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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Equitas SFB launches fintech accelerator programme ‘Equitech’

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Equitas Small Finance Bank on Monday announced the launch of ‘Equitech’ – a fintech accelerator programme aimed at the start-up ecosystem. The programme, designed to scale-up, will help fintechs to curate their products and define a go-to-market strategy.

In a press release, the Chennai-based lender said, Equitech will help fintechs to reach the next level and take its product to the market in a more targeted manner. The programme was launched on August 7 and the application process for the enrolment has commenced. “Indian fintech ecosystem is experiencing exponential growth from almost all the sub-segments ranging from payments and regtech to robo-advisory and blockchain. This growth is driven by the innovative fintech start-ups that were able to create unique banking trends like BaaS, neo banking, open banking, autonomous finance etc,” Murali Vaidyanathan, Senior President and Country Head – Branch Banking – Liabilities, Products & Wealth, Equitas Small Finance Bank said in the release.

Also read: After hit by pandemic hard, start-ups on growth path: EY

“These innovations have significantly impacted the way Indian banking industry functions and has resulted in India seeing a 60% increase in fintech investments despite the pandemic. We are glad to be able to assist and nurture the future unicorns in upgrading the banking system for the next level,” he added.

Focus on banking technologies

Equitech will focus on banking aspects such as payments, lending, CASA, transaction banking, API banking, governance & regulations as well as technologies such as agri-tech, banking tech, clean energy, government tech and other horizontal segments across key focus areas. The shortlisted firms will be granted direct access to a world class infrastructure through Equitas Small Finance Bank’s tech platform and API sandbox for product development.

Besides, there will be specific cohorts along with mentors and a panel of experts, the start-ups will work closely with these experts to create their products. Equitas will provide the necessary support required from legal and regulatory aspects. The selected fintech may also get to service Equitas SFB either as their first commercial business partner or as a co-brand partner, the bank’s release said.

Eligibility

To enroll, a fintech start-up must be registered / incorporated within the last 6 years as on date of the accelerator programme opening and should have at least two full-time employees, with most important team members having expertise in their field. The start-up must present an innovative product/ idea with significant advantages over current industry offerings and should represent original ideas wholly owned with the freedom to use.

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How did a start-up win a rare banking license in India?

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BharatPe, a barely three-year-old payments start-up, is going to be the half-owner of a bank in India — a prize that has eluded many of the country’s pedigreed tycoons.

It’s a lucky break. Even Jaspal Bindra, who’ll own the other half, has had to wait six years for this chance, ever since his reign as the top Asia banker at Standard Chartered Plc ended amid a heap of losses in India and Indonesia.

Also read: PMC Bank’s resolution could become a template for rescuing other weak UCBs

The in-principle approval for BharatPe and Bindra is a marriage made in heaven, or rather the capital-starved hell that has been the country’s banking system for much of the past decade. The regulator is rewarding the duo for agreeing to help remove the debris of a scam-tainted small lender. Punjab & Maharashtra Co-operative Bank collapsed after it made 70 per cent-plus of its loans to one bankrupt shantytown developer. To prevent a run, the Reserve Bank of India had to stop PMC depositors from freely accessing their money.

That was in September 2019. After two years and two waves of a pandemic, the stuck savers finally have a resolution: BharatPe and a unit of Bindra’s Centrum Capital Ltd will put their financial businesses into a newly licensed bank tasked with making small-ticket loans to unbanked segments of the population. For the privilege of getting that license, the new lender will have to assume at least some of the liabilities of the troubled PMC, as well its moth-eaten assets.

It’s unclear how much of the past baggage the new bank can be expected to carry. PMC’s March 2020 deposit base of ₹10,700 crore ($1.5 billion) may have shrunk after the RBI relaxed re strictions on withdrawals in June last year. But it doesn’t have many good assets left to earn a return: About 80 per cent of its ₹4,500-crore loan book had gone bad by March last year. Depending on the deal the regulator strikes on their behalf, one option may be to sweeten PMC depositors’ take — beyond what they’ll be paid out by the deposit guarantee corporation — with some equity in the new bank.

Beyond that, it’s a clean slate. BharatPe, which allows merchants to accept payments from any of the several apps popular with consumers, is yet to join the unicorn club of start-ups with at least $1 billion in valuation. TechCrunch has reported a Tiger Global-led fund-raising round that will take it comfortably past that hurdle. The money will also come in handy in creating a new-age bank. Gauging retailers’ creditworthiness from real-time customer data, and making that the basis for pricing working capital loans, will preclude the need for a costly physical branch network.

