HomeNewsBusinessFintech startup Converj's credit cards for b2b payments looks at addressing the MSME credit gap

Fintech startup Converj's credit cards for b2b payments looks at addressing the MSME credit gap

The transactions are currently settled using NEFT and RTGS payment methods, which does not facilitate credit for such b2b payments. The credit card rails could help the companies free up working capital for business expansion.

September 21, 2023 / 22:11 IST
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Representative Image
Representative Image

The size of the small and medium businesses credit gap is often touted to be worth $350 billion by various studies. This has spawned multiple fintechs targeting treasury operations and transaction banking payments to digitise the business to business (b2b) corporate settlements, which could help the lenders address this gap better through transparency, transaction and payment data and invoice information.

Among such startups is Bengaluru-based fintech Converj, looking at converting such payments to card networks through virtual credit cards, which is currently happening through bank payment settlement systems managed by the Reserve Bank of India -- NEFT and RTGS. Both these payments do not earn any commissions for the banks and hence card payments present a compelling case for this shift.

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While this is the first such effort, the promise of incentives along with the credit opportunity could help in the adoption of this method. The b2b payment transaction value itself is worth $8 trillion every year in India. Out of the $350 billion credit opportunity, the immediate real addressable market could be around $80-90 billion, say fintech executives.

Founded in July 2020, Converj has raised US$ 2.8 million so far from Beenxt and other angel investors. While Parry Ravindranathan and Varghese K Abraham started the company, Manish Daswani joined the firm as chief business officer early this month. The company has signed up both issuer and acquirer banks and will see the first set of customers coming onboard this month through the issuer banks.