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EAR TO THE GROUND

Fortune India

|

January 2021

Beginning its life as a microfinance company, Bandhan has made its name as a commercial bank to watch out for. It now wants to leapfrog into the future. Will it be able to work its magic again?

- DEBOJYOTI GHOSH

EAR TO THE GROUND

CHANDRA SHEKHAR GHOSH, managing director and CEO of Bandhan Bank, is an unusual banker. Unlike his peers, Ghosh doesn’t possess an MBA from an Ivy League school. He operates out of the bank’s Kolkata headquarters, again an aberration given that most bankers work out of Mumbai, India’s financial capital. Ghosh, in short, is an outlier who earned his success against unlikely odds, much like his five-year-old institution, Bandhan Bank, which today commands a market capitalisation of over ₹56,000 crore (about $7.5 billion).

“I am not a banker. But I have a strong understanding of people’s needs at the grassroots level,” says the 60-year-old awardee of the Ashoka Fellowship, a recognition for leading social entrepreneurs globally.

Despite not having a commercial banking pedigree, Ghosh’s Bandhan Financial Services was the first microfinance company in the country to win a banking licence from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in April 2014. The only other applicant was infrastructure financing company IDFC, which was also given a new bank licence.

Bandhan Bank, which started operations as a commercial bank in August 2015, follows a different model than its larger peers, State Bank of India, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, and others. Analysts see Bandhan Bank as a “unique Indian financial services play” that primarily focusses on microfinance, affordable housing, and micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), targeting the country’s large unbanked population and underpenetrated markets.

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