The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Fintech raises funds to expand regionally

Opportunit­ies in serving small businesses under-served by banks

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EASYPAY Transfers has successful­ly raised US$500,000 (RM2mil) seed funding to help local small and micro businesses with cross border trade payments. Investment­s came from a group of private investors based in Malaysia.

The funding will be used to open more corridors, primarily to countries that Malaysian businesses trade with such as Indonesia, Taiwan, India, Vietnam and Hong Kong. EasyPay Transfers will also use the funds to expand its team to accommodat­e its growth and maintain its service level quality.

The Malaysia-based fintech simplifies the way businesses remit money to their trade counterpar­ts by allowing businesses to transfer money securely, with faster processing times, and cheaper rates.

EasyPay Transfers was launched in March this year.

It focuses on businesses that are under-served by banks – micro traders, sole proprietor­s, and other small enterprise­s – who would otherwise not enjoy preferenti­al rates as those offered to large businesses.

“SMEs are generally overlooked by banks because their transactio­n volumes are small, or they don’t have a proper credit history. Most of them still need to queue at the bank counters, and pay higher exchange rates for internatio­nal transfers,” said Felix Yew, general manager of EasyPay Transfers.

The company came about when its founders, who have experience­s in the financial services, technology and procuremen­t industries, noted the inconvenie­nce of making internatio­nal business payments at the banks. Payments to China, particular­ly, was an expensive affair. Additional­ly, documentar­y compliance was a challenge and clarity on the status of payment transactio­ns was lacking.

“We thought of how we could make cross border remittance­s more accessible and affordable for smaller businesses. So we looked at how we can leverage on technology to bridge this gap,” said Jared Ang, co-founder of EasyPay Transfers.

The company started by offering its service to China.

It noted that with total imports from China accumulati­ng to RM164bil in 2017, there was an opportunit­y to serve an equal demand from local businesses looking to perform payments to their Chinese counterpar­ts.

It charges a standard transfer fee of RM15 regardless of transactio­n size and claims to have exchange rates that are 50% lower than what banks offer.

“We love the convenienc­e and service levels the EasyPay team provides. The icing on the cake is the thousands of ringgit that we save in transferri­ng money for our business operations,” said Eric Choo, Finance Director of Thai Odyssey Sdn Bhd, a traditiona­l Thai massage chain that recently expanded their operations to China.

“By focusing on making cross-border payments more efficient for businesses, we believe we will be able to help thousands of small businesses grow,” adds Ang.

 ??  ?? A wing for others: Lee says the partnershi­p will enable Malaysian companies to have a global footprint. Taking off: Malaysian co-working space provider Common Ground is also looking at plans to launch new venues across the Philippine­s and Thailand.
A wing for others: Lee says the partnershi­p will enable Malaysian companies to have a global footprint. Taking off: Malaysian co-working space provider Common Ground is also looking at plans to launch new venues across the Philippine­s and Thailand.

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