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The future is Fintech and Pakistan is ready

Fintech revolution at Pakistan’s doorstep – do you know what it is?

The silver lining that came with the Corona pandemic was the rapid move towards digitalization in different sectors of the economy that had previously been moving at a tortoise pace! Financial inclusion of the rural areas is, in particular, crucial for a faster pace of economic growth that the country needs to develop, and the Fintech revolution is offering opportunities to bring in many of these previously unbanked people.
ByMagazine Desk

14 June 2021
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Pakistan's Fintech revolution

Pakistan’s fintech revolution: Sounds cool but do you understand what it means?

In essence, it refers to technology supporting banking and financial services. Ok, well, that’s a start! But what’s new about this – don’t we all know tellers have computers that they tap into when we deposit or take out cash from the bank.
At its simplest, it may have meant that, but in essence, the fintech we are referring to more correctly refers to all technology that helps you conduct your banking needs generally without the assistance of a person. So it could be as simple as checking your balance or transferring your funds in your telephone app.

What does it mean for Pakistanis?

Huge Deal. Seventy-seven percent of the country is still physically unbanked and not financially included due to several reasons, including that bank branches cannot cover every part of the country; at 10 branches per 100,000 adults, Pakistan’s banking coverage is shallow as compared to the average of 16.38 in Asia.

That means that a large number of people do not have access to finance, and all that comes with it including, agricultural loans, tractor loans, machinery loans, car loans, mortgages, farmers insurance, and SME development is hindered by a lack of access to capital and so on.

This prevents individuals from engaging in economic activities that could change their lives and overall inhibits economic growth. According to the Access to Finance Survey, the country is still predominantly cash-based.

Only 23 percent of the adult population of Pakistan has access to formal financial services, and even less, only 16 percent of adult Pakistanis have a bank account. The Black Swan event known as Covid-19 rapidly transformed countries like Pakistan into the digital twenty-first century in the financial sector.

Banks that were plodding along and been talking about digital wallets, branchless banking were pushed into immediate action as they encouraged consumers to ‘stay safe and stay home’ and use their internet banking services; it acted as an extraordinary catalyst for digitization and e-commerce.

PTI government has launched a “Digital Pakistan initiative” covering all sectors, including agriculture, health care, education, trade, commerce, government services, and financial services.

Huge money that was spent under the Ehsaas program was sent as digital payments, and the government used this (government to person payments (G2P)) as an opportunity to get the previously unbanked populations into the financial sector.

Pakistan’s digitization did a logarithmic acceleration, as digital solutions became necessary, especially during the lockdown. The State Bank of Pakistan is also driving through faster change with the availability of instant payments through their Raast system.

Fintech has impacted many fields like Banking, Insurance, Loans, Personal Finance, Electric Payments, Loans, Venture Capital, and Wealth Management, to name a few. Many new startups have started in the field and have taken on established players head-on, often creating a competitive environment that benefits consumers.

According to MarketScreener, the global financial sector is expected to be worth $26.5 trillion in 2022, and the Fintech industry is worth around 1 percent of the industry.

According to a Goldman Sachs study, it was estimated that the global fintech industry might eventually disrupt up to $4.7 trillion of revenue from brick-and-mortar financial services. PwC estimated in 2020 that up to 28 percent of banking and payment services would be at risk of disruption due to new business models brought about by fintech.

Fintech in Pakistan

According to Pakistan Telecommunication Authority, a whopping 101 million people use the internet in Pakistan, 46% has access to broadband services and 85% of Pakistan’s population has mobile connections that account to 183 million mobile subscriptions, a high penetration in the population.

Pakistan offers immense business opportunities in the payments sector for banks and other fintech entities, including startups and telcos, to capitalize on the high mobile penetration in the country by offering financial services through mobile devices, apps, and web services.

An electronic wallet could be used for various payment transactions such as receiving payments including remittances, wages, and paying bills along with phone top-ups. According to McKinsey Consulting, the cost of offering customers digital accounts can be 80-90 percent lower than using physical branches.

Neobanks hit the country several years ago once the telecom giants realized they could enter this industry and challenge the traditional banks. Neobanks are basically internet-based banks that are virtual banks that operate exclusively online without traditional physical branch networks and any of the costs attached with this.

