Driving Financial Inclusion: Leveraging Cash Flow Lending for MSMEs | Expert Insights with Deepak Sharma

In this insightful dialogue, Sagar Parikh engages with Deepak Sharma to explore the transformative potential of cash flow lending for Indian MSMEs. Deepak underscores the significance of democratizing credit access through short-tenor and small-ticket loans, especially for micro-enterprises that comprise 99% of the MSME sector in India. Drawing from his rich experience in banking and financial services, Deepak Sharma provides invaluable guidance on navigating the complexities of B2B financing, highlighting the critical role of innovative lending models in fostering inclusive growth.

Deepak Sharma delves into the pressing challenges faced by MSMEs in accessing financing, particularly in the realm of B2B transactions. Leveraging his extensive experience and deep insights, he offers a fresh perspective on the traditional lending landscape, emphasizing the need for agile and tailored solutions to empower MSMEs. By advocating for cash flow-based lending and trust-based scoring systems, Deepak Sharma presents innovative approaches to address credit gaps and unlock opportunities for sustainable economic development within India’s dynamic MSME sector.

Deepak Sharma’s perspectives on banking innovation and financial inclusion provide several key learnings for the industry:

  1. Leveraging Technology for Inclusion: Sharma emphasizes the transformative impact of technologies like UPI and Aadhaar in fostering financial inclusion. These initiatives not only revolutionize digital payments but also open doors to credit access for underserved segments like SMEs.
  2. Proactive Engagement with Tech Ecosystem: Deepak advocates for proactive engagement with India’s tech ecosystem, encouraging early adoption of initiatives like IndiaStack. He challenges banks to rethink their approach and prepare for future changes in the financial landscape.
  3. Importance of Early Adoption: Reflecting on his experiences at Kotak, Sharma stresses the importance of early adoption of innovative initiatives. Banks that jump in early can leverage emerging opportunities and drive meaningful change.
  4. Value of Learning from Ventures: Deepak highlights the significance of learning from both successful ventures like OCEN and past failures. This learning process is essential for banks to navigate the evolving tech landscape effectively.
  5. Structured Innovation with the 5C Model: Sharma’s structured approach to innovation, encapsulated in the 5C model, emphasizes critical aspects such as customer acquisition, commercial viability, credit assessment, compliance, and collections. This framework ensures alignment on objectives and risk management strategies.
  6. Startup Mindset and Controlled Pilots: Adopting a startup mindset within traditional banking institutions, Deepak advocates for establishing small, specialized teams focused on data analysis, technology, and risk management. Controlled pilots with defined success metrics enable banks to manage—- risk effectively and drive innovation.
  7. Importance of Trust-Based Scoring: Sharma underscores the importance of trust-based scoring systems and proprietary scorecards for credit assessment. Moving away from traditional methods, these innovative approaches provide a holistic view of creditworthiness, especially for SMEs with limited credit histories.
  8. Optimism about OCEN: Deepak Sharma’s views on OCEN reflect a visionary approach to addressing India’s credit gap. He sees OCEN as a pivotal platform to harness India’s data richness and enable comprehensive credit assessment and lending solutions.

In conclusion, Deepak Sharma’s insights emphasize the necessity of embracing innovation and leveraging technology to drive inclusive growth in the financial services sector. By adopting proactive strategies, banks can navigate the evolving landscape of digital lending and unlock opportunities for underserved segments, contributing to India’s economic development.

For more information, please visit: http://ocen.dev

❓Questions? Submit your questions here.
📩Contact? Reach the OCEN 4.0 team at [email protected]

Please note: The blog post is authored by our volunteer, Sagar Parikh 

Open Credit Enablement Network (OCEN)

OCEN is an initiative to unbundle lending and enable the creation of specialized entities, each specialized at one part of the job. Therefore, we envision the future of lending to be a partnership between multiple firms individually focused on sourcing/distribution, identity verification, underwriting, capital arrangement, recollections, etc. The entities like marketplaces who have high business-connect with their customers (businesses or individuals), can embed credit offerings in their applications now. These entities are referred to as Loan Agents’ (LAs) and were previously referred to as ‘Loan Service Providers’ (LSPs).

OCEN (Open Credit Enablement Network) aims at democratising the lending ecosystem. The core philosophy is using open networks to reach out to maximum borrowers and lenders, with reduced risk, more transparency, strict control on funds (both end use & collections) and thus building a robust lending ecosystem. At the borrower level, using consent driven architecture and personal data as information collateral, any type of borrower (even new to credit or people with poor credit scores), can access financing. The end-to-end digital processes not only reduces the total cost of operations, but also has the advantage of reaching out to anyone and everywhere, without the lender having a physical presence. For example, sitting out of Jaipur, a NBFC has disbursed OCEN loan on GeM Sahay to borrowers operating from Andaman Nicobar Islands, Manipur, Baramullah etc and the smallest loan transaction has been of Rs.160 for business purposes.

OCEN is the right protocol, to bring credit/finance to the bottom of the pyramid and at the same time lenders also make money with this same section of people at the bottom of the pyramid. OCEN not only levels the playing field between incumbents and challengers, but also reduces the concentration risk which comes with size at bigger players. Most MSMEs are working capital intensive businesses that need quick money and do not have collateral securities to put up to banks for conventional Cash Credit limits like financing. For such businesses, this is a tool to grow their businesses, and improve their credit scores.

Lenders see opportunities in not only sourcing new business, but also reduced risk due to high quality data and use of DPI (Digital Pubic Infrastructure), like GSTN, Account Aggregator, Digilocker and its associated APIs, like mobility, Health, Fastag etc.

Why OCEN

Low Cost of Acquisition >> The Borrower Agent brings his borrowers on the network, reducing the cost of acquisition through various channels. OCEN framework benefits the Lenders to gain easy access to borrowers. Not just borrowers of one network, but easy access to multiple sets of borrowers of multiple networks. 

