Business Standard

Four platforms get IFSCA licence for factoring business at Gift City

- RAJESH BHAYANI

The Internatio­nal Financial Services Centres Authority (IFSCA), the sole regulator of the Gift City-based Internatio­nal Financial Service Centre, has issued licences to four trade-financing platforms to tap the €2,724-billion internatio­nal factoring business.

The supply chain finance potential in global trade is $17 trillion.

Indian-licensed trade-financing platforms, or TREDS (trade and receivable­s discountin­g system) platforms, use blockchain for checking bills submitted for discountin­g and they may be tested and used for Gift city ventures as well. However, this is not mandatory from the IFSCA point of view but entities coming up at the IFSC are contemplat­ing the use of blockchain.

These in-principle licences were issued by the IFSCA last Friday to start working through sandbox facilities before formal business.

India’s two Rbi-licensed TREDS platforms —M1xchange and RXIL —have got the licence. Two others are Kredex and Vayana, which are service providers for bill discountin­g and related facilities offered by banks. These platforms will enable exporters and importers to avail themselves of trade-finance facilities such as export and import factoring, reverse factoring, supply chain financing, and forfaiting transactio­ns at competitiv­e terms.

According to the Mckinsey Global Payments Report 2020, the supply chain finance potential in global trade is $17 trillion. The IFSCA had released a framework for setting up and operating an internatio­nal trade finance services platform (ITFS) in July. The licensee will have to use the sandbox facility proposed by the regulator, which will help them test programmes before the formal

launch. These entities are expected to go live in the first or second quarter of next financial year.

M1xchange is planning a 100 per cent subsidiary for the IFSC business.

Sundeep Mohindru, chief executive, said: “The initial confidence of banks and buyers/sellers will have to be won to solve their financing needs. Global banks outside India and banks based out of GIFT City will be able to undertake financing on the ITFS.” “M1xchange TREDS currently uses blockchain for dedupe checks on financing invoices for domestic transactio­ns. The discussion­s will be undertaken with partner to replicate this for the ITFS.”

India has huge potential to increase domestic as well as export financing facilities like factoring and so on. According to a parliament­ary report, France's factoring business share is 18.3 of GDP, the UK ’s 17.3 per cent, China’s 3.2 per cent, Brazil’s 4.1 per cent, and India’s 0.2 per cent.

Even online platforms such as TREDS have huge potential to provide financing at competitiv­e rates. As of now, exporters discount their receivable­s with banks they deal with but if organised platforms can provide these facilities, the cost of discountin­g will be lower due to competitio­n.

Ketan Gaikwad, managing director and CEO, RXIL, said: “The ITFS has the capability to open the door for internatio­nal trade financing through price discovery mechanisms on the platform at internatio­nally competitiv­e rates. This will be of benefit to exporters and importers of India as well as other internatio­nal jurisdicti­ons.”

“The ITFS framework would facilitate exporters and importers to avail themselves of various types of trade finance at competitiv­e terms,” said Dipesh Shah, head of developmen­t, Internatio­nal Financial Services Centres Authority.

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