Arab News

Transferwi­se aims to help Gulf expats send cash home

UK tech startup, which serves 6 million customers worldwide, gets license to operate from Abu Dhabi

- Sean Cronin London

A UK-based money transfer companies aims to slash the cost of sending cash home for hundreds of thousands of expatriate­s across the Arab world.

Transferwi­se is targeting the multi-billion dollar Middle East money transfer market with a new hub planned for Abu Dhabi that aims to offer an alternativ­e to sometimes costly bank transfers. UK-based Transferwi­se, started in 2011 by Estonian entreprene­urs 2011 Kristo Käärmann and Taavet

Hinrikus, processes remittance­s by using two local transfers instead of one internatio­nal one — avoiding expensive banking fees. “Money transfers from dirhams have long been one of our most wished for currencies, so we always knew we’d begin our expansion into the Middle East in the Emirates,” said Kristo Käärmann, CEO and co-founder of TransferWi­se. “The latest World Bank data shows an uptick in the cost of sending money from the Middle East, and there’s such a strong expat community locally who desperatel­y need a better way to manage their money across borders.”

The company has been granted a license to bring its money transfer platform to the UAE and its local unit will be regulated by the Abu Dhabi Global Market Financial Services Regulatory Authority, it said in a statement on Tuesday.

The company, which serves 6 million customers worldwide, claims to offer money transfers that are up to eight times cheaper the banks in its biggest markets. It processes $5 billion in customer payments every month and it says that 25 percent of its internatio­nal transfers are instant.

The company reported revenues of £179 million in the fiscal year ending March 2019, and net profits of £10.3 million. Its backers include Richard Branson and PayPal.

The lion’s share of Gulf outward remittance­s head to South Asia. Global remittance­s to South Asia grew 12 percent to $131 billion in 2018, according to World Bank data. That compared to 6 percent growth in 2017.

“The upsurge was driven by stronger economic conditions in the US and a pick-up in oil prices, which had a positive impact on outward remittance­s from some

GCC countries,” said the World Bank’s latest Migration and Developmen­t Brief.

It estimated that officially recorded annual remittance flows to low- and middle-income countries reached $529 billion in 2018. Global remittance­s, which include flows to high-income countries, reached $689 billion in 2018, up from $633 billion in 2017.

However, the global average cost of sending $200 remained high, at around 7 percent in the first quarter of 2019, according to the World Bank’s Remittance Prices Worldwide database.

 ??  ?? Kristo Käärmann
Kristo Käärmann

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