India’s fintech revolution is primed to put banks out of business | TechCrunch (2024)

Abhijit BoseContributor

Abhijit Bose is the founder and CEO of Ezetap.

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While global stock markets reset and U.S. tech unicorns readjust to new expectations and valuations, India’s tech renaissance is just beginning to flourish.

Infosys founder Nandan Nilekani calls it India’s “WhatsApp Moment,” echoing how a simple software solution from Silicon Valley turned the Asian telecommunications industry upside down, making obsolete decades of infrastructure, business models and loyal customer relationships with massive telecom operators.

Just as WhatsApp surpassed all incumbent telecom operators in its messaging scale, financial technology is poised to become the next sector ripe for radical change. In this piece, I’ll explore how a single innovator could surpass the scale of all financial incumbents in all emerging markets combined.

Moreover, I’ll show how this disruption is different from other domestic leapfrog stories in India and China — because if it delivers as promised, India’s fintech revolution will have global repercussions, affecting all publicly traded banks and payment companies by the end of the decade.

Lack of incumbents

Until now, India has been a place where low-cost services and “Fill-in-the-Blank of India” solutions have driven the technology market. While India’s unicorns have innovated successfully, they pose no threat to their international counterparts and competitors.

The Indian fintech story is different. The Indian government has a massive problem with an opaque, cash-based economy that has dominated the country for decades. With the majority of its citizens lacking access to formal banking services, India had nothing to lose by encouraging out-of-the-box innovation that would seem insane to the U.S. financial services establishment.

The only benefit of having poor infrastructure is that once in a generation — when people, policy and timing align — a country can reboot and leapfrog the developed world because there is no material incumbent investment or scale to protect. The fintech innovation in India today has been built completely outside the established “way of how things work,” and with minimal concern for which incumbents may suffer or go out of business as a result.

The mobile revolution

Ten years ago at my first startup in India, we spent a significant amount of time and resources worrying about how to approach customers who predominantly used SMS and bare-bones Symbian handsets. While the mobile internet user figures were superficially interesting, consumers weren’t really comfortable using the mobile internet as a replacement for offline transactions. Betting on mobile banking and payments 10 years ago was premature, and private sector velocity was hampered by a lot of environmental headwinds.

The government has made financial inclusion and transparency a stated priority.

Today, the situation in India is much different. Google, Amazon and a set of private sector companies poised to launch 4G services next year have made a mobile-internet world not only a reality, but a certainty on which private sector companies and the country can base 10- to 20-year business models. India is now the world’s third largest market for smartphones and will reach 314 million mobile web users by 2017.

Today any company with a three- to five-year horizon can assume that every relevant target consumer will have access to a $40 smartphone connected to an ecosystem of thousands of mobile apps built and securely run on cloud-computing infrastructure. The maturation of India’s mobile network into a legitimate platform for software services on par with the U.S. is critical to why India’s fintech story is happening now after a decade of promise.

Proactive public policy is encouraging the private sector

Over the last 24 months, the government has made financial inclusion and transparency a stated priority — and there is proactive policy and pressure to empower the private sector to help deliver results. A favorable regulatory stance from the Reserve Bank of India, coupled with the Indian Prime Minister’s “Jan Dhan Yojana” (financial inclusion for the masses) program, are working to bring all citizens onto the financial grid at unprecedented velocity and scale. As a result:

  • More than 200 million bank accounts have opened in the just one year and more than 300 million new debit and credit cards have been issued in the last four years, bringing the total number of cards to more than 600 million.

  • More bank accounts have been created in India in the last year than there are bank accounts in the U.S. overall.

  • In the last 12 months, more than 100 million new mobile wallets were created, from a base of almost zero, mostly driven by startups that didn’t exist five to 10 years ago.

  • More than 1 billion citizens came onto the digital grid through India’s Universal ID project in five and a half years, making it the fastest digital service growth in history. (Android hit 1 billion in 5.8 years; WhatsApp took 7 years.)

