Arab News

Google backs UK-based payments company Currencycl­oud

- FRANK KANE | SPECIAL TO ARAB NEWS Spurt in non-oil activity IMF way off course

THERE is a genuine debate going on about Saudi Arabia’s economic prospects this year, but the momentum is with the upside. That is the message from recent research based on the latest economic and financial data. It is a crucial time for the Kingdom, with the first full year of the National Transforma­tion Program (NTP) 2020 well underway and the oil price strategy apparently delivering the goods. How it goes in the next few months will to a large degree determine whether the economic transforma­tion forges ahead full steam or whether it will be constraine­d and modified by economic circumstan­ces.

Just over the past week, there have been conflictin­g assessment­s delivered by various authoritat­ive bodies. On the one hand, data for January from the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA) showed that credit provision by banks to private sector businesses has remained subdued, after very weak growth in 2016.

This is obviously a negative indicator. Companies need credit to expand and invest, and consumers need it to fund purchases. Weak credit markets could add to deflationa­ry pressures — the last thing policymake­rs need as they seek to increase the proportion of gross domestic product (GDP) coming from the non-oil sector.

But to claim, as one report did, that this shows “the economy struggling as lending growth slumps,” is stretching it too far. The SAMA figures were essentiall­y a snapshot of the financial position in January and do not amount to an economic forecast.

Financial statistics only go so far in telling you about the real economy. To get the full picture, you need to cast the statistica­l net wider.

Capital Economics (CapEcon), the Londonbase­d consultanc­y that has a reputation for comprehens­ive economic research and for “telling it like it is,” has been doing some serious number crunching in recent weeks. First it did a detailed study of the purchasing managers’ index (PMI) figures for the first month, then a study on the prospects for a deflationa­ry dip in the Kingdom.

Both were actually rather positive for the economic outlook this year. The PMIs were the best for some time, indicating a spurt in non-oil activity and there is only a very small chance of fullscale deflation and recession later this year.

Now CapEcon has followed with another update, building on the first two. Because Saudi GDP figures are quite slow in being released — data for the fourth quarter of 2016 will not be out until NEW YORK: Alphabet Inc’s venture arm has invested in Currencycl­oud, a UK startup that provides technology to enable businesses to provide cross-border payments services to their customers.

GV, formerly Google Ventures, participat­ed in a $25 million investment round in Currencycl­oud alongside existing investors Notion Capital Ltd, Sapphire Ventures LLC, Japanese technology company Rakuten Inc. and venture capital firm Anthemis Group, the payments company said on Thursday.

The cash injection, which brings the total raised by Currencycl­oud to $61 million, will be used to support the company’s global expansion plans, the company said.

“We just opened up in the US and that requires a lot more developmen­t,” said Mike Laven, Currencycl­oud’s chief executive officer. “We are also seeing tremen- later this month — CapEcon calculates its own GDP “tracker.” This tells a rather different story than the reports based on the SAMA figures.

“The Saudi economy strengthen­ed in the fourth quarter as the drag from fiscal austerity eased,” said CapEcon’s Middle East economist Jason Tuvey. True, headline GDP will slow in the first half as oil production cuts continue to have an effect. “But we think the consensus and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) are now overly pessimisti­c on growth over 2017 as a whole,” Tuvey said.

In January, the IMF slashed its forecast for Saudi growth to a meager 0.4 percent in 2017, from an earlier prediction of 2 percent. But once again, it looks as though the perpetual pessimists at the IMF are way off course.

The “tracker” suggests growth at around 3.5 percent in November and December, a big leap from the 1.5 percent estimated for the first nine months. Oil growth was robust at higher prices, while the non-oil economy recovered from a slump last winter, CapEcon says.

This non-oil bounce-back is set to continue this year. The December budget suggests that the period of austerity in the wake of the oil-price crash is over and there has been an upturn in new constructi­on contracts as some bills are finally being paid.

It is not all undiluted good news, CapEcon recognizes. Credit conditions can only remain subdued if the US Federal Reserve’s program of increasing interest rates is maintained this year, as most experts predict. This will have a knock-on effect for consumer spending and cash in the economy via ATM withdrawal­s.

The oil price, of course, remains the crucial variable. Saudi Arabia actually cut more than it was obliged to under the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries’ (OPEC) agreement last November, so there is some leeway it could use there. There is also the option to extend the cuts until the end of the year, decreasing production but maintainin­g prices.

All in all, CapEcon thinks the Saudi GDP will grow by 1 percent this year, significan­tly better than the IMF forecast or the economists’ overall consensus of 0.5 percent. In the circumstan­ces, that represents a “glass half full” for Saudi policymake­rs as they advance plans for the Kingdom’s ongoing economic transforma­tion. Frank Kane is an award-winning business journalist based in Dubai. He can be reached on Twitter @frankkaned­ubai dous interest from Asia broadly.”

Launched in 2012 Currencycl­oud’s platform allows companies ranging from banks to popular payments startups to offer internatio­nal payments services without having to set up complex and costly cross-border infrastruc­ture.

Clients include Swedish payments business Klarna Inc, lender Standard Bank Group, foreign exchange company Travelex Ltd. and startups Azimo and Revolut. Around $25 billion has been sent through the company’s infrastruc­ture to more than 200 countries to date.

Laven said Google was attracted to Currencycl­oud because it saw it as a company that provided computer developers tools to add crossborde­r payment functional­ity to their services.

“Google looked at us as a tool that is used in globalizin­g domestic businesses,” Laven said.

Currencycl­oud’s funding round comes following a drop in venture capital investment­s in UK financial technology startups in 2016, as the country’s decision in June to leave the EU raised concerns on the prospects of local businesses.

UK-based fintech companies raised $783 million from venture capitalist­s last year, down 33.7 percent from 2015, according to a report by trade group Innovate Finance. Funding of US fintech startups also dropped by 12.7 percent to $6.2 billion, according to the Innovate Finance Report.

Laven said the company saw business drop in the months following the Brexit referendum, but that it has been “business as usual” since September. The company was prepared to seek a license to operate in the EU were that to become necessary after the UK formally leaves the bloc, Laven added.

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