Lower Cost of Underwriting >> The Borrower Agent also acts as a Provider of Derived Data along with other Underwriting data from various sources like GSTN and Account Aggregator which helps in lowering the Cost of Underwriting

Digitisation >> OCEN Digitises the whole process which involves various activities like Bureau pull, KYC validation, Account Aggregator data, E-Sign on documentation, e-NACH for repayment etc and reduces the time and effort of processing at reduced costs.

Reduced Cost of Collections >> OCEN provides a large opportunity to Lenders and Borrowers to participate in T4 (Type 4) loan products which have End Use Control and Collections control for ensuring higher portfolio quality and cash flow control as well as reduced Cost of collections

OCEN solves for MSME’s Credit requirements: Small Ticket Short Tenure Loan

Small businesses need loans of smaller amounts and for shorter tenures (15/30/90 days) for their businesses compared to larger businesses to help them navigate through the requirement of day-to-day Working Capital needs.

It also helps Lenders to create Loan books for smaller loans which are granular loan exposure on a rotational basis, compared to large bulky loans. Hence reducing concentration risk.

As these Loans are for short tenure, there is higher predictability and lower risk compared to long tenure loans in which recovery of loans may sometimes be a challenge. 

Loan Agent model

The Loan Agent (LA) model is a departure from the Direct Sourcing Agent (DSA) model and is an ‘agent of the borrower’. The LA explains to borrowers their ‘bill of rights’ ensuring transparency and safeguarding of borrower interests. They educate the borrowers about the various credit product offerings, pricing and more details. They help the borrowers get access to formal, affordable credit at low interest rates and collaborates with lenders to create more tailored offerings for borrowers.

In their simplest form, LAs are a loan marketplace that enables borrowers to compare loan offers from multiple lenders and choose the best one. In a more advanced version, the LAs are akin to a borrower’s financial advisor, looking after their interests, fetching the best offers and advising the customer to make good decisions.

In the longer run, it is envisioned that many more LAs (with apps) will be created. Each of them would focus on distinct borrower pools and build the specialized experiences suited to their customers. This would allow lenders to focus purely on their underwriting and collections logic and cater to diverse collaborations with the LAs.

OCEN 4.0

The OCEN model has been built incrementally in phases, with reinforced learnings from each of the previous pilots. The goal for OCEN 4.0 is to build an ecosystem of participants that creates a Cambrian explosion of cash-flow based loan products across different MSME sectors and different types of borrowers. 

Participant Roles

OCEN 4.0 supports specialized roles for the participants. The purpose of introducing new roles is that it promotes specialization and enhances system efficiency. For example, by establishing a local network of participants, the burden on lenders is reduced, resulting in increased credit accessibility in underprivileged areas.

Role Description
Lender Lenders are the regulated entity that create and own the credit products. They work with other participants as part of a Product Network to serve the Borrower. The Loan-agent understands the borrowers’ credit requirements and works with the lenders to create the product.
Loan-Agent (LA) Agent of the borrower who will help the Borrower to pick up the best loan offer. The Borrowers agent will charge the Borrower a fee for helping them select the best loan. Loan agent is a more inclusive term that encompasses both Borrower Agent (BA) and Lender Service Provider (LSP), spanning across the existing DLG model referred to as LSP and the emerging model in which BA operates as the borrower agent.
Derived Data Partner (DDP) A derived data provider is a collaborating partner within the network that furnishes supplementary data to the Lender, aiding in enhancing their underwriting engine with additional information.
Collections Partner (CP) A Collections Partner is a network-affiliated collaborator designated by the Loan Agent (LA) to aid in the collection process. The lender retains the option to either opt for the Collections Partner or continue using their existing collection procedures.
Disbursement Partner (DP) A Disbursement Partner (DP) is responsible for supporting Purpose Controlled products. This partner will establish integration with suppliers, retrieve their catalog, and facilitate seamless direct payments to suppliers within the OCEN journey.
KYC Partner A KYC partner is a collaborator selected by the Loan Agent (LA). This partner can be engaged for Assisted KYC or any technology-related specialization available on the network. The lender retains the choice to employ the KYC partner within the network or continue with their existing procedures.

In addition to the participant roles above, OCEN framework also relies on Account Aggregator and Credit Guarantees (CGTMSE) as part of the loan journey.

Participant Onboarding

All participants are onboarded to OCEN 4.0 via the participant registry. A standard onboarding process is followed for all participants, and their verification is guaranteed by SROs to ensure that new members receive an equivalent level of trust within the network.

Product and Product Network onboarding

Lender will create & manage the Product and the Loan Agent will create & manage the Product Network to serve that product. All participants in OCEN 4.0 can browse the Products and Product Networks on the Product Registry and subscribe to serve a Product via the Product Networks.

Product Networks

OCEN 4.0 enables a network of product networks that participants can discover, collaborate and serve products to borrowers. See sample example below:

  1. Network begins with Product Network 1
    • Created by Loan Agent 1 who onboards as network participants – 3 lenders, disbursement partner, collections partner and a derived data partner
    • Loan agent 1 can serve their borrowers other products as well.
  2. Network expands with Product Network 2
    • Created by Loan Agent 1 who onboards as network participants – 2 new lenders, the same disbursement partner, and a new derived data partner
    • Loan agent 1 can continue to serve their borrowers other products as well.
  3. Network expands with Product Network 3
    • Created by Loan Agent 1 who onboards existing participants and a new lender (Lender 6) to serve the product
    • Participants can discover products and join the product network
  4. Network expands with Product Network 4
    • Created by a new LA, Loan Agent 2, who onboards existing and new participants to serve the product to their borrowers

OCEN Examples:

GeM SAHAY

GeM is a short form of one stop, ‘Government e-Marketplace’ where common user goods and services can be procured by various Ministries and agencies of the Government. Government e Marketplace (GeM) offers both products and services as part of its offerings to its registered buyers. GeM facilitates the procurement of a spectrum of Product and Service categories in a way to facilitate Buyer in ease of selection and procurement. GeM SAHAY is an online platform built on the OCEN protocol that provides loans against Purchase Orders to the sellers. 

