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Published July 2006 *The report is sent in PDF format and will be e-mailed to you within one working day from the purchase of the report.
With growth rates of 30 to 35%, India's revenues from banking and financial services offshoring is likely to reach $6.5 billion by FY2011. However, this is still a fraction of the "offshoreable" market potential. Arun Jethmalani, CEO, ValueNotes says, "Growth in Indian offshore revenues from the BFS vertical will outpace overall BPO growth, driven by expansion into higher value services, especially research and analytics".
Almost 50% of the world's biggest banks in terms of asset size already have significant presence in India. The smaller, regional banks are also expected to take to offshoring in a big way in future. The need to manage increasingly complex global operations in a cost-effective manner, and added workload due to regulatory compliance such as SOX, Spitzer's Settlement ruling and Basel II norms are major offshoring drivers.
The offshore vendor landscape is made up of: - Captives of MNC banks and financial institutions such as Morgan Stanley, JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers,TSB Lloyds, Scope International
- Among third party players are:
o Large multi-service companies like Genpact, EXL Service, WNS; o Multi-service BPOs with IT parents such as Wipro BPO, Progeon, MphasiS BPO and iGate; o Large KPOs such as Evalueserve, OPI and Integreon
Large players and niche specialists are best positioned to exploit the large opportunity.
Ribhu Ranjan, ValueNotes analyst and co-author of the report expects that going forward, regional and mid-tier financial firms the world over will adopt a multi-location, multi-vendor offshoring model, signaling a preference for global sourcing.
The report provides an overview of the buyer scenario and an in-depth analysis of the Indian vendor space along with profiles of major industry players. The report is designed to help: - Banking and Financial Services firms looking to outsource/offshore
- Outsourcing consultants to evaluate and compare the offerings of vendors
- Banking and Financial Services vendors to assess their competitive environment
- Venture Capital companies looking for investment opportunities
- Researchers looking for detailed information on financial services offshoring
This study is based on secondary data as well as extensive interviews with key people at various BPOs (captive as well as third-party) in India. Table of Contents
Pages: 90 | 1. Executive Summary | | 2. Scope | 3. The Big Picture 3.1 Financial Services Industry: Definition 3.2 The Global Financial Services Market 3.3 Business Processes | 4. The Offshoring Perspective 4.1 BFS - Pioneers of Offshoring 4.2 Offshoring Drivers: Beyond Cost Arbitrage 4.3 Offshoring Preferences: Regional and Global Firms 4.4 India Remains the Favorite | 5. Who is doing What? 5.1 The Matrix | 6. Indian Vendor Analysis 6.1 Vendor Segmentation 6.2 Funding Patterns for Third Party BPOs 6.3 Billing Rates 6.4 Current Positioning of Vendors
| 7. Trends, Insights & Projections 7.1 Best-of-breed Global Sourcing Will Increase 7.2 Leading to Hybrids Within Hybrids 7.3 Captives’ Will Remain So 7.4 M&A Activity Will Gain More Traction 7.5 Skill Availability Holds The Key 7.6 Estimated Growth in Offshoring for India 7.7 Research and Analytics to Witness Spectacular Growth 7.8 Employee Numbers up 350% in Five years | 8. Company Profiles 24/7 Customer Adventity Amba Research Copal Partners EXL Service Fractal Analytics Genpact IBM Daksh ICICI OneSource Inductis KPIT Cummins GBS MphasiS OfficeTiger Outsource Partners International Progeon Transworks Wipro BPO | | 9. Directory | | 10. Research Methodology | | 11. About ValueNotes |
Table of Figures Figure: 1 S&P 500 market capitalizations 2004 Figure: 2 Global financial services market by segment Figure: 3 Geographical dispersion of the global market Figure: 4 Global financial conglomerates Figure: 5 Business processes Figure: 6 Process sub-classifications Figure: 7 Core services Figure: 8 Financial services value chain Figure: 9 The offshoring time-line Figure: 10 Drivers: Now and Then Figure: 11 Regulatory Drivers Figure: 12 Regional Firms Prefer Regional Vendors Figure: 13 Services outsourced across the vertical Figure: 14 Components of research and analytics Figure: 15 India SWOT analyses Figure: 16 Wage comparisons in the financial services industry Figure: 17 Preferred destinations for offshoring Figure: 18 Comparison of offshore destinations Figure: 19 Who-is-doing-what matrix Figure: 20 IT offshoring by top 30 firms Figure: 21 Percent of financial institutions offshoring different services to India Figure: 22 Vendor Segmentation Figure: 23 Captive centers in India Figure: 24 Major players catering to the BFS vertical Figure: 25 Services offered by third party players Figure: 26 Number vs. employment amongst vendor types Figure: 27 Comparison of the vendor models Figure: 28 VCs – the prime funding source Figure: 29 Funding received by major BPOs Figure: 30 Average Billing Rates Figure: 31 Research and analytics claim the most Figure: 32 Third Party Vendor groups Figure: 33 Niche-o-Meter: Measuring the BFS dominance Figure: 34 SWOT analyses of Third party vendors Figure: 35 Rating of Vendor Clusters Figure: 36 Vendor life cycle Figure: 37 Future strategic moves of the vendors Figure: 38 The hybrid model Figure: 39 Prominