SC Ventures is a business unit of Standard Chartered Bank that focuses on investment, innovation, and venture building. Unlike other corporate venture capital unts (CVC), SC Ventures not only invests in fintechs but also builds its own independent ventures. The unit has three main objectives… To rewire the DNA of banking, to invest in fintechs that have a strategic fit with the bank, and to drive a culture of innovation across the bank’s employees.
SC Ventures has launched several successful ventures in areas such as Digital Assets, Online Economy & Lifestyle, Sustainability & Inclusion and SMEs & World Trade. The unit embraces challenges in terms of governance, talent, and scaling the ventures. In terms of future trends, SC Ventures is interested in exploring the application of AI and the potential of the metaverse in commerce and education.
During Money 20/20 Europe we met with Gurdeep Singh Kohli, one of SC Ventures’ founding members, to find out more…
Tell us about the genesis of SC Ventures?
“SC Ventures is the investment, innovation and venture building arm of Standard Chartered Bank. Our purpose, the vision statement, is to rewire the DNA in banking. A need that we are increasingly hearing from our clients. Importantly, SC Ventures is not like any other CVC unit you may come across in the corporates, or even banks. Most of them just have a CVC unit, which is an investment unit into fintechs. But what we have is also a venture building arm; it’s what differentiates SC ventures from many other CVCs.
Venture building is where we build our own businesses and these are set up as independent ventures. Going forward, many of them will actually have their own stand here at Money 20/20 as independent ventures. We are also a bit different from an investment perspective. Sc Ventures only invests in fintechs… We work with so many CVCs set up with a pure financial objective. However, SC Ventures only invests in a fintech that has proven itself with the bank or with one of our other ventures.
So, there needs to be a strategic fit first before we make an investment. Another of our objectives is to drive the culture of innovation across the 85,000 people we have at the bank. And as a part of that, we run an intrapreneurship programme where the bank can throw challenges for employees in the bank to participate and come up with ideas. We take them through training and then we put those ideas into production. We have been delivering against these three objectives – venture building, Fintech investment and intrapreneurship – since the inception of SC Ventures six years ago.”
Talk about your role at SC Ventures?
“I’m one of the founding members of SC Ventures with CEO Alex Manson right from day zero. Alex and I drafted the blueprint for SC Ventures which got endorsed in 2017. We set up in 2018 and I have played multiple roles over these last six years. Today, I’m an Operating Member and lead for Europe and the Americas. During the last six years I’ve set up the venture building practice where we started incubating a few ventures. The few have become quite a few! I’ve also played a part in developing our strategy and I’m now responsible for the intrapreneurship program. I also serve on the board of the ventures we launch and as an Operating Member, overseeing the performance of these ventures.”
What are some of the key challenges financial institutions are facing that you can help them with? What problems are they asking you to solve? In doing so, what are the challenges for SC Ventures?
“Our portfolio is spread across four high conviction themes: Digital Assets, Online Economy & Lifestyle, Sustainability & Inclusion and SMEs & World Trade. Venture building in itself is a challenge. It requires a venture building mindset to achieve progress in stages.
We created an alternate governance model to allow the decision making for venture building to be faster and more nimble. Meanwhile, we maintain institutional grade security from a risk, compliance and security mindset and are actually among the best in the market. This is something smaller fintech companies do not have. Another challenge we face is talent. It is very important to have these ventures led by people who also understand banking, not just tech. A combination of people from within and outside the bank is required to be successful. Obviously, the ability to scale is another key challenge as we look at the sales cycle for developing many of these capabilities.”
Tell us about some of SC’s successful ventures…
“Online Economy & Lifestyle has seen some of our biggest success stories with the digital bank Mox, which operates in Hong Kong. We have also built a Banking-as-a-Service (BaaS) business called Audax which is live and now opening up to new clients. And we are looking at some of the onboarding solutions in the UAE with a venture called Appro.
Within SMEs & World Trade, we took a different approach. We did not lead with financing, we led with commerce. Because the problem statement from the client was ‘help us grow and then you can give us financing’. Traditionally, the banks have led with financing, but the SMEs have told us they can manage financing and want us to help them grow so that financing follows. We’ve responded by building a B2B commerce platform for SMEs called Solv. It’s been very successful from a scale perspective in India; and we are entering other markets. We also have ventures like Olea and TASConnect, for supply chain management, and Olea which helps distribute trade assets to institutional investors. So, that’s the bridge which Olea is creating.
For Sustainability & Inclusion, SC Ventures is partnering with ENGIE Factory on a startup to bolster funding for conservation projects. The venture will leverage emerging technology to identify, evaluate and drive capital into critical conservation efforts worldwide.
Across Digital Assets, our biggest ventures are Zodia Custody and Zodia Markets, creating institutional grade capability for custodying cryptocurrencies and digital assets and for institutional trading.”
What trends are you seeing across the FinTech landscape? What opportunities do you see for SC Ventures?
“The financial world moves on and the recent focus on crypto and payments has shifted to how AI can impact the future for financial services.
There is an element of what can we do in the field of metaverse. And there is an element of the application of metaverse for commerce and the application of it for learning. Another key theme is not AI in terms of tech but AI in terms of application which we are interested in. What we are doing now is creating a centre of excellence in SC Ventures for the bank. It will find out the use cases of AI within banking. We are already seeing examples of applying use cases of AI in compliance. So, we are working on a capability which can make the compliance or regulatory change management much easier by applying AI.
In my opinion, AI is at the stage where blockchain was a few years ago… You kept on hearing the word blockchain. But my simple brain said, ‘Blockchain is the tech, but tell me the application.’ I think AI is at that stage where people are leading with AI, but then AI will be replaced by the word, which is the application of it. And that is very natural for the evolution to happen. But I think everybody’s going to benefit.”
And what’s next for SC Ventures? What future launches and initiatives are you particularly excited about?
“We have also created an Innovation Bridge (currently known as the FinTech Bridge) which connects fintechs to the banks. I’m leading on this unique proposition which doesn’t exist anywhere else right now in the market. Initially this bridge was only for Standard Chartered, which is the bank calling out to the fintechs to find solutions to their problems. Now, we are opening up this bridge for other banks to pose challenges. So far, we have 4,000 fintechs registered on the bridge.”
Why Money20/20? What is it about this particular event that makes it the perfect place to showcase what you do? How has the response been to SC Ventures?
“It’s the first time I’ve attended Money 20/20, we’ve had some fascinating impromptu conversations that will lead to great opportunities. All the big names are here and it’s clearly a popular event from a thematic perspective – payments is a big theme this year. I have a very high regard for the quality of what’s on offer and the way the event has been organised. It’s a great customer experience, the way it’s all been structured, at scale, is actually one of the best I’ve ever seen.
The response has been fantastic… We’re now beginning to combine Standard Chartered’s access to the clients and also SC Ventures. We are working as one unit to transform the bank and the banking industry at the same time. It’s a unique combination that is getting people engaged and starting great conversations for future collaborations.”
- Digital Payments