GeM SAHAY is the pilot project on OCEN to validate the idea of cash-flow based lending for MSMEs. In this pilot, GeM (Government e-Marketplace) is the Loan Agent. The Lenders onboarded onto the pilot offer loans to MSMEs on the GeM portal against government purchase orders. The pilot validates that short-tenure, small-ticket size loans enabled via the OCEN network works for all participating parties.

GeM as a Loan Agent allows the Goods and Service Providers on GeM to apply for Loans against Purchase orders received through various Government buyers on the GeM portal.

GeM as a Loan agent helps onboard borrowers for lenders reducing the acquisition cost for the lenders

GeM being a loan agent also acts as a Derived Data Provider as it carries rich data of the participating MSME borrowers in terms of past number of orders, value of orders executed, quality incidences, completion timelines, etc and these data points help the participating Lenders to underwrite the MSME loan application.

GeM facilitates digital loan process for MSMEs on its GeM SAHAY portal by ensuring integration with multiple lending institutions and helps the Borrower MSMEs to receive multiple offers for its loan applications. Allowing the MSME to choose the best suitable loan offer creates a market shift from Lender’s market to Borrower’s market.

GeM also acts as a Collection partner for the Lending institutions as it helps the lender with repayment of the loan for the purchase order though the Escrow account where the payment for the orders executed is credited by the purchasing entities.

GST SAHAY

A second pilot that expanded on the above is the GST SAHAY pilot project. This pilot uses GST data to enable working capital loans where SIDBI is acting as the Loan Agent. An additional parameter for validation on this pilot was the inclusion of the Account Aggregator data for loan underwriting.

In GST SAHAY, borrowers can seek loans against unpaid B2B Invoices for supply of Goods and Services to other businesses. Any business registered with GSTN and filing the statutory returns on GSTN can seek financing against Invoices where goods or services are supplied on credit period.

Borrower can register on GST SAHAY application and upload Invoices against which it seeks to avail financing. 

The GST SAHAY application, after seeking the consent of borrower will pull details available from the GST network for its past invoice transactions filed with GSTN, periodic return filings and share the same with Lenders for evaluation and underwriting and credit decisioning.

Similarly, GST SAHAY application after seeking the consent of the borrower will pull details of the Bank statements available from Account Aggregator framework for its past banking data and share the same with Lenders for evaluation and underwriting and credit decisioning.

Lenders will parallelly also check the Credit Bureau of the borrower to assess credit worthiness and past performance on existing credit facilities from other lenders, if available. 

Lending institutions will digitally consume all these data points, along with details available on the Invoice to be financed and by using its proprietary rule engine for underwriting and scoring model, will provide an offer to the borrower for the respective Invoice to be financed.

Borrowers may receive multiple offers (higher loan amount, lesser interest rate, longer tenure) from different Lenders based on their evaluation criteria and will have a choice to select the best suitable offer for seeking the disbursement in a digital way by e-signing the loan agreements, e-Nach / Standing instructions, wherein the amount will be credited to the borrower’s account within few minutes.

There are other OCEN innovative product networks which are at various stages of development and are expected to go live to provide seamless credit to the credit starved MSMEs using OCEN API specifications for communication between the parties (Borrowers, Lenders, Loan Agents and other participants)

For more information, please visit: http://ocen.dev

❓Questions? Submit your questions here.
📩Contact? Reach the OCEN 4.0 team at [email protected]

Please note: The blog post is authored by our volunteer, Rahul Bhaik

Unlocking Growth: The Power of Cash Flow Lending for MSMEs | Expert Insights with Dr. Ravi Modani

In this recent OpenHouse, Sagar Parikh discusses with Dr Ravi Modani how democratizing credit through short-tenor and small-ticket loans can help finance Indian MSMEs, 99% of which are micro-enterprises. Dr Modani shares his insights and invaluable guidance to navigate the complex world of B2B financing for MSMEs.

He also delves deep into the challenges faced by them in accessing financing, particularly in the realm of B2B transactions. Drawing from his extensive experience and research, he offers a fresh perspective on the traditional lending landscape and presents innovative solutions to empower MSMEs.

Key Insights from the Video:

  1. The MSME Financing Dilemma: Dr. Modani highlights the significant hurdles that MSMEs encounter when seeking short-tenor and small-ticket loans. He emphasizes the need for a paradigm shift in lending practices to better serve the unique needs of these businesses.
  2. A New Way Of Financing for MSMEs: Dr. Modani advocates for a pioneering financing approach for MSMEs, highlighting the effectiveness of short-tenor and small-ticket loans. These loans, being revolving in nature throughout the year, allow lenders to disburse a higher volume of loans. Consequently, lenders can potentially amplify their AUM by up to 8 times, surpassing the typical 5-6 times AUM ratio associated with traditional lending practices.
  3. Comparing Financial Platforms: Dr. Modani provides a comprehensive comparison between TReDs and OCEN, offering insights into the advantages of leveraging public networks like OCEN for enhanced interoperability and accessibility.
  4. The Power of Public Networks: Leveraging platforms like OCEN and GeM can significantly reduce operational costs for lenders, ultimately leading to lower lending costs and improved efficiency. Dr. Modani illustrates how these public networks can drive down the cost of lending, benefiting both lenders and borrowers alike.
  5. The Time Sensitivity of MSME Financing: Dr. Modani underscores the time-critical nature of MSME lending and stresses the importance of streamlining the loan journey to ensure timely access to funds for businesses.

His illustrations and learnings help in navigating the complex world of MSME financing by embracing innovative approaches. He believes that leveraging public networks like OCEN will only help lenders unlock new growth and success in today’s lending landscape by opening multifold opportunities to them.