Tens of millions of India’s small retail shops rely on personal relationships with wholesalers for credit. Bringing them under the ambit of formal lending will also draw them into the tax net, helping ease the resource crunch for a government that has seen its debt explode because of the Covid-19 crisis. For Bindra, it’s time to try something different from the old corporate banking model of financing empire-building by large conglomerates. In India, taking errant corporate debtors through a formal bankruptcy process or coming to a settlement with their politically influential owners was always like pulling teeth. Of late, extraction of capital from failed businesses has become a painful joke — yielding recovery rates of 4 per cent to 6 per cent for creditors.

In the absence of a formal mechanism to deal with bank failures, expect more bespoke arrangements. Inviting Singapore’s DBS Group Holdings Ltd to take over the assets and liabilities of struggling Lakshmi Vilas Bank Ltd offered a strong hint that the Indian central bank had learned its lesson from unsatisfactory half-rescue of YESs Bank Ltd., a major corporate lender that was allowed to hobble along as a standalone lender.

BharatPe’s unexpected bonanza could well set a template for post-Covid recapitalisation of Indian lenders. The RBI responded to the pandemic by slashing interest rates and making available nearly 7 per cent of GDP in easy liquidity. When that cheap money is eventually unwound, more banks with depleted capital coffers may need new homes. If RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das is going to reprise the anxious Mrs. Bennet from Pride and Prejudice, maybe other fintech suitors, too, will get to play Mr. Darcy.

(This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Andy Mukherjee is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering industrial companies and financial services. He previously was a columnist for Reuters Breakingviews. He has also worked for the Straits Times, ET NOW and Bloomberg News.)

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Fintech start-up Boxop ties up with Mahindra Insurance for Covid treatment

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Boxop, a Kerala-based start-up has tied up with Mahindra Insurance Brokers Ltd (MIBL) to provide low-cost insurance protection for the Covid-19 treatment.

Boxop is providing this comprehensive service across the State through Akshaya Kendras and support from MIBL.

The company has introduced a Group Covid plan in which individual who is tested Covid positive will get a lumpsum benefit plan of ₹25,000, in which 24 hour of hospitalization is mandatory. Individuals can also avail other products like cashless treatment plans for all illnesses including Covid-19, at select hospitals (reimbursement plans at other hospitals) and an income replacement plan for in-patient hospitalisation for an amount of ₹1,000 per day (for maximum 30days in a year) across all Akshaya Kendras.

These plans can be availed only after 30 days of enrolment and customers of Boxop-Akshaya can get enrolled into these plans at all Akshaya centres.

Boxop is a fintech focussed start-up registered under Kerala Start-up Mission for customised financial and non-financial services to the public who are not serviced by banks and other financial entities.

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Fintech start-up LenDenClub turns profitable in Q4 of FY21

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Three-year-old fintech start-up LenDenClub, a peer-to-peer lending platform, has disbursed loans worth nearly ₹600 crore in FY21, up from ₹60 crore in the previous fiscal and has turned profitable in Q4 of FY21.

The company is eyeing a five-fold growth in the next two years and aims to disburse ₹1,200 crores worth of loans in FY22.

The company has provided loans to over 1,30,000 unique borrowers and cumulatively 3,60,000 loans, primarily to young salaried professionals. It processes over 25,000-30,000 loan applications and disburses about 15,000 loans every month. The P2P lender currently has a user base of over 15 lakh borrowers and 4.5 lakh lenders on its platform.

Business growth

“At LenDenClub we have grown 1,000 per cent y-o-y and 43 per cent of our customers are repeat customers who rely on us during their tough times. Even amidst the pandemic, we identified the consistency in the investment flow and business grew exponentially. We have seen a considerable growth with respect to all aspects of our business – be it business numbers, headcount/manpower, geographic reach etc. As a company we are growing very fast, thanks to our collaborative team efforts, and became profitable in FY20-21. Our sustainable focused approach has helped us become the first P2P lending company in the industry to turn profitable as on Q4, 2021,” Bhavin Patel, CEO and co-founder, LenDenClub told BusinessLine.

“We believe that the current year will also witness muted growth in the first quarter and then grow exponentially over the next three quarters,” he said.

Recently, LenDenClub also became the first P2P lending company to integrate with Google Pay, going live on its platform, allowing customers to borrow and lend seamlessly, along with making payments. Additionally, the fintech lender has expanded its flagship digital lending platform InstaMoney pan-India.

Financial inclusion

From its presence in seven States, the company has expanded its offering to borrowers from over 19,000 pin-codes. This has benefited population living in rural regions not covered by banks especially, in the small ticket loan category of up to ₹10,000. The company has one of the lowest NPAs in the digital lending space of 3.95 per cent.

LenDenClub aims at fostering financial inclusion and in serving the marginalised, low-income groups and credit-starved MSMEs. The company hopes to scale up disbursement volumes to ₹500 crore on a month-on-month basis by FY23-24, while working towards becoming one of the top lending institutions in the country.

