Khaleej Times

Indian firms eye DIFC for growth opportunit­ies

- Staff Report

dubai — Dubai Internatio­nal Financial Centre (DIFC) is attracting a number of Indian financial services related firms, making it the destinatio­n of choice for them to access the region. This was reaffirmed during a special event where DIFC hosted a number of top-tier consultanc­y firms from India on Wednesday to further reinforcin­g the financial centre’s strong ties with the country.

DIFC’s links to India are already strong. From hosting just one financial institutio­n in 2007, DIFC is now home to many Indian firms. DIFC’s 2024 strategy aims for even further growth, and has ambitious plans to attract more Indian banks, financial institutio­ns and firms operating out of the centre.

A number of recent developmen­ts are evidence of DIFC’s strengthen­ing position in terms of Indian business and finance. UTI Internatio­nal, India’s largest asset manager, has just set up its latest fund in DIFC.

“We found that DIFC offers a comprehens­ive ecosystem required for a thriving asset management business — a world class regulator and a plethora of administra­tors, law firms, accounting firms and availabili­ty of talent,” Praveen Jagwani, CEO of UTI Internatio­nal said.

Price incentives

Current pricing incentives are designed to attract more Indian and other asset managers to Dubai, the largest fund regime in the region.

Recent changes to domestic regulation­s in India, and the India-Mauritius tax treaty, mean that Indian asset managers are seeking alternativ­e fund juristicti­ons. DIFC’s vibrant ecosystem, coupled with its efforts to improve ease of business and an enabling Qualified Investor Funds regime, has seen significan­t interest from Indian asset managers.

Recently, Kotak Mahindra Bank and Federal Bank upgraded their representa­tive office status in DIFC to Category 1 Licence, with HDFC Life and Axis Bank, the third largest of the private-sector banks in India, also strengthen­ing their operations in the centre. DIFC is also home to leading Indian banks, financial institutio­ns and fund managers including ICICI Bank, IDBI Bank, Punjab National Bank, Union Bank of India, State Bank of India, IIFL Private Wealth Management, L&T Capital Markets Limited and Aditya Birla

We are living in an era where UAE-India ties are accelerati­ng Salmaan Jaffery, chief business developmen­t officer at DIFC Authority

Sun Life Asset Management Company Limited.

“We are living in an era where UAE-India ties are accelerati­ng. With 2.6 million Indian expats living in the UAE, 26,000 Indian firms and over 40,000 UAE-based firms owned by non-resident Indians, the bond between the UAE and India is already strong,” Salmaan Jaffery, chief business developmen­t officer at DIFC Authority, said.

Strong relations

DIFC has also recently signed two separate MoUs — with Gujarat Internatio­nal Finance Tec-City (GIFT), India’s first financial services centre, and Mumbai Metropolit­an Region Developmen­tal Authority (MMRDA), an urban town planning and developmen­t authority establishe­d by the Maharashtr­a state government. Both MoUs provide for the sharing of knowledge and internatio­nal best practice.

These developmen­ts come against a backdrop of strengthen­ed ties and co-operation between the two countries, with 14 wide-ranging, bilateral agreements signed in January this year.

“Indian institutio­ns make up the third largest community of financial firms in DIFC, behind the US and UK, and DIFC is the ideal platform for Indian businesses and institutio­ns as it offers political and financial stability, an investor-friendly setting, strong regulation and an English common law base,” Jaffery said.

“DIFC is an important link for India in the South-South corridor, connecting the subcontine­nt to Africa and Central Asia. There is a huge opportunit­y for Indian firms looking to conduct business in DIFC,” he added.

— business@khaleejtim­es.com

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