For more information, please visit: http://ocen.dev

❓Questions? Submit your questions here.
📩Contact? Reach the OCEN 4.0 team at [email protected]

Please note: The blog post is authored by our volunteers, Sagar Parikh and Muskaan Sharma

Unlocking MSME Growth: Interoperable Networks & FinTech Insights with Bhavik Vasa

In our most recent OpenHouse, we embark on an insightful exploration of the transformative landscape in MSME lending, featuring Bhavik Vasa, the Founder of GetVantage, and Sagar Parikh. The conversation delves into the potential of creating groundbreaking impact through interoperable networks, particularly focusing on OCEN. The discussion navigates the dynamic intersection of finance and technology, highlighting how inventive solutions are reshaping the lending panorama. Emphasizing the crucial role of interoperability, the dialogue underscores its significance in bridging the credit gap, propelling the MSME sector into a new era of unprecedented growth.

Key Takeaways:

Network Effects Unleashed: OCEN catalyzes network effects, narrowing the credit gap and expanding the market, fostering inclusivity and vibrancy.

Efficiency through Interoperability: Standardized protocols cut costs and efforts, providing high-quality data for lenders while empowering MSMEs with smoother access to loans.

Addressing Unmet Needs: Explore how interoperable networks bridge gaps in unsecured lending, catering to shorter tenures and smaller loan sizes.

Tech-Enabled Business Growth: Witness the role of unsecured lending in a tech-driven landscape, fostering a circular consumption economy for economic growth.

Personalized FinTech Solutions: Bhavik advocates for a borrower-centric approach, urging lenders to view lending through a tech and data-driven lens, benefiting both parties.

Collaboration Dynamics: Conclude with insights on how NBFCs and banks can coexist and collaborate, playing to their strengths for a more robust lending environment.

Ready to unlock the future of MSME lending? Join the conversation now!

For more information, please visit: http://ocen.dev

❓Questions? Submit your questions here.
📩Contact? Reach the OCEN 4.0 team at [email protected]

Please note: The blog post is authored by our volunteers, Sagar Parikh and Muskaan Sharma

Role of Intermediaries & FinTech in MSME lending ecosystem: A conversation with Lizzie Chapman

Intermediaries and Fintechs have played an important role in the lending ecosystem, but the impact is mostly seen in consumer lending and not so much in MSME lending, especially for unsecured, small ticket and short duration loans. What are the missing pieces in the lending process for which advanced tech and a mindset shift can utilise a digital infrastructure like OCEN (Open Credit Enablement Network) and unlock this credit supply for MSMEs?

Recently, we hosted Lizzie Chapman in an insightful conversation with Sagar Parikh. She shared her views on where the intermediaries and FinTechs can further become a value add in a profitable manner by pushing the boundaries of technology.

Points discussed:

  • Digital infrastructure & its impact on the costs, penetration & process for lending eco-system
  • Unsecured MSME loans not as solved as unsecured consumer loans. Cashflow lending addresses the concerns around unsecured lending to MSMEs.
  • DPI such as OCEN facilitating the availability, quality, aggregation of data for credit underwriting along with loan disbursement for MSMEs
  • Need for Intermediaries & Fintechs to harness technology to conceptualise innovative lending products, advanced ways of pricing and matching risks & address the opex challenges in collections & repayments
  • Investors tend to prefer businesses that touch the customer end to end. They should see that being part of the value chain can be as profitable as owning the value chain.
  • OCEN is creating dispute resolution mechanisms but intermediaries should also innovate for transparency and building trust with the customers so as to enable a safe, stable, secure growth in short term cashflow lending for MSME credit.

For more information, please visit: http://ocen.dev

❓Questions? Submit your questions here.
📩Contact? Reach the OCEN 4.0 team at [email protected]

Please note: The blog post is authored by our volunteers, Sagar Parikh and Muskaan Sharma

Unveiling the Future of Lending: A Conversation with Shachindra Nath from UGro Capital

In an era of evolving financial landscapes, the realm of lending is witnessing a significant shift—from the traditional collateral-based approach to the more contemporary cash flow lending model facilitated by OCEN (Open Credit Enablement Network). Recently, we hosted UGro Capital in an insightful conversation with Shachindra Nath, shedding light on this transformative paradigm in lending and delving into its profound implications.

Points discussed:

  • Transitioning from Collateral to Cash Flow Lending
  • Exploring Market Potential
  • Challenges in Seamless Digital Lending

For more information, please visit: http://ocen.dev

❓Questions? Submit your questions here.
📩Contact? Reach the OCEN 4.0 team at [email protected]

Please note: The blog post is authored by our volunteer, Sagar Parikh 

Beyond the clutter: How OCEN is unlocking MSME credit market in India

Introduction

OCEN plays a pivotal role in revolutionising MSME lending in India. This innovative open network is specifically designed to serve those new to credit, employing an omni-channel approach that democratises and simplifies access to lending.

Currently, the market lacks a scalable and profitable model for short-term, low-value MSME loans – a significant gap that OCEN has adeptly filled with its GeM-SAHAY pilots.

Amidst the confusion and excitement surrounding OCEN versus ONDC, and the broader impact of open networks in the lending sphere, this blog aims to provide clarity and insight. Let’s dive in and explore these transformative developments.

🔀 OCEN or ONDC: Which is better for short tenure MSME lending?

There’s much debate about which lending framework potential partners should explore. Rahul Mathur (Associate Director, InsuranceDekho) captures this perfectly in his tweet, presented as a checklist below:

🗣️ “Turns out, the focus in lending for ONDC v/s OCEN is very different (see the image below)
(1) 💰Type of loan: Type 1 personal loan v/s Type 4 MSME loan
(2) 🔎GTM: Online v/s Omni-channel (assisted)
(3) 🙇Persona: Eligible for credit v/s New to credit
(4) 🌟Objective: Bring credit to point of commerce v/s Democratize credit access

To summarize, there are some good reasons why ONDC has launched loans independently of the OCEN network.
Over time, OCEN will expand to include further lending use-cases & products. And, at that point, ONDC <> OCEN interoperability would make sense.”

You can find the original post here

Clearly, OCEN is the undisputed option for short tenure, low ticket size lending for new to credit MSMEs. Over time the lending use cases will be expanded to service the traditional form of loans.

OCEN and ONDC, while both operating in the lending space, are tailored for very different use cases and audiences. While they may overlap in some cases, the larger ecosystem benefits from introduction of newer networks. In the end, it’s all about solving the most challenging problems 🙂

Let’s further understand how OCEN addresses the MSME lending problem in India.


