Grab Offers Micro Loans And Mobile Payment

Posted by Kirhat | Tuesday, March 27, 2018 | | 0 comments »

GrabPay
Grab, a car-hailing service, has been linked with a deal to buy out Uber's business in Southeast Asia, but those rumors aren't stopping it from building its fintech platform after announced a financial services unit.

The Singapore-based company has been pushing itself into fintech for some time, with the most visible moment being the launch of its mobile payments service last November. Today, it extended that further still by introducing micro-loans and insurance options for Grab drivers and businesses that use its GrabPay services.

For its new offerings, Grab has teamed up with Credit Saison, a US$ 3 billion firm that is Japan's biggest lender with some 70 million credit cards in circulation, to create a joint venture called Grab Financial Services Asia. U.S.-based insurer Chubb has signed on as a partner.

In an interview with TechCrunch on the sidelines of the Money2020 event in Singapore, Jason Thompson, who is head of GrabPay, said the move is in line with Grab's focus on enabling business and income in Southeast Asia.

"Today we've helped create about five million jobs [across Grab services], for those people to grow their businesses, we need to provide them with financial services. Whether that's nano-loans for working capital, the ability to buy a car, actually without financial services we're going to restrict the business growth of that whole ecosystem. That's the reason we're doing it," he said.

Rather than pumping potential financial services customers with alerts via its app, Grab plans to take a community-driven approach and promote the availability of services using its driver events, its network of agents and other offline means.

Credit scoring is tricky in many emerging regions since a large proportion of people don't own bank accounts or use them regularly. In Southeast Asia, KMPMG estimates that just 27 percent of the region's 600 million population have a bank account. Grab plans to assess loan recipients and insurance candidates using a mixture of signals that could include their driving style, which Thompson said it can track using telemetrics from a driver's device.

So while it wouldn't be the lone criteria for scoring, a Grab driver's driving style could play a part in assessing whether they receive a loan, Thompson explained.

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