In Pakistan, initial entrants included the banks set up by Telenor and Jazz offering cash transfer services like EasyPaisa by Telenor, JazzCash by Jazz (a company formed after Mobilink and Warid merger) have their own microbanks which are run by USSD (Unstructured Supplementary Service Data) in the rural areas.

They have phone apps from which customers can do many kinds of banking transactions, including bill payments, cash transfers, and so on. Internationally, neobanks like N96, Revolut, Alipay, and WeChat are the leaders in the fintech sectors.

According to research by a tech firm WPP, 86 percent of neobank clients use a banking app (from any bank), and 60 percent of traditional bank clients will use a banking app. On average, a neobank customer will use their neobank app for 40 percent of interactions.

Fintech revolution
Source: State Bank of Pakistan
According to a 2019 World Bank report, Pakistan’s Digital Financial Services will see a boom reaching $36 billion, contributing 7 percent to the GDP if a real-time retail payments gateway is introduced.

Currently, branchless banking, even with the telecom companies, has not made a big jump; as of March 2021, the average daily transactions remain around 6,604,143, and the total number of transactions during the quarter were only 594 million, with the value of transactions around Rs. 1.8 trillion.

Who will serve the unserved?

According to a 2016 World Bank report, 27.5 million Pakistani adults say that distance to a financial institution is a significant barrier to accessing financial services. The arrival of branchless banking providers into the market has added around 180,000 active agents since 2008 to the existing 100,000 bank branches, but this only slightly helps with the scarcity of financial touchpoints for the populace.

Moreover, a Karandaz report shows that banks still offer 80 percent of the existing financial services whilst serving only 15 percent of the population. Increasingly, in markets where this shortage of financial service providers exists, we see startups entering to provide this need for faster, efficient, no-frills attached payment services, especially amongst small and medium-sized businesses and unbanked individuals.

Since the introduction of Electronic Money Institute (EMI) regulations by the SBP in April 2019, several Pakistan-based startups have approached the SBP for approval— including Finja, Nayapay, Sadapay, and AFT— all are at different stages of approval from obtaining a pilot approval to an in-principle approval from the SBP.

More fintech startups and other companies are preparing to acquire EMI licenses to unlock the potential of digital financial services. The EMI license only allows fintechs to provide customers with an account with daily and monthly transactional limits.

They are not allowed to deliver any lending or savings products; companies that wish to also do that have to opt for branchless banking or apply for non-banking financial institution (NBFI) at the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP).

Finja recently became the first fintech to obtain both regulatory licenses: an EMI license under the ambit of the SBP and a lending license for an NBFC (non-bank financial company) under the SECP. Not all fintechs are looking to compete with banks.

Finja, for example, is building partnerships with banks by collaborating with them and creating lending and payment products to serve a segment they may not have targeted earlier.

Recently, HBL invested $1.15m into Finja, stating that this would proactively reinvent the bank to become a “technology company with a banking license.” The bank noted that investment in Finja would serve two of the bank’s strategic priorities, namely, making investments into digital financial inclusion and in development finance companies involved in agriculture and SMEs.

Screenshot_1-269x300.jpg


Muhammad Aurangzeb

President & CEO
HBL

WE ARE DELIGHTED TO BE INVESTING IN FINJA. PAKISTAN’S
FINTECH LANDSCAPE HAS IMMENSE OPPORTUNITIES. AT
HBL WE BELIEVE THAT BY MAKING THIS INVESTMENT WE
ARE NOT ONLY DEVELOPING THE STARTUP ECOSYSTEM, BUT
IT WILL ALSO PAVE THE WAY FOR PAKISTAN TO PLAY A BIGGER
ROLE IN THE FINTECH SPACE GLOBALLY. SME LENDING IS THE
FUTURE AND THEREFORE WE ARE INVESTING IN FINJA WHICH
ENJOYS A FIRST-MOVER ADVANTAGE OVER THE MARKET IN
DIGITALLY LENDING TO SMES IN THIS COUNTRY.
Since April 2020, Finja has increased its digital lending portfolio by 550 percent, disbursing out over 50,000 digital loans to Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises. There is no doubt that the SBP is keen to ensure that fintech companies help in its goal of increasing financial inclusion through new and often innovative digital payments frameworks.