After decades of slow innovation and investment from public and private sector banks, India also granted a slew of new banking licenses this year to promote competition, expansion and faster deployment of new digital services. What was interesting is that most of these banking licenses were not given to traditional banks, but primarily telecom, software and IT services companies — most of whom have a strong track record of scaling by dramatically lowering operating costs and disrupting existing business models.

An Indian-born tech stack

The “spark” that will unleash the WhatsApp-like disruption is the “India Tech Stack,” a unique suite of API-based services that lift the veil off every major government-mandated customer service. The first was India’s Unique Identification through which any person can be identified with a simple biometric check using commercial handsets.

The second major leg of the Unified Payment Interface (UPI) was launched last month by Raghuram Rajan (Reserve Bank of India Governor), Nandan Nilekani and the head of almost every major bank in India. UPI is a platform through which any person can transfer money to another person’s bank account or financial instrument of choice by knowing their mobile phone number. Moreover, the underlying technology has been exposed as a service to the entire app developer ecosystem.

The implications are huge, as it democratizes all of the IP and infrastructure that made financial and government systems proprietary, unnecessarily bloated and difficult for startups to reinvent.

If the India experiment works, the U.S. would have to seriously consider adopting the “India Stack.”

PayPal, Square and Apple Pay arevisions of the future, but ultimately still conform to the old walls of financial services. Imagine an interoperable world where any app built by two college kids could allow you tomove money at no cost from one bank account to another. Whichever app delivered the most utility would own the value and marketshare… the exact way that WhatsApp won. In the four weeks since UPI’s launch, I haveseen dozens (and soon to be hundreds) of apps built by small teams that will have the power and capability of PayPal on steroids.

The last time a single core technology was exposed in an open-manner like this was when the U.S. government openedGPS in 2000. The result a decade later was Uber, Google Maps and driverless cars.

India has exposed six core technologies: UID, UPI, eKYC, Mobile-based Digital Signature, Digital Locker (which eliminates the need to submit a paper document after the first time) and Digital Consent (which allows people to easily, transparently and securely make their profile and transaction data available to third-parties for services). In combination, these real-time digital services will enable startups to digitize and simplify everything from bank account creation to border security, from voting and subsidy distribution to tax filing and refunds across the world.

Innovation moving from emerging markets into established ones

The fact that the payments infrastructure in the West has existed for so long (and is pretty good) has actually had a dampening effect on the adoption of digital payments technologies. People in the West still overwhelmingly use credit cards when checking out in retail stores, even if they could pay on their phone. Why? Because whipping out a credit card is pretty painless, so there is not much incentive to change behavior. In Asia, consumer behavior is changing rapidly and consumers are already leapfrogging traditional forms of payments to use mobile.

If the India experiment works, the U.S. would have to seriously consider adopting the “India Stack,” and if it does, entire layers of the financial service technology and business stack will become either obsolete or commoditized, moving the value to mobile software companies and non-traditional banking units.

Banks that you grew up with would become commoditized and replicable using open services; your telecom operator or Facebook could become your bank. Billion-dollar hardware and processing companies will become obsolete or go out of business, like what happened with Nokia, Lucent and AT&T.

Not only will the United States and Europe be importing disruptive technology and business models from Mother India, but also, instead of Amazon and Uber attacking Indian or Chinese markets, Bank of America, TurboTax and PayPal may be fighting off battle-tested and efficient Asian product companies that could become the dominant players in the U.S. Now that’s a revolution.

India’s fintech revolution is primed to put banks out of business | TechCrunch (2024)

FAQs

How is the FinTech revolution changing the banking industry? ›

Fintech solutions have revolutionized the banking sector, providing banks with increased efficiency, cost reduction, improved security, enhanced customer experience, increased transparency, accessibility, faster payments, and more.

How does FinTech affect the banking sector in India? ›

Fintech has successfully penetrated the unbanked and under-banked segments of the population, where traditional banks have struggled. User-friendly, adaptable, and multilingual mobile banking interfaces have promoted transparency and financial inclusion, expanding the consumer base and driving economic growth.

What is the FinTech revolution in India? ›

India is currently experiencing a radical transformation in its financial sector due to the rapid growth of Financial Technology, or FinTech. This transformation is reshaping the delivery of financial services, creating new avenues for innovation and inclusion.

