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SoftBank, Temasek, Morgan Stanley Keen To Acquire One-Third Stake In FINO

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SUMMARY

The Proposed Deal Will Value The Payments Bank And Fintech Solutions Provider At $308 Mn

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Japanese investment giant SoftBank Group, along with global financial services firm Morgan Stanley and Singapore’s state-run investment firm Temasek, is reportedly eyeing a one-third stake in Financial Information and Network Operations (FINO).

If the deal materialises, it will value the Mumbai-headquartered payments bank and financial technology solutions provider at $308 Mn (INR 2,000 Cr).

As part of the deal, the trio is looking to buy out alternate asset manager Blackstone’s 26% stake in the company. Apart from that, it will also include the acquisition of a 7% holding in FINO through a primary share sale.

Commenting on the development, a source requesting anonymity told ET, “A formal process has been initiated. It’s in the very early stages. Things will take some time to get matured into a concrete transaction.”

An email query sent to SoftBank’s communications team did not elicit a response till the time of publication.

Blackstone will be clocking a four-fold return on its seven-year-old investment in FINO, as part of which it had pumped $23 Mn (INR 150 Cr) back in 2011 against a 26% stake in the company. It is estimated that the American private equity firm will get a return of around $80.1 Mn (INR 520 Cr) and $100.1 Mn (INR 650 Cr) on its exit.

According to people close to the development, Swiss multinational financial services firm Credit Suisse has been entrusted with the task of finding Blackstone a new buyer.

FINO Growth Story: An Overview

Established in 2006 by a consortium of banking and financial services firms such as HSBC Bank, ICICI Bank, ICICI Lombard General Insurance, Corporation Bank, IFMR Trust, Indian Bank, Intel Inc. and Union Bank, FINO provides technology and operational to financial institutions.

Essentially, the company builds integrated technologies that enable financial institutions to reach the underserved and unbanked sector of the country. Overall, FINO’s tech and payments bank businesses boast more than 78 Mn customers in over 20,000 transaction points across 499 districts in 28 states.

The company calls Intel Capital, Headland Capital and International Finance Corporation among its other investors.

In July 2017, Fino Payments Bank was launched as India’s fourth payment bank, a month after it received the RBI’s approval. The bank went live with 410 branches and over 25,000 touch-points on day one, a number it aims to ramp up to over 100K+ in the next three to five years.

With the aim of turning profitable by 2020, the payments bank is gearing up to mobilise deposits worth $1.56 Bn (INR 10,000 Cr) over the next three years by acquiring about 50 Mn customers through a network of 1000 branches.

Headed by Rishi Gupta, Managing Director and CEO, the bank faces competition from other payment banks namely Airtel Payment Bank, Paytm Payments Bank and India Post Payments Bank.

SoftBank, Temasek, Morgan Stanley And Their India Bets

With a $100 Bn vision fund, SoftBank is currently the most active investment firm in India, betting on high-growth Internet and technology startups like Flipkart, Paytm, OYO and cab aggregator Ola.

Other companies in India where SoftBank has invested include startups like Grofers, Snapdeal and Housing. From the Vision Fund, SoftBank has invested in 26 companies so far.

Founder and CEO Masayoshi Son had stated last year that SoftBank was counting big on its largest investments in India, precisely on Flipkart, and Paytm. “Flipkart, India’s number one e-retailer has 60% share in the domestic ecommerce market and is bigger than Amazon India. It is very difficult to see someone who is bigger than Amazon,” commented Son in November last year.

The Japanese Internet and telecom giant SoftBank made gains of $74 Mn (JPY 8,069 Mn) on account of the gain on investments made in companies in Southeast Asia and India in the nine-month period ending in December 2017. The gain was in contrast to the loss of $360 Mn (JPY 39,281 Mn) that it incurred during the corresponding period ending December 2016.

Earlier in January 2018, the investment behemoth was reportedly in talks to acquire a major stake in another fintech company PolicyBazaar at a valuation of $800 Mn.

Temasek, on the other hand, has a $10 Bn exposure in India. Its Indian investment portfolio includes well-known names like Snapdeal, automobile classifieds platform CarTrade and SBI Life. Homegrown cab aggregator Ola is also reportedly in talks with the Singapore-based sovereign wealth fund Temasek and other investors to raise another $500 Mn to $1 Bn in funding.

In India, financial services firm Morgan Stanley has so far invested in Internet companies like Flipkart and microfinance startup Janalakshmi.

As per estimates, India’s fintech software market is expected to reach $2.4 Bn by 2020 from the $1.2 Bn as fo FY16. According to Inc42 Funding Report 2017, more than $3.01 Bn was poured into fintech startups last year across 111 deals.

With an eyeing on the sector’s growing potential, investment giants like SoftBank and Temasek are increasingly looking for ways to strengthen their hold on the country’s fintech market. The proposed FINO deal is, therefore, in line with their aim to gain a controlling stake in the Indian financial technology and services segment.

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