📈 OCEN makes small ticket size lending a reality

OCEN’s primary goal is to make short-term lending profitable. Something which we’ve achieved in our pilots with the Government e-Marketplace, through the GeM-SAHAY app.

One of our volunteers explains the economics in this blog post: Evaluating the short term lending opportunity, where he shows how lenders can earn 2.2x higher revenue with the same capital through the adoption of the OCEN framework.

The significant 2.2x increase in revenue is attributed to the introduction of a crucial role known as the borrower’s agent. These agents not only reduce the cost of servicing a loan but also heighten accountability within the system.

Borrower’s Agents (BAs) assume a variety of roles traditionally outsourced by lenders, BAs function as data providers, collections agents, escrow account managers, and product providers.

By integrating these services and cohesively binding the network, BAs enable lenders to efficiently service low-cost loans even in remote areas. In performing these four key roles, the borrower’s agent emerges as the cornerstone of the open network, vital for its effective operation.

The role of borrower’s agent has been discussed in depth in one of our open house sessions:

OCEN is changing the game by making even the tiniest loans worthwhile for both the lender and the borrower.


🌐 Efficacy of Open networks and streamlining the lending process

Some people we’ve spoken to, worry that open networks will lead to the commodification of lending, which, in turn, is bad for the overall market. However, this couldn’t be farther from the truth 🙂.

OCEN streamlines the lending process by introducing roles such as the borrower’s agent, KYC agents, and collection partners. These roles combine to create a bundle that lenders can easily integrate into their processes to start lending.

Newer and smaller lenders will benefit from the transparency and scale offered by open networks.

Closed network auctions, which are common today, see lenders bidding down for loans. However, their lack of transparency and scale often results in low profitability.

Open networks, on the other hand, provide scale and transparency that leads to low cost of servicing, more borrowers to choose from, and reliability in the system through a borrower’s agent.

Larger lenders benefit from the low cost of servicing a loan that comes with open networks

Larger lenders will benefit from open networks as it provides the technical chops of a borrower’s agent. BAs can help with KYC, collections and other parts of servicing a loan while absorbing some of the costs.

We’ve seen such effects before, with the introduction of Aadhaar and UPI, where KYC and collections became far cheaper enabling large lenders to facilitate smaller ticket size loans.

In conclusion

Through OCEN, the potential to unlock a ~$300 billion credit market in India becomes a tangible reality. This is demonstrated by the increased revenue potential and the introduction of the borrower’s agent role, enhancing loan servicing efficiency and accountability.

Moreover, OCEN’s streamlined lending process benefits the entire market, by offering scalability and cost-effectiveness to both emerging and established lenders.

Thus, embracing OCEN is not just a choice but a strategic direction for expanding market possibilities and empowering both lenders and borrowers in the dynamic credit landscape of India.

Can digital currencies and crypto investors help close India’s SME financing gap?

The internet connected the average Indian to millions of sources of information. Could crypto protocols connect Indians to millions of sources of capital?

To achieve its goal of a five trillion dollar economy by 2025, India needs to close an enormous financing gap for its small and medium-size enterprises (SMEs). It already has important assets with which to attract global capital: the youth of its population, the energy of its tech sector, the growth of its internet connectivity, and the rising acceptance of so-called informational collateral in lieu of traditional physical collateral. But what hasn’t yet been done is to integrate these assets into the new multi-trillion dollar cryptoeconomy, which may have the most risk-tolerant, internationally oriented, growth-seeking pool of investors in the world.

In this piece we begin by reviewing India’s need for SME and startup capital. We then tick through India’s existing assets, with particular focus on informational collateral, which combines the previously separate concepts of due diligence and physical collateral into an internet-friendly financing package. Finally, we discuss why global crypto investors could help meet India’s capital needs.

India’s need for SME and startup financing

India is home to more than 60 million businesses, 10 million of which have unique GST registration numbers, most of them SMEs. However, of the one trillion USD worth of total commercial lending exposure of the banking system, only ~25% of it is provided to SMEs, which are considered less creditworthy than larger corporates or multinationals. This has resulted in a financing gap estimated to be between 250-500 billion USD, where meritorious businesses without national profiles aren’t able to access the capital they need to finance their growth. India’s next trillion in GDP growth depends upon solving this problem, but the incumbent financial system may not have the resources to fix it alone. Despite ever-increasing bank branches, India’s legacy financial system is still slow, costly, and unwieldy for borrowers— in sharp contrast to the databases, online KYC systems and intelligent lending apps of new-age fintech companies. And in addition to this high cost of capital for MSMEs, India also has a low baseline level of financial inclusion.

The baseline issue is being partially addressed with low-frill Jan Dhan accounts, which are providing partial banking support for millions of previously excluded individuals. Many of these Jan Dhan accounts are held by small businesses, entrepreneurs, students and self-employed people in rural India, the same folks who are running India’s SMEs. But these accounts have only inflow data, with outflows typically in cash. Even though cash still plays a big role in the self-organized and informal sectors, it’s not easy to provide business-related financing in cash. The so-called JAM trinity (Jan Dhan accounts, Aadhaar digital identities, and Mobile phones) offers a partial solution for this under-banked population, but it only supports what we might think of as consumer-grade applications like basic peer-to-peer payments and individual savings accounts. Access to capital sufficient to finance a business — a true measure of financial inclusion — is still not yet present for these low-income, mostly feature-phone possessing groups.

On the other end of the spectrum from rural SMEs are India’s tech startups. Over the last decade, India has broken into the ranks of global technology and is now the #3 generator of unicorns in the world. Supportive governmental policies, combined with a young, creative, and aspirational workforce has helped reimagine large swathes of the economy including diverse industries such as e-commerce, logistics, SAAS, education, food, healthcare etc. This rise has attracted global equity and loan-funds that could in turn help many start-ups become world beating players in their respective domains. But the startup sector is just as hungry for capital as the rural SMEs, and India’s startup economy is still somewhat disconnected from global venture capitalists and financial markets.