What is the future of FinTech industry in India? ›

India is amongst the fastest growing Fintech markets in the world. Indian FinTech industry's market size is $584 Bn in 2022 and is estimated at ~$1.5 Tn by 2025. The Payments landscape in India is expected to reach $100 Tn in transaction volume and $50 Bn in terms of revenue by 2030.

Why is fintech a threat to banks? ›

Fintech companies use technology and data-mining to bring lenders and borrowers together to allow the easy raising of money without financial institutions. Consider how disruptive that is for traditional banking business models if lenders and borrowers no longer need banks to mediate.

How is fintech disrupting banks? ›

The way FinTech disrupts the banking industry is by offering an improved customer-centered approach. A report by the Economist shows that FinTech is fast making banks more customer-centered in their business model. Banks now have more insight into more information through Big Data and Artificial Intelligence.

Why banks are better than fintech? ›

The primary distinction in comparing FinTech vs Banks lies in their approach to financial services. FinTech companies offer convenient and user-friendly solutions aimed at modernizing banking experiences. On the other hand, traditional banks prioritize stability and trust in their service delivery.

How do banks react to fintech? ›

Based on current actions, banks sit in the top left quadrant. They have displayed low motivation despite their high ability to respond to fintech. They have the wealth and staff numbers to tackle the disruptive potential of fintech startups, but their responses have been either dismissive or passive.

What is the relationship between fintech and banks? ›

What is FinTech? FinTech is short for 'financial technology' which refers to the use of technology to improve, automate, and provide innovative financial services. It is used to enable banks, financial institutions, companies, and consumers to better manage their financial operations, processes, and lives.

What are the drivers of fintech revolution? ›

Big data and data analytics has an immense role to play in the fintech revolution in India. Big data and data analytics essentially uses the technological advancements in the market to analyze and interpret huge amounts of data to uncover patterns and trends in financial behavior.

Which is the biggest Fintech in India? ›

Top Fintech Companies in India
  • Paytm.
  • PhonePe.
  • PayPal.
  • Intuit.
  • Stripe.
  • Visa.
  • Slice.
  • Wise.

How much does fintech contribute to India's GDP? ›

India's fintech sector has emerged as a cornerstone in the nation's economic framework and is expected to contribute an additional $400 billion to the national economy in the next seven years.

What is the fintech growth in India 2024? ›

The Indian fintech industry is estimated to be around USD 110 billion in 2024 and its projected to reach about USD 420 billion by 2029, Ajay Kumar Choudhary, Non-Executive Chairman and Independent Director, National Payments Corporation of India, said.

What is the future of fintech in 2050? ›

In 2050, the payments ecosystem (acquirers, PSPs, facilitators, and aggregators) will revolve around creating integrated capabilities within an ecosystem of partners to truly optimise the customer experience and deliver a seamless, personalised payments journey from awareness to purchase and long-term retention.

What is the future of fintech 2025? ›

One of the most prominent fintech trends for 2025 is the growing adoption of virtual bank cards. These are digital credit and debit cards. They act as live-in e-wallets rather than physical wallets. This offers consumers a convenient and secure way to make payments.

How is fintech transforming banking? ›

FinTech banking solutions offer better control over financial data and improved transparency. It enables customers to track transactions, monitor accounts, and get financial information on the fly. Banks get improved processing capability with FinTech enabling them to offer faster services.

How did technology change the banking industry? ›

(2)Banking process is faster than before and more reliable. Maintenance and retrieval of documents and records have become much faster and easier. (3) Computerized banking also improves the core banking system. With a core banking system, all branches have access to common centralized data and are interconnected.

What is the role of fintech in the banking industry? ›

Fintech refers to the integration of technology into offerings by financial services companies to improve their use and delivery to consumers. It primarily works by unbundling offerings by such firms and creating new markets for them.

How is fintech shaping the future of banking? ›

Fintech is playing a significant role in increasing financial inclusion by providing access to financial services for underserved populations. Mobile money platforms, peer-to-peer lending, and microfinancing options are making it possible for people in remote or rural areas to participate in the financial system.

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