indians paid Rs 9,700 crore in hidden forex fees, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Indians paid nearly Rs 9,700 crore in the form of fees hidden in inflated exchange rates while making remittances in 2020. This is more than a third (36%) of the total fees of Rs 26,300 crore that Indians paid for sending money across their country’s borders.

The fees reflect a lack of transparency and high charges applied by banks on remittances. Banks have been reducing the fees on foreign remittances and their income under this head fell from Rs 15,017 crore in 2016 to Rs 12,142 crore in 2019. However, they have protected themselves by recovering Rs 4,422 crore through exchange mark-up in 2020, which was up from Rs 2,505 crore in 2016.

These figures were from independent research carried out by Capital Economics in August 2021, which aimed to estimate the scale of foreign exchange transaction fees in India. The study was released by Wise, the technology company that was founded with the objective of reducing cross-border remittance costs.

Overseas workers sending money into India are also losing money. Over the past five years, money lost to exchange rate margins on inward remittances has grown from Rs 4,200 crore to Rs 7,900 crore. Meanwhile, fees paid to transaction costs have grown from Rs 10,200 crore in 2016 to Rs 14,000 crore in 2020.

“A significant portion of these fees paid on remittances to India come from people in Gulf countries where most are employed in blue-collared jobs to support their families back home in India,” a statement issued by Wise said. Of the share of total fees paid on inward remittances to India in 2020, Saudi Arabia ranked first at 24%, followed by the US (18%), the UK (15%), Qatar (8%), Canada (6%), Oman (5%), UAE (5%), Kuwait (5%), and Australia (4%).

“While technology and internet have eased some of the issues related to the convenience and speed of foreign funds transfers, the age-old practice of hiding fees in the exchange rate results in people spending too much on hidden foreign currency fees — money which should rightfully stay in their pockets,” said Wise India country manager Rashmi Satpute. Indian consumers spending abroad paid Rs 1,441 crore as transactions fees, of which Rs 1,303 crore was hidden charges in the form of exchange mark-up.



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Saudi Arabia’s STC Pay gains digital banking licence, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Saudi Telecom‘s STC Pay business will be converted into a digital bank with paid-up capital of 2.5 billion riyals ($666.7 million) after Saudi Arabia‘s cabinet approved licenses for two digital banks, it said on Wednesday.

The company will inject additional 802 million riyals to retain 85% of STC Pay’s share capital, with Western Union investing 750 million riyals for the remaining 15%.

A consortium led by Abdul Rahman bin Saad al-Rashed and Sons Company was also granted permission to establish a local digital bank with capital of 1.5 billion riyals.

Saudi Arabia’s central bank has licensed 16 Saudi fintech companies in recent months to provide payment services, microfinance and digital insurance brokerage.

In addition, there are 32 fintech companies operating under the regulatory sandbox environment designed for testing innovative services and products in the kingdom, a central bank statement said.

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