India’s assets: youth, growth, connectivity, and informational collateral

India does have assets with which to close the capital gap. It has a youthful population. It has a fast-growing economy, even given the setbacks of COVID-19. It has an enormous population of hundreds of millions of new internet users. And it has something new, which is the possibility of informational collateral as a sort of combination of traditional concepts of due diligence and physical collateral.

Specifically, the SME funding gap is most pressing for the Indian cash-flow businesses that don’t have the physical assets to take out loans, which are the mainstay of the current, hard-collateral-backed credit system.

One alternative is to use trustworthy digital records to ascertain whether a business is worthy of credit or equity investment. India’s Goods and Services Tax (GST) helps to address this by generating invoice and payment data in a format suitable for credit underwriting and risk analysis. The GST data also enables a small enterprise in a large value system to provide data and visibility across the supply chain; for example, one can track the progress of parts from a small parts supplier to an auto component manufacturer to a large passenger car maker all the way through to distributors, sub-dealers, and retail sales.

The digital version of an SME’s sales and purchase invoices ledger thus amounts to informational collateral on both the company and the larger ecosystem within which it sits, that could become the basis for extending credit, as an alternative to the hard asset or collateral-based financial system. This is similar to how Square Capital and Stripe Capital already function in the West.

In addition to credit-based financing, the trustworthy records furnished by GST’s informational collateral can also support equity or quasi-equity financing, to support growth without increasing debt. These might take the form of direct equity investments in small businesses, or even personal micro-equity investments in individual consultants or students. 

India’s innovation: use new pools of crypto capital to address long-standing financing needs

So, we understand that (a) Indian SMEs need capital, and that (b) IndiaStack’s UPI and Aadhaar can help GST generate informational collateral for potential investors and lenders.


Now the question arises: what class of investors is most willing to use this newfangled type of informational collateral to invest in potentially high-risk businesses outside of the proven venues of America, Europe, East Asia and the large Indian enterprises? Who are the most risk-tolerant, international, forward-looking, class of investors in the world — willing to risk millions of dollars purely on the basis of internet diligence alone?

It may turn out to be the new class of wealthy, globally-minded crypto investors. After all, the 10-year old cryptoeconomy is now worth trillions of dollars, there are more than a hundred million crypto holders around the world, and there are at least fifty crypto protocols valued over one billion dollars, a “unicoin” analog to the traditional tech unicorn. While still small in comparison to global capital markets, a sector worth $2T that is growing at more than 100% per annum could become a much larger piece of the global financial puzzle in short order. This is a new source of risk-tolerant digital capital that could flow into India to help close the SME financing gap, if we can make it an attractive proposition for the global investor.

Specifically, India could offer a viable path to deploy this new crypto wealth in a controlled manner, while solving for SME financial inclusion. Inflows of cryptocurrencies from KYC-ed investors through approved Indian and global exchanges can potentially be allowed into India for the purposes of enhancing SME access to low-cost global capital. GST-registered companies could, for instance, receive capital against their issued e-invoices and other information collateral in special accounts opened via a controlled conduit such as GIFT city, which is one of India’s favored bridges to international markets. The companies benefiting will need to explicitly consent to sharing their information and receiving funds into a new account at system-level while capturing cash flows against invoices for repayment. Inflows of global crypto-capital into Indian SMEs could also enable the rest of the credit system to migrate to informational collateral-based lending. And the special account could eventually be ported to a wallet backed by a national digital currency, such as the proposed digital rupee.

For more detail on this possibility, we invite your attention to Balaji S. Srinivasan’s companion piece on the subject, where he proposes to Add Crypto To IndiaStack. Balaji makes the case for crypto-powered extension of IndiaStack, which broadens IndiaStack from its current mostly domestic remit into an international platform for attracting capital from around the world. He describes several case studies by which the emerging world of decentralized finance or “defi” could help enrich the Indian economy, without competing with the digital rupee. For example, Indian startups could benefit from crypto crowdfunding, Indian SMEs as discussed could access global defi lending pools, and Indian students might even be funded with the emerging concept of personal tokens, like an equity-based version of microfinance. As the former CTO of  Coinbase, the $100B crypto goliath, and a former General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz, the $16B venture capital firm, Balaji’s proposals have technical and social support from the very class of investors we’d seek to attract. At least insofar as they relate to the issue of plugging the SME financing gap, we believe they deserve serious consideration by policymakers in India. 

In short, India has a unique opportunity to close the SME financing gap by attracting the new class of global crypto investors, by using everything the IndiaStack team has helped build over the last decade — particularly UPI, Aadhaar, GST, and the informational collateral they generate —  to help connect the trillion-dollar cryptoeconomy to capital-hungry Indian entrepreneurs.


The blog post is co-authored by Sanjay Phadke, Krishna V Iyer, Pankaj Gupta, Sanjay Jain, Sharad Sharma and Siddharth Shetty.

For any further queries, please write to [email protected]

iSPIRT Fourth Open House on OCEN: Market Opportunities

On 14th August we hosted the fourth open house session on Open Credit Enablement Network (OCEN). This week’s discussion focused on the different roles and market opportunities for ecosystem participants across the lending value chain.

To recap, OCEN (O-Ken) is a new paradigm for credit that seeks to provide a common language for lenders and marketplaces to build innovative, financial credit products at scale.

In last week’s session, we did a deep dive into the underlying OCEN API flows, covering different entity interactions in-depth and addressing common technical queries. 

We began by highlighting the shift from balance sheet based lending to cash flow based lending that will be enabled by OCEN adoption. This upgraded methodology gives lenders a more holistic way to assess the creditworthiness of potential borrowers while allowing for more innovation in the kinds of products that can be offered to individuals and MSMEs.

OCEN is built around the idea that any service provider that interfaces with consumers and MSMEs can become a Fintech-enabled credit marketplace i.e. a Loan Service Provider. A key component to the success of this approach is that data from these digital platforms will reduce the information asymmetry between borrower and lender

There is room for entities to play the role of Derived Data Providers by digesting this data (after obtaining user consent) and helping to inform the lender’s credit rules. Working alongside specialised Underwriting Modellers, these players can map the best the fit between lender and borrower, making for smarter underwriting. 

