Non-banking financial company (NBFC) InCred, and over a dozen individual investors including Mindtree executive chairman Krishnakumar Natarajan and Sharjah Islamic Bank’s senior vice president Ravi Bhardwaj invested in the company.
“Most of our investors come from financial institutions,” KNAB Finance’s co-founder Mandeep Chaudhary said.
Bangalore-based KNAB Finance was founded by IIT Delhi alumni Chaudhary, Vineet Gupta, and Thomas Varghese in October 2015. Varghese earlier worked at information technology company HP and also founded two firms, including HSBSoft Technologies. Gupta previously worked with Infosys and Mindtree, while Chaudhary joined Indian Police Service and worked with Central Bureau of Investigation after graduating from IIT. He, however, quit the government job in 2001 and later worked at Citibank and Barclays Bank.
The start-up received its licence to operate as a non-deposit-taking NBFC in October 2016. “We actively started disbursing loans in January 2017. After receiving our NBFC licence, we held ourselves back for two months due to demonetisation,” Chaudhary said.
The start-up extends loans with an average ticket size of Rs 6 lakh, and it has disbursed Rs 10 crore worth of loans so far. It also offers short-term loans, allowing customers to close them within a month.
KNAB has on-boarded a few partners. “We give loans to customers of the ecosystem every month. Some of our partners are Treebo Hotels, Paytm and M-Swipe, among others,” Chaudhary added.
SME lending
Several start-ups have emerged in the online lending space over the past two years, and most of them are targeting SMEs. “If we see SME as a space, there is no proper underwriting and risk assessment happening right now. The reason is, the loans SMEs want are too small for a corporate loan. The interest income is too low and the cost of on-boarding is too high,” Chaudhary said.
“We do a careful examination of documents using over 300 variables, which helps us calculate our customer’s KNABscore,” he added.
When asked if there is room for more players in the digital lending space, Chaudhary said, “There is a huge dearth in the SME lending space in India. China has been able to grow because credit is easily available to SMEs, unlike in India. As an institution, one can give around Rs 1,000 crore, which is peanuts for an ocean like India.”
InCred recently invested in another fin-tech startup, DigiLend Analytics & Technology Pvt Ltd. InCred founder Bhupinder Singh said his firm had invested in a few startups to pick up 10-15% stakes in return.
Recent investment activity in the lending space includes Bangalore-based Billionloans Financial Services, which raised $1 million in seed funding from Reliance Corporate Advisory Services Ltd, a wholly owned subsidiary of Reliance Capital Ltd.
In June, Delhi-based digital lending platform Stashfin raised $5 million (Rs 32.2 crore then) in pre-Series A funding from Kirloskar Group’s venture capital arm Snow Leopard Ventures, Singapore-based Alto Partners, GrowX Ventures, and a clutch of angel investors.
In the same month, Ahmedabad- and Bangalore-based Lendingkart raised Rs 50 crore ($7.8 million) in debt from Yes Bank.
Around the same time, online peer-to-peer lending platform LoanMeet secured seed funding from a clutch of investors, including Chinese entrepreneurs.
Other start-ups that have raised funds in the lending space include LoanTap, Innoviti, Fincash, MoneyTap, Loan Frame, and Ftcash.
Source: VCCircle