“The key is to continue to support these platforms and scale them up,” Rajeev Kannan, head of its India division, said in an interview.
Global firms have piled into India’s financial sector as they hunt for growth in the world’s most populous nation that’s hungry for credit to support its growth ambitions, though the verdict is still out on whether this is a lucrative strategy. For Sumitomo Mitsui, getting into India’s commercial banking is “the last missing piece” for its so-called multi-franchise strategy. The bank aims to build a full suite of financial services in four countries in Asia, which also include Vietnam, the Philippines and Indonesia.
Over the past four years, Sumitomo Mitsui has spent roughly US$5 billion snapping up stakes in firms. The investment spree is likely to slow going forward, as it focuses on integrating the acquisitions, according to Kannan, who has spent almost three decades at the firm’s banking unit and was previously its co-head of Asia-Pacific.
In 2021, it bought a majority stake in shadow lender Fullerton India Credit Co for about US$2 billion to tap demand for personal and small business loans, and last year, bought the remaining stake in the company, now renamed SMFG India Credit Co. This year, the Japanese bank purchased a 20% stake in Yes Bank and has gotten regulatory approval to raise its holding to 24.99%, just below the level where it has to make an offer for more shares.
See also: Russia cuts key rate to 15.5% despite uptick in inflation
On further increasing the Yes Bank stake, Kannan said the firm hasn’t had “any of those kind of discussions at this point of time”.
Another firm with whom more could be done is US investment bank Jefferies Financial Group Inc, which is active in India dealmaking and Sumitomo Mitsui is raising its stake in, Kannan said.
Elsewhere, the Japanese bank is fighting to stay among the top tier of lenders in the country, where it faces fierce competition from HSBC Holdings Plc to First Abu Dhabi Bank PJSC. It’s currently ranked seventh in foreign currency loans to India borrowers, from fourth last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
See also: BOJ hawk Tamura flags spring as possible timing for rate hike
Kannan highlighted infrastructure financing, acquisition and leverage financing to private equity firms as some of the growth areas. He is unfazed by the crowded field, such as from Middle Eastern rivals pushing more into the market, saying the market is getting bigger to provide the capital India needs.
More people will be added to support the growth, according to Kannan. Yes Bank and SMFG India Credit employ more than 20,000 people each and are looking to hire. Sumitomo Mitsui itself has over 400 staff across five branches, where business is growing more than 20%, he said. They include one at Gujarat International Finance Tec-City, India’s finance hub also known as GIFT City, and the newest one at Bengaluru.
At the GIFT City branch, which opened last year, the book size has expanded “quite materially” and the bank may consider getting into areas such as sales and trading, he said.
Another major new initiative for the bank is setting up a facility in Chennai in September to support its systems development and operations, adding to similar spaces in Malaysia and Dublin. The facility, also referred to as a global capability centre, has space for 600 people and makes Sumitomo Mitsui the latest among global banks to latch on to such hubs in India.
“As we think about scale, efficiency, and tapping into available talent and human capital, we need as a group to build a presence in India,” where many global and its Japanese peers have seen success, Kannan said.
Uploaded by Liza Shireen Koshy