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Goel quits Trifecta Capital as partner

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Aakash Goel, one of the partners of Trifecta Capital, which provides loans to start-ups, has decided to move on even as the company is preparing for the next growth cycle.

Goel, who has been a partner with Trifecta for last three years, communicated his decision to leave to Rahul Khanna and Nilesh Kothari, co-founders of the firm, said sources close to the development.

Also read: Trifecta Capital closes second venture debt fund, invests ₹900 crore

Prior to Trifecta, Goel was a principal with Bessemer Venture Partners, which had investments in online grocer BigBasket, PharmEasy and home services firm UrbanCompany.

Incidentally, Trifecta has also provided debt to all three firms and others such as car-selling portal Cars24, content start-up ShareChat, home furnishing firm Livspace and news aggregator Dailyhunt.

Trifecta recently raised ₹1,025 crore as its second venture debt fund. It also has plans to raise another ₹1,200-1,500 crore by the end of the year.

Last October, the company inducted Lavanya Ashok, former Managing Director (Private Equity) of Goldman Sachs as partner, to widen its scope and start pursuing equity transactions selectively, sources said.

Trifecta was started by Khanna and Kothari in 2015 and raised ₹500 crore in its first round of funding.

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Rewire, a neobank for expats, raises $20 million to extend financial services

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Rewire, a fintech start-up that develops cross border online banking services tailored for the needs of expatriate workers worldwide, on Thursday announced a Series B funding round of $20 million and a significant line of credit from a leading bank.

The round, led by OurCrowd, included new key investors Renegade Partners, Glilot Capital Partners (through its early growth fund Glilot+), and Jerry Yang, former Yahoo! CEO and director at Alibaba, through AME Cloud Ventures. They were joined by current investors including Viola Fintech, BNP Paribas through their venture capital fund Opera Tech Ventures, Moneta Capital, and private angel investors.

The funding round further builds on the firm’s growth in South-East Asia. Since launching its services in the region in 2016, Rewire has seen users remit hundreds of millions per year to Asia, and has acquired over 230,000 users originally from China, the Philippines, India and Thailand. The firm’s userbase continues to grow rapidly, with users from the Philippines and Thailand growing at 300 per cent year-on-year. Similarly, the number of users originally from India is growing at 350 per cent while the pool of users originally from China is growing at 1000 per cent year-on-year, the company said in a statement.

Rewire was founded with the vision to empower every migrant to fulfil their financial potential for a better future, for themselves and their families. The current round of funding will enable the fintech startup to continue enhancing its product portfolio and services, as well as its strategic partnerships in the migrant’s country of origin and the country in which they currently reside.

Rewire has recently secured its EU Electronic Money Institution licence (EMI), granted by the Dutch Central Bank, which allows the fintech start-up to issue electronic money, provide payment services, and engage in money remittance. Rewire was also granted an expanded Israeli Financial Asset Service Provider. Acquiring these licences is another major step for the fintech start-up in its mission to provide secure and accessible financial services for migrant workers worldwide.

Rewire CEO Guy Kashtan said: “At our core, we aim to create financial inclusion. Everything that we do at Rewire is aimed to help migrants to build a more financially secure future for themselves and their families. To do so, we aim to provide services that go beyond traditional banking services such as insurance payments in the migrant’s home country and savings accounts. This investment and licences are major steps towards fulfilling our company’s vision and will be used for additional expansion of geographies and products.”

To boost its cross border solution, Rewire plans to enrich its platform with new value-added services such as bill payments and insurance, in addition to credit and loan services, investments, and savings. Adding these to its existing remittance services, payment account, and debit card, Rewire is able to make its first-rate financial services more accessible to migrants and, thus, include them in the financial systems.

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Caspian Debt partners Villgro to provide debt access to early-stage startups

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Caspian Debt, a digital corporate lending services company, has partnered with Chennai-based Villgro, an incubator of early-stage social enterprises, to provide debt solutions to start-ups that aim to create a positive social or environmental impact.

Villgro’s portfolio company, Bharat Rohan, a Lucknow-based Agri-tech startup was the recipient of the first loan of ₹25 lakh. Bharat Rohan uses unique UAV/drone based hyperspectral remote sensing and artificial intelligence in precision agriculture, integrated pest management and contract farming.

“Emerging social enterprises in India face the challenge of having limited access to debt due to the lack of credit history and an existing negative feedback nexus between credit history and access to debt. Through this partnership with Villgro, we will provide the first set of debts by the end of Q3 2021. We look forward to working closely with the team at Villgro to identify these promising start-ups,” S Viswanatha Prasad, Managing Director, Caspian Debt.

“Invention based enterprises face a near impossible task of accessing capital during their early days. This partnership is built on the insight that it only needs a small amount of capital to catalyse business operations, and that credit risk can be reduced using innovative methods to enable access to this capital,” said Srinivas Ramanujam, CEO Villgro India.

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