The National - News

Fierce competitio­n among UAE’s remittance big three

Juan Bianchi, the global chief executive and president of Ria Money Transfer, a major global money transfer firm, which is expanding in India, talks to The National about the market when it comes to the flows of money being remitted from the UAE to India.

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QWhat is the main trend in terms of the remittance flows from the UAE to the Indian market?

A Actually it has decreased yearover-year from the prior year to the last year. It’s one of the few years that has happened and it’s directly related to the oil crisis. You see the oil prices drop and that economy slowed down a little bit.

That gets reflected in that there are less jobs, constructi­on slows down, so there are less jobs, less remittance­s.

What are your expansion plans for India and the UAE?

For the UAE, we have two handfuls of partners there, and over the next three years we would like to see that doubled in terms of partnershi­ps we would onboard. Here in India, we should see an accelerati­on of growth because of a new tie-up in India with partners. We’re working on the trends that we see in terms of digital technologi­es and digital wallets, that maybe today they are not as relevant in the market, but that we recognise will be important a few years down the road. Also, we have an aggressive expansion plan to onboard remittance­s in India in the rest of the world.

Is there a lot of competitio­n among money transfer firms in these markets?

In the UAE, there is a lot of competitio­n. You have three players in the value chain – the agent, the money transfer organisati­on, and then the payer. Many of the agents in the UAE share the same money transfer organisati­on, so there is competitio­n among the agents of who drives the customer into their business, but it’s all processed by one big player, so what we are doing is bringing competitio­n at the money transfer organisati­on level.

What are the biggest challenges you are facing?

There’s one big challenge we’re all seeing as an industry that has to do with bank de-risking which is driven from compliance. It’s called for, to be honest, because it’s very important that money transfer organisati­ons have a proper compliance programme, so regulators all over the world have been putting pressure on the industry.

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