OCEN is designed to enable many types of LSPs offering diverse ‘species’ of credit products. While the last three sessions have focused on MSME credit, this week our volunteers covered several use cases for individual consumers and service professionals. Principally these resemble the ‘Type 4’ loan products highlighted in earlier sessions where the end use for the loan is defined, and the repayment is locked into incoming cash flows.

Through the past few weeks one of our objectives has been to illuminate the range of opportunities for participants (both new and incumbent) to get involved in an OCEN-enabled lending process. Entities can provide value by bringing superior distribution, data, technology, or capital into the equation. 

LSPs have an important role to play as ‘agents of the borrower’. Technology Service Providers (TSP) need to work with lenders, LSPs or both, helping them to successfully come onboard the OCEN protocol. Account Aggregators play the role of data fiduciaries, facilitating the consented sharing of financial information in real time. Payment Service Providers (PSP) provide a ready infrastructure for both the disbursement of loans and collection of repayments.

Even incumbent fintech lending marketplaces that have a ‘deep, tacit know-how of the lending domain’ can play multiple roles in the cash flow based lending value chain.

Finally, our volunteers talked about CredAll, which is a collective of lending ecosystem players to drive cash flow based lending. Participants interested in becoming an OCEN-enabled Lender or LSP can have a look through the suggested checklist and basic requirements for each.

The fourth session on OCEN covered the following topics broadly, and the entire webinar is also available on our official Youtube channel:

  • By Siddharth Shetty
    • An introduction to iSPIRT and our values
  • By Nipun Kohli
    • New cash flow based lending paradigm
    • Derived data providers
    • How DDPs and Underwriting Modellers can help assess the creditworthiness of potential borrowers
    • Types of lending products enabled by OCEN
    • Product example 1 (Consumer finance use cases like paying school fees or streaming charges)
    • Product example 2 (For service professionals)
  • By Ankit Singh
    • Opportunities for different stakeholders at various stages in the credit lifecycle
    • Different ways entities can add value
    • How an LSP is different from a DSA
    • 5 D’s of value addition for LSPs
    • The role of Technical Service Providers (TSP), Account Aggregators (AA), and Payment Services Providers (PSP)
    • OCEN opportunity for incumbent fintech lending players
    • How to become an OCEN-enabled lender or LSP

After the presentation, our volunteers answered some questions from the community including:

  • How to think about constructing the right business models for LSPs and lenders?
  • Does a DDP always have to be an LSP?
  • What are the opportunities for existing fintech players?
  • What are the KYC implications for OCEN?

As always, in order to successfully create a new credit ecosystem for Bharat it will take the collaborative effort of participants from every corner of our fintech ecosystem.

If you’re interested in participating as a:

  • Loan Service Provider
  • Lender
  • Technology Service Provider

please drop us an email at [email protected]

Readers may also submit any questions about the OCEN to the same email address and our anchor volunteers shall try their best to answer these questions during next open house discussion (P.S: Time and Date is yet to be decided)

If you would like to know more about becoming an LSP, please check out www.credall.org (CredAll is a collective of lending ecosystem players to drive cash flow based lending)

Recommended Reading:

Chapter 7 and 8 in RBI UK Sinha MSME committee report: https://www.rbi.org.in/Scripts/PublicationReportDetails.aspx?UrlPage=&ID=924

Introduction to India Stack’s fourth layer – Data Empowerment & Protection Architecture: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mW__azI8_ow

iSPIRT Second Open House on OCEN: Varied LSP Possibilities

On 31st July we hosted the second open house discussion on Open Credit Enablement Network (OCEN). This week’s session covered several potential Loan Service Provider (LSP) products and business cases, and answers to questions that came up following last week’s introductory presentation.

To recap, OCEN is a new paradigm for credit that seeks to provide a common language for lenders and marketplaces to build innovative, financial credit products at scale. OCEN seeks to reimagine the lending ecosystem so that any service provider that interfaces with consumers and MSMEs can become a Fintech-enabled credit marketplace, or more specifically, a Loan Service Provider.  

The discussion this week centred around what kind of role LSPs could play in an OCEN-enabled cash flow lending value chain. OCEN APIs can enable lending products for both consumers and businesses, and for both capital and operating expenses. They are designed to allow for several different types of LSPs and financial products to flourish. 

To build this new credit economy, we need to move from the ‘Lend and Forget’ mindset of traditional lenders to the holistic ‘Lend, Monitor and Collect’ model allowed by the myriad of service providers and marketplaces in our tech ecosystem. These platforms not only have insightful data into their user’s commercial activity but they have an ongoing interface and interaction with potential borrowers.

With OCEN standardisation, LSPs can improve and contribute to all the five aspects of lending i.e. acquisition, underwriting, ROI, collections and monitoring. Tailored credit products can be plugged in at every stage in a typical supply chain (from ‘Procurement to Pay’) to help ease liquidity concerns and ensure business continuity. 

Our volunteers illustrated this with two examples:
1) A seller on the Government e-marketplace (GeM) obtaining invoice financing through the Sahay GeM LSP

2) A truck owner availing of Business-Vehicle Trip Financing through a logistics company performing the role of an LSP

OCEN is also enabling the creation of a new type of credit product that is digitally applied for and disbursed, where the end use of the loan is identified and paid for, and where repayment of the loan is enabled by the locking of incoming cash-flow.

Every participant in our fintech ecosystem is incentivised to take part in this new open credit economy enabled by OCEN. There is an opportunity here for lenders, service providers, aggregators and tech providers to all play their role in bridging India’s credit gap and giving our people and businesses the support they need.

