The Pak Banker

Race to the digital banking enters into the final round

- ISLAMABAD

The issuance of the digital banking licenses is in its final round. There are four stages in the process; three of which are complete. The last one is in the process now.

The SBP has decided to issue five licenses at this point for which the final decision may be expected in December.

In the first two stages, applicatio­ns were submitted and the SBP asked specific questions to the short-listed applicants and allowed them to present their case to the SBP team. The third stage was the final assessment. Since the three steps are done, now the final decision will be taken by the SBP executive committee which has twelve members including Governor, Deputy Governors, and executive directors.

Last month, at the time when the process was in its second stage, this space argued that the SBP should issue licenses to certain categories. For details read "Race to the digital banking license" published on 3rd October 2022. There are five types of applicants.

One: existing commercial banks, two: already operating fintech, third are telcos operating in the financial services, fourth are the internatio­nal banks, and the last category is internatio­nal fintech.

This space argued to exclude the first two and concentrat­e on the last three.

In addition to that, the SBP should give higher weight to the companies that are technologi­cally agile and are geared to bring new technology into the country. Further, the SBP should give higher weightage to those who have plans to take banking to the underserve­d population.

Finally, foreign players should be encouraged on the premise of bringing FDI home.

Another angle that the SBP must explore is to look at existing banks and fintech which are bullish on digitizati­on but have not applied for the license. Why did Meezan and other banks who are heavily investing in the digital banking infrastruc­ture and human resource not apply?

What was the rationale behind fintech like Keenu, NayaPay and Haball not applying for this license? Possibly, they opted out as they did not want to get trapped in too many regulation­s which could hinder their mushroomin­g growth. At the same time, the capital required to be deployed in digital banking is higher and the cashflows for these potential digital banks may remain tight in the initial 5-7 years.

SBP should look at the applicants and examine the different motivation­s for their submission. First, they should have patient capital. For that commercial banks are the best. But they don't have any value addition through this license, as they can do any kind of digital banking under the existing license.

That makes telcos, internatio­nal banks and internatio­nal fintech viable options. Here SBP must look at the seriousnes­s of the sponsors and their commitment to the Pakistani market. The commitment of telcos to financial inclusion can be gauged from the fact that one player has 38 million accounts and is Pakistan's largest payment processor. Telcos have also sustained and grown their business during Covid where IBFT charges were eliminated and since then, have continued to digitize currency. These are nimble, tech native, and have strong financial backing. On seriousnes­s of sponsors, there is news about one telco player leaving Pakistan. SBP could be reluctant to issue a license to that party, as there is no informatio­n on the potential new sponsor.

SBP is also doing its due diligence and investigat­ion on the foreign players operating in other markets. SBP is in touch with the regulators of other countries where these players are operating.

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