DT Next

Innovation precedes regulation: Pontaq Partner

- HEMAMALINI VENKATRAMA­N

CHENNAI: Pontaq is a UK-registered venture capital fund with a sectoral focus on fintech, emerging tech (such as IoT, AR/VR, AI, Blockchain) and smartcitie­s.

It is now launching its UK India Innovation Fund 3 (UIIF 3) to expand its scope of opportunit­ies. The entity has a corpus of 50 million pounds, constituti­ng Pontaq’s broader strategy of increasing its assets under management to 500 million pounds soon.

Since 2015, it has been capitalisi­ng on the massive opportunit­y of innovation exchange between the UK and India, says Mahesh Ramachandr­an, Partner – India. Started as a five-million pound fund, it is on the verge of attaining the 10 million pound mark. It has invested in 11 companies so far, including three in TN – at money, Max Byte and Kritilabs. In an interview with DTNext, he shares insights on new gen tech ventures and the rationale of investing in such companies. Excerpts:

We are essentiall­y in the broad space of banking, where we see tremendous opportunit­ies. For instance, the neo-banking or tech-enabled banks offer such possibilit­ies. Lending is turning into an interestin­g space, especially with Chennai having some of the credit storing companies, including innovative ones like PayPal. Trading remittance, robo advisory and wealth advisory are part of the open banking landscape. From a global perspectiv­e, the fintech companies are disrupting the space. They will change the experience of banking given their ability to pull informatio­n from multiple banks. This enables a portfolio view, which, in the next few years, will provide a different benefit system to customers. Even if a person has an account with one bank and chooses to apply for loan from another one, the transfer of data from one bank to another bank through huge data, the State Bank of India, for example can do remarkable things. Their announceme­nt to stop debit cards has opened up new vistas. Just like mobile disruption dealt the death knell to landline, this technology will eliminate the intermedia­ries (issuer, acquirer) thereby simplifyin­g the transactio­ns.

Most fintech start-ups are good in technology, possibly good in user interface in terms of presenting solution on their website, but they need to have a ‘go to market’

the e-way eases up the process. RBI regulation is coming into play in this regard.

Fintech innovation

Next, we see in the impact of wearables in the payment space. The National Payments Corporatio­n of India deserves due credit for all the innovation that they have done. Now, fintech companies will be able to work closely with innovative banks. Obviously, the new gen banks are ahead of curve compared to certain banks by offering customized services at a nominal fee. Large public sector banks must ride the fintech wave. Sitting on

strategy pitch ready besides knowing the ways of raising funds and having a basic understand­ing of finances. B2C is a difficult sell and so, B2B2C is a better way of penetratin­g the market. When it comes to B2B sell itself, training is imperative. This is where the fintech Centre of Excellence ecosystem plays a role wherein mentors are engaged on a regular basis. Onboarding profession­al mentors must be compensate­d for their time and energy. A small shareholdi­ng or compensati­on will pave the way for attracting more such mentors, making hand-holding an impactful exercise.

Leveraging advanced tech

There is a paradigm shift happening and the use of voice-enabled technology only magnifies the role of ‘Alexa’ like business disruption­s. So, it will not be surprising to have local language in a remote place as the gateway to rope in unbanked customers in the country. Amazon, for instance, has a huge R&D centre in Ambattur and with cost of devices coming down, the focus on English language teaching skills including phrase usage correction­s is a reality. Extrapolat­e the same to money transferri­ng process and you will note that security products selling will be picking up. While there is a constant chase between hacking and security, it has to be discerned that sometimes, hackers are ahead of the curve, keeping abreast of developmen­ts. Innovation always precedes regulation. Chit fund, when re-imaging it by taking it online, turns out to be an interestin­g model. Couple of companies like Moneyclub online has reached us for funding and mentoring support. We encourage Indian firms to grow opportunit­ies in the UK and similarly, we have the license for operating funds in the US. Such opportunit­ies lead to cross pollinatio­n between India-UK and UK-US and US-India. We have been approached by British Columbia to come and set up shop there as we see opportunit­ies in VR and augmented reality for a cluster of industries. Firms in those spaces drive innovation and the valuations are high.

Lending is an interestin­g space, especially with Chennai having some of the credit storing companies, including innovative ones like PayPal Mahesh Ramachandr­an, Partner, Pontaq

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India