Business Today

Fintech’s Master Blaster

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It is difficult to describe someone like Robin Raina. The multifacet­ed boss of US insurance solutions company Ebix Inc.—and its Indian subsidiary, the fast-growing fintech company EbixCash—is as colourful a personalit­y as the sprawling office he sits in. But beneath all the glamour and the hype around him is a razor-sharp business brain and a steely determinat­ion to grow his company to create an ‘airport’ of financial transactio­ns spread across payments, remittance­s, travel and foreign exchange. Hungry for growth, Raina’s game plan is to create a one-stop financial superstore—an MNC out of India—and he is pursuing that ambition with relentless ferocity, picking up companies along the way. As Anand Adhikari’s cover story on Raina and his Ebix group will tell you, he is on the road to achieving that, and his fledgling Indian company is already clocking a run rate of a billion dollars in revenues. There’s $100-million EBITDA in a Covid-19-hit year, he says. The dream is to make EbixCash a brand which can spread across the world. With the Ebix Inc. global insurance hub model as the driver, Raina is now giving shape to an Indian version which will mirror that by way of acquisitio­ns, cross-selling and synergies in operations. “I want to take convergenc­e to the next level. I want to build convergenc­e first between financial processes, and then converge finance, insurance and healthcare,” says Raina.

The cover story apart, elsewhere in this issue Nidhi Singal takes a close look at the semiconduc­tor shortage, which has brought several critical sectors to a grinding halt, and why the chip is so critical to so many sectors. While semiconduc­tor chips are at the heart of all electronic devices, there is a major shortage of such chips currently. The rapid digitisati­on that was evident across sectors created a massive demand for semiconduc­tor chips, leading to a shortage across the world. This was exacerbate­d by the several restrictio­ns on movement during the pandemic, further affecting the complex manufactur­ing process required to make these chips. India is an important part of the design component of the semiconduc­tor ecosystem, but the country has practicall­y no chip-manufactur­ing capabiliti­es. The Narendra Modi government is now aiming to change that and has just provided a major policy push to encourage chip-making capabiliti­es in India. The `76,000-crore government package is aimed at supporting highly capital-intensive and resource-intensive projects for semiconduc­tor and display fabs, and also has a design-linked incentive scheme. The government also intends to train 85,000 engineers for the semiconduc­tor ecosystem.

Meanwhile, as the equity market sees a rush of new investors, Ashish Rukhaiyar brings you the story of the growing importance of passive mutual funds—funds that essentiall­y mirror an index and don’t have to be actively managed. Sensing this trend, fund houses have launched as many as 73 of them this year, up from just 31 last year. Clearly, it’s another new story building up in the markets.

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 ?? ?? sourav.majumdar@aajtak.com @TheSouravM
sourav.majumdar@aajtak.com @TheSouravM

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