The second session on OCEN covered the following topics broadly, and the entire webinar is also available on our official Youtube channel:

  • By Siddharth Shetty
    • An introduction to iSPIRT and our values
  • By Ankit Singh
    • Recap of what OCEN is, and how LSPs fit in to the framework
    • Recap of Sahay, the reference app for OCEN (and the first LSP)
    • Becoming an LSP (and the role of CredAll)
  • By Nipun Kohli
    • Examples of different cash-flow-lending products enabled by OCEN
    • Key differences between traditional lending and credit products on OCEN
    • How LSPs can participate across the lending value chain
    • ‘Procurement to Pay’ credit products
    • Product example 1: GeM – Procurement to Pay
    • Product example 2: Business-Vehicle Trip Financing
  • By Praveen Hari
    • Building new credit products on OCEN
    • The Type 4 loans

After the presentation our volunteers answered some questions from the community including:
– How is Sahay different from TReDS?
– How does the underwriting take place for LSP-enabled loans?
– How can risk be managed between the LSP and the lender?

We will be hosting weekly open house sessions to keep diving deeper into OCEN. The next such event will take place at 5 pm on 7 August 2020


Readers who wish to learn more about OCEN are encouraged to share this post and sign up now for the session below or click
here.

As always, in order to successfully create a new credit ecosystem for Bharat it will take the collaborative effort of participants from every corner of our fintech ecosystem.

If you’re interested in participating as a:

  • Loan Service Provider
  • Lender
  • Technology Service Provider

please drop us an email at [email protected]

Readers may also submit any questions about the OCEN to the same email address. We shall do our best to answer these questions during next Friday’s open house discussion. 

If you would like to know more about becoming an LSP, please check out www.credall.org (CredAll is a collective of lending ecosystem players to drive cash flow based lending)

About the Author: The post is authored by Rahul Sanghi

Recommended Reading:

Chapter 7 and 8 in RBI UK Sinha MSME committee report: https://www.rbi.org.in/Scripts/PublicationReportDetails.aspx?UrlPage=&ID=924

Introduction to India Stack’s fourth layer – Data Empowerment & Protection Architecture: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mW__azI8_ow

iSPIRT First Open House on OCEN: Summary and Next Steps

“The ‘Landline to Mobile’ leapfrog for MSME credit is here.”

On Friday evening we hosted the first open house discussion on the new Open Credit Enablement Network (OCEN). It is the next chapter of the ‘India Stack’ story, one that has provided the building blocks for public digital infrastructure in our country.

The past decade has seen us widen the net for financial inclusion in India on the back of open infrastructure for digital identity (Aadhaar, eKYC, eSign) and payments (UPI, AEPS). This year will also see the launch of the Account Aggregator framework, ushering in a new era for data governance in India. Similarly, OCEN is a new paradigm for credit that seeks to provide a common language for lenders and marketplaces to build innovative, financial credit products at scale.

The first session on OCEN covered the following topics broadly

  • By Sharad Sharma
    • An introduction to iSPIRT and our values
    • An overview of India Stack and where OCEN fits in
  • By Siddharth Shetty
    • A product demo of Sahay, the reference app for OCEN
  • By Ankit Singh
    • The reason for the credit gap in India
    • The challenges for lenders and prospective credit marketplaces
    • A reimagined credit ecosystem with OCEN and Loan Service Providers (LSPs)
    • The roles of LSPs
    • A new cash flow-based lending paradigm
    • The opportunity for market participants with OCEN
    • Release of OCEN APIs, Check them on Github: https://github.com/iSPIRT/lsp-lender-protocol-specification
  • Brief Q/A – Nipun Kohli

Why do we need this?

Access to credit is a crucial part of any flourishing economy. It is safe to say that India’s economic engine has not yet gotten out of second gear because of our inability to guide formal credit into the hands of the people and businesses that need it most. The unit economics of our current lending set-up are broken, and don’t suit the needs of either borrowers or lenders. The challenges range from high costs of customer discovery to lack of trustworthy data for underwriting, and an overall mismatch in ticket size, tenure and interest rates of loans. This has resulted in a whopping MSME credit gap of over $330 bn.

OCEN is an effort to recognise that the touchpoints for delivering financial products to individuals and MSMEs extends beyond traditional lenders. In order to democratize access to credit in India, OCEN reimagines an ecosystem where every service provider can become a Fintech-enabled credit marketplace. 

This means that whether you’re an aggregator, a payment gateway, a software provider or any other company that interfaces with consumers, you can now fill in a crucial role in India’s lending value chain. OCEN will allow you to effectively ‘plug in’ lending capabilities into your existing product or service offerings, enabling you to play the role of a Loan Service Provider (LSP) in this framework.

At one end this will simplify and reduce the cost of acquiring and analysing new customers. Working in tandem with the Account Aggregator framework it will also allow applicants to leverage different data sources so that lending can become a Cash flow based operation instead of the existing balance sheet focus. Overall these open standards will enable lenders to accelerate the disbursal of formal credit while allowing LSPs to holistically serve their existing customers.

India’s new credit rails are ready to be laid out, and we look forward to working with our spirited fintech ecosystem participants over the coming months.

We will be hosting weekly open house sessions to keep diving deeper into OCEN. The next session will focus on Open Credit Enablement Network (OCEN) APIs at 5 pm IST on 31st July 2020.

Readers who wish to learn more about OCEN are encouraged to share this blog post and sign up again for the session here: https://bit.ly/LSPOpenHouse (same embedded below)

As always, in order to successfully create a new credit ecosystem for Bharat  it will take the collaborative effort of participants from every corner of our fintech ecosystem.

If you’re interested in participating as a:

  • Loan Service Provider
  • Lender
  • Technology Service Provider

please drop us an email at [email protected]

Readers may also submit any questions about OCEN on the google form: https://bit.ly/LSPQA. We shall do our best to answer these questions during next Friday’s open house discussion.

About the Author: The post is authored by our volunteer Rahul Sanghi.

Recommended Reading

Chapter 7 and 8 in RBI UK Sinha MSME committee report: https://www.rbi.org.in/Scripts/PublicationReportDetails.aspx?UrlPage=&ID=924

Introduction to India Stack’s fourth layer – Data Empowerment & Protection Architecture: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mW__azI8_ow