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Findi’s ringing up profit thanks to India’s love of cash

- Tim Boreham

Cash here is becoming like the orange-bellied parrot – highly endangered – despite the folding stuff continuing to be the preferred transactio­nal means of many tradies and their customers.

From this month, Macquarie Bank went completely cashless while Linfox Group’s cash-lugging Armaguard is struggling.

But in India, cash rules the Raj, for cultural and practical reasons.

The opportunit­y is not lost on the ASX-listed Findi (ASX:FND), one of India’s biggest ATM operators with wider ambitions to become a fullyfledg­ed digital bank within three years.

“There are 350 million Indians who don’t have bank accounts and another 350 million people with bank accounts who don’t use them regularly,” said Findi chairman Nicholas Smedley. “So half of the population in effect is unbanked.” Smedley adds that with only 80 million Indians in the tax system, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) was using ATMs to broaden the tax base (ATM customers need a bank account and they thus become traceable).

Findi currently operates 20,000 ATMs in a fragmented market of about 250,000 machines (an 8 per cent share). Of these, 8000 ATMs are Findi-owned and deployed on behalf of banks – including the country’s biggest, the State Bank of India (SBI), and the Central Bank of India.

A further 12,500 are supplied to BTI, India’s biggest whitelabel ATM operator (like those in convenienc­e stores here). “We want that number to increase to 80,000 by this time next year, via organic deployment of new ATMs as well as acquisitio­ns,” Smedley said.

Last month the RBI granted provisiona­l authorisat­ion to Findi’s Indian subsidiary, Transactio­n Solutions Internatio­nal, to own and operate white label ATMs in its own right.

This will enable almost 4000 ATMs deployed with the SBI to be replaced with Findibrand­ed machines.

Smedley says securing the licence is a key pillar in Findi’s quest to become a full transactio­n bank and to participat­e in long-expected industry consolidat­ion.

Findi’s full-year numbers are due this month, but in the first half to September 2023 the company reported a $773,000 net profit, up 350 per cent, on revenue of $31.7m (up 30 per cent).

About 90 per cent of the turnover was derived from a government-determined ATM (interchang­e) fee of 17 rupees – 35 cents – which adds up given there are one billion transactio­ns on the network annually. The $160 million market cap stock is listed on the ASX because it was founded here, but with no local activities a secondary listing on the BSE (formerly Bombay Stock Exchange) beckons.

Findi is a rare ASX pure-play exposure to what’s now the world’s most populous nation.

Blue chips including BHP, ANZ and Wesfarmers have a presence there, but nothing that would move the dial. Other companies with Indian ambitions include wound care house Polynovo (ASX:PNV) and Medtech minnow Memphasys (ASX:MEM), which strives to make the country even more populous with its sperm-selection device.

Betashares’ India Quality ETF (ASX:IIND) offers an allin-one exposure to some of India’s best companies.

This story does not constitute financial product advice. You should consider obtaining independen­t advice before making any financial decisions.

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