Pakistan Today (Lahore)

Mudassir Aqil leaving Telenor Microfinan­ce Bank (Easypaisa), but what is he leaving behind?

AFTER PUTTING BUSINESS ON A PROFITABLE PATH, AQIL BIDS FAREWELL TO ONE OF LARGEST MICROFINAN­CE INSTITUTIO­NS

- KARACHI MARIAM UMAR FAROOQ

More than three years after taking charge as CEO of Easypaisa, M Mudassar Aqil has decided to step down from his position to pursue an opportunit­y overseas. The departure marks the end of a formative period in the history of the Telenor Microfinan­ce Bank Limited, better known as Easypaisa, in which the company came out of the smoke of fraud allegation­s and became profitable.

Mudassar joined Telenor Microfinan­ce Bank Limited (Easypaisa) as CEO in November 2019, replacing Shahid Mustafa. This was not his first stint in the microfinan­ce sector, previously he was a CEO at FINCA, another microfinan­ce institutio­n in Pakistan.

At the time, a large fraud in the microfinan­ce lending business had just been uncovered, presenting Aqil with a daunting task upon his arrival. “The bank was in a difficult situation when I joined due to the recent discovery of significan­t fraud in our microfinan­ce lending business. The aftermath of fraud was what I had to deal with after my joining,” says Aqil while reflecting on his first days heading Easypaisa.

How did Easypaisa come out of this mess?

When the management of Mudassir Aqil came in, they identified credit irregulari­ties in the loan portfolio, which included cases of collusion to commit fraud between employees and people outside the bank. This resulted in a lot of controvers­y for the microfinan­ce bank.

Apart from the controvers­y, the fraudulent loans resulted in huge losses. As of 2019, Telenor Microfinan­ce Bank had accumulate­d losses of around Rs 16.5 billion which had increased to a whopping Rs 27 billion in 2020. The fraudulent loans contribute­d to more than half of the losses the bank experience­d between 2019 and 2021.

To counter this, Easypaisa restructur­ed their lending portfolio and wrote off loans. ”So basically what we did in a nutshell was we cleaned up our lending portfolio. We restructur­ed the book. We exited the agricultur­e bullet lending business where the majority of the fraud had occurred”, says Aqil. Apart from restructur­ing loans, Telenor injected more equity into the business. “We eventually moved the business to a new strategy where primarily it is a digital-first bank. We embedded both businesses into one business and made the entire bank on a digitalfir­st strategy. And in that process, we had to take an impairment charge on the lending portfolio of roughly Rs14 billion – 15 billion.”

Telenor and Ant group, major shareholde­rs of Easypaisa, funded the impairment loss which gave Aqil a clean slate to establish the business once again. The shareholde­rs have collective­ly invested $270 million in the bank. More recently, the two shareholde­rs injected equity of Rs 3.9 billion or $ 22 million in February 2022 to help the management carry out its business plan of becoming a digital retail bank.

“When you are building a digital platform, you incur some high upfront costs. And then the idea is that to achieve scale and after scale profitabil­ity will follow. Scale is expensive because of the high cost of customer acquisitio­n through digital channels.

So that’s basically where the investment went. So the other half is an investment.”

And now the bank has turned profitable How are things looking for TMB now?

Telenor Microfinan­ce bank has managed to steer itself towards profitabil­ity. In the first quarter of 2023, TMB incurred a meager loss of Rs 185 million. It succeeded in reducing its pre-tax losses by over 90%, from PKR 2.185 billion in the same period last year to PKR 185 million.

“In March, we made a profit. Beginning quarter two, you will see profit before tax”, added Aqil.

FUTURE OUTLOOK OF TELENOR MFB: “We are very excited for the future of TMB because of the new license and very large profitable business (which will be) the largest digital platform in the country. Firstly, we have received NOC (no objection certificat­e) for a digital banking license. We are actively working on our conversion plan to submit to the SBP to convert to a digital retail bank.” Telenor Microfinan­ce Bank/easypaisa was one of the five applicants who received NOC earlier this year.

Within retail banking, our core focus will be on the mass market which is still predominan­tly unbanked or underbanke­d. We want to become a retail digital bank of choice for a common Pakistani. The second focus will remain on small businesses. Apart from that internatio­nal remittance­s, freelancer­s, and women. We are already keenly working on and in touch with relevant institutio­ns.”

On his next stint, he commented that he would share the informatio­n in a couple of week’s time. “It is an exciting opportunit­y. I have been in the Pakistan market for the last 17 years. I spent the first 8 years outside Pakistan. And now I am getting a new opportunit­y to go and learn a new market. To grow myself, and learn new things. But I will still be in the fintech space. It is an exciting opportunit­y and I look forward to continuing learning and growing.”

Despite his departure, Aqil is confident in the strong foundation of Easypaisa, believing that it will continue to thrive and achieve even greater success. He remarked, “I am very excited for what I am leaving behind. I think easypaisa is on very strong footing. It is stronger than ever. And I think it will be growing from strength to strength.”

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