The 2019 regulations provide a clear framework for EMIs looking to service the public and stipulate minimum service standards and requirements for these companies to ensure that payment services are given to consumers robustly and cost-effectively and provide a baseline for customer protection.


@Goenitz
 
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The startup boom in Pakistan
Usman Hanif | July 06, 2021
Startups receive $85 million in venture capital funding this year

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Fintech companies have received about a fourth of the total venture capital investment in the past six months.

KARACHI: Record levels of funding are pouring into Pakistan-based startups, boosting hopes for a brighter economic outlook for the world’s fifth-most populous country.

Startups have received $85 million in venture capital (VC) funding so far this year, outpacing the $66 million raised in 2020, and venture firms continue to build their war chest.

“A surge in venture capital investment in 2021 augurs well for innovation in the country,” said HBL COO Sagheer Mufti while talking to The Express Tribune.

“In particular, the focus on fintech and partnerships with banks provide immense opportunity for driving consumer choice and ease, employment, financial inclusion and economic growth. HBL’s investment in Finja was in this spirit,” he added.

Fintech companies have received about a fourth of the total VC investment so far this year. They are finding plenty of overseas investors eager to tap the world’s third-largest unbanked population in what is being called a “fintech revolution”.

In Pakistan, 71% of adults do not have a bank account, one of the highest rates in the world.

Islamabad-based fintech SadaPay raised $7.2 million - reportedly the largest seed round ever in the country - for a personal debit card and e-wallet that still awaits regulatory approval.

Trading app KTrade - dubbed the “Robinhood of Pakistan” - raised $4.5 million after amassing 200,000 users since its launch in 2019.

US-based mega-firm Kleiner Perkins made its first investment in the country - a $17 million round for Tajir, a B2B marketplace based in Lahore that enables small business owners to buy from manufacturers and wholesalers.

Another B2B marketplace, Bazaar, raised $6.5 million in seed capital. Abhi raised $2.1 million for its early wage access platform and is headed to Y-Combinator (along with TAG).

There is plenty of action in other sectors as well.

“The news of Pakistani tech startups receiving foreign funding is certainly a cause for celebration and marks the hopeful onset of brighter horizons owing to our massive population; we have incredible potential for growth within us,” said SI Global CEO Noman Ahmed Said while talking to The Express Tribune.

Fintech - an amalgamation of finance and technology to enhance and automate financial processes, in particular - has brought in a significant chunk of this funding.

“Pakistan’s fintech wave is just starting,” remarked TAG Innovation Founder and CEO Talal Gondal as the Islamabad-based startup announced $5.5 million in seed funding to become the country’s first digital bank.

During the recent Pakistan Startup Cup - Pakistan’s largest startup competition, an app for moms called “Scaryammi” took home the grand prize. Second place went to a building visualisation company, ‘mimAR’, and third went to an AI-based career counselling tool for high-school students called ‘MeraFuture’.

All the momentum led investor Khailee Ng to conclude earlier this year, “There will be unicorns from Pakistan”.

“With this newfound funding, we must collectively focus on bringing Pakistan at par with the Western world,” added Said. “There is absolutely no doubt that Pakistan is positively brimming with talent.”

He was of the view that as leading professionals in the tech world, it was up to them to revolutionise Pakistan’s technological landscape by honing this talent, guiding and shaping it.

“This work should begin at the university level; final projects and thesis submission should focus on upbringing creativity and new ideas that may be brought to life with support from the likes of us,” the CEO added.

The tech expert stated that IT manufacturing, in particular, should be an area of focus and encouraged by local education boards so that locally manufactured products may begin to be employed.

“Pakistan faces a severe shortage in terms of tech manufacturing and hence, it is important to maintain international standards of quality,” he emphasised.

While giving suggestions, he said that the government and State Bank of Pakistan could also encourage IT manufacturing initiatives by handing grants to the deserving projects and supporting technology companies in their efforts.

Exports of information and communication technology (ICT) and telecommunication services from Pakistan grew by an astounding 46% in the first 10 months of 2020-21 compared to the same period of last fiscal year.

“Pakistan is set to make about $2 billion from its IT exports,” he said, adding that this was also due to the facilitation and keen interest of the government in the expansion of this sector.

In comparison, India witnessed the highest-ever exports in the first quarter of financial year 2021-22 and recorded over $50 billion in tech exports. It was the world’s second-largest exporter, he said. “Keeping these statistics in mind, we must rise to the challenge and work on expansion so that we too become prominent in the tech world,” he said.
 
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Pakistani startups on a roll as they rake in $120 million in first half of 2021
Mutaher Khan | Natasha UderaniUpdated 02 Jul, 2021 02:46pm

Recent flurry of foreign investors has helped increase round sizes significantly as 20 of the 35 deals were worth more than $1m.

The first half of 2021 has proven to be stellar for Pakistani startups. According to data compiled by Data Darbaar, total investment into the country's ecosystem crossed $120 million across 35 unique deals.

This figure is almost twice as much as the $66 million registered during the whole of 2020, when 48 deals were recorded.

Activity was mainly led by the e-commerce sector which cumulatively bagged more than $42m across 11 deals in the first six months of the current year, surpassing the $11.2m recorded during all of 2020.

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This marks a shift from the domination of transport and logistics which had led the investment value in each of the last two years.

Aside from the Series B of Jabberwock Ventures — the parent company of Cheetay and Swyft — which was never officially disclosed but is reported to be around $20m, Tajir recorded the biggest deal worth $17m at Series A.

The e-commerce sector's ascent to the funding leaderboard from second position came on the back of a handful of business to business (B2B) startups working towards digitising the retail supply chain, or what the i2i Insights calls DukanTech.

It was these players that raked in the overwhelming majority of the money at $36.6m, making up 87 per cent of the sector’s total.

All five of them — Bazaar, Retailo, Tajir, Salesflo and Dastgyr — had raised a combined $6.2m in 2020, thus representing a surge of almost six times in less than a year.

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Grocerapp, which operates in the direct to consumer segment, also secured $5.2m earlier in June.

Fintech too finally lived up to the buzz that surrounds it, at least as far as fundraising is concerned, as it raked in close to $32m during the period under review.

The major drivers here were Sadapay’s $7.2m and TAG’s $5.5m among electronic money Institutions while trading platforms Seedlabs and KTrade bagged $6.4m and $4.5m, respectively.

In comparison, the entirety of 2020 had seen $9.6m poured into the sector, almost single-handedly contributed by Finja’s $9m, which added another $1.15m from Habib Bank Ltd in 2021 to finally close its Series A round.

More than half of the deals came at the seed stage while six were Series A. Unlike 2020, which saw 10 Pre-Series A, only one such round has been recorded so far.

City-wise, Karachi continued to top the charts with 21 deals under its belt worth roughly $48.4m. On the other hand, Lahore led in terms of value if Jabberwock’s investment is included.

As far as founder demographics are concerned, there was hardly any noticeable change since around 97pc of the total capital went to male-founded startups across 27 deals.

Only two were entirely led by women while six had women as co-founders. Similarly, 86pc of the investment went towards startups that had at least one foreign-educated founder.

On the supply side of money, the first half of 2021 saw the participation of 88 unique institutional investors of which 65 were international.

Venture capital firms naturally dominated the overall tally at 53 while the number of corporates was 10. The remaining were either traditional or blockchain-focused investment companies, private equity or syndicates.

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The period also saw the entry of some major global names into the Pakistani ecosystem, most notably Kleiner Perkins which has invested in more than 1,200 startups to date and boasts at least 17 unicorns, including Instacart.

The recent flurry of foreign investors has helped increase the round sizes significantly, which can be gauged from the fact that 20 of the 35 deals were worth more than $1m.

At least 15 of these had one or more foreign lead investors. However, as far as the deal count is concerned, Fatima Gobi Ventures was the most active with four investments.

Sarmayacar, Global Founders Capital and i2i Ventures closely followed with three deals each.


@Goenitz @SQ8 @krash @Imran Khan @PAKISTANFOREVER @PanzerKiel @VCheng
 
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The period also saw the entry of some major global names into the Pakistani ecosystem, most notably Kleiner Perkins which has invested in more than 1,200 startups to date and boasts at least 17 unicorns, including Instacart.

If the government can continue to encourage such startups, Pakistan will be well-placed to take advantage of the digital transition to help move some aspects of its economy into the 21st century. Good progress thus far.
 
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