Business Standard

Indian-origin bizman helps banks open remote branches for $150

The start-up has acquired more than 30 client banks and financial institutio­ns across Africa and Southeast Asia

- GURDIP SINGH

An Indian-origin banker was so consumed by the idea of making banking accessible for the unbanked that he poured his entire life savings into a start-up in Singapore that enables banks to set up branches in remote locations for just $150.

Ram Sharma, a permanent resident in Singapore, and a veteran in the banking sector, having worked with Centurion Bank in India and Bank Albilad in Saudi Arabia, and his friend Ragu Nandan, set up a fintech startup in 2016.

Based in Singapore, Bank-genie develops digital solutions that enables banks to overcome prohibitiv­e costs to set up branches in remote locations and make banking accessible to unbanked population­s, according to the Today tabloid.

The germ of this idea took root in Sharma’s mind during a relatively mundane road trip he undertook in south India seven years ago.

Sharma and his friend found themselves travelling for about 100 km just to find an ATM.

“It struck me, why do ATMS remain here (in this town)? After this, there are villages where there are people living but there are no ATMS. Why should it be like that?” The Today tabloid quoted the 50-year-old as saying.

Sharma poured his entire savings and “mortgaged everything else”, except the roof over his head, to raise over a million dollars to fund the company.

Bank-genie offers solutions that allow a bank to open branches and provide a suite of financial services with just “a tablet and a small Bluetooth printer and the card reader”, Sharma said in an interview with the tabloid.

“Nothing more than that, and this will cost you around $150 to start a branch,” he quipped.

In 2017, fintech managed to secure an undisclose­d amount in a Series A funding backed by two key institutio­nal investors: SBI Holdings Group, a Japan-based conglomera­te that was spun-out of Softbank, and the Dutch developmen­t bank FMO.

Such was the affordabil­ity of Bank-genie’s solution that Sierra Leone Commercial Bank, one of the largest commercial banks in the West African nation, was able to set up 600 branches in 90 days, including in remote areas — “somewhere up the mountains, somewhere in the valleys,” he said.

In less than five years, Bank-genie has ramped up its presence in Central Asian countries such as Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan as well as in Kazakhstan, where Sharma almost got stranded around two years ago when borders started closing due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The start-up has acquired more than 30 client banks and financial institutio­ns across Africa and Southeast Asia, with 13 banks in the Philippine­s alone.

Scaling up its solutions took considerab­le effort, said Sharma, as the product built and installed for one bank cannot be replicated in another. “Each country has its own requiremen­ts. There are statutory requiremen­ts, there are compliance things which need to be met,” he was quoted saying.

“Some countries have regulation­s like customer data cannot reside outside the country due to privacy, so on and so forth. So banking is an animal which needs to suit each country differentl­y,” Sharma observed.

The start-up worked closely from the onset with the central bank of each country it stepped into. Sharma said that while the pandemic had scuppered some of his firm’s expansion plans, it also presented opportunit­ies.

With more than 40 staff globally, the Singapore-headquarte­red start-up has chalked up revenues to the tune of $3.1 million for the financial year ending March 2022, up from $840,000 during the previous financial year, Sharma added.

Ram Sharma’s start-up allows banks to provide financial services with just a tablet, a small Bluetooth printer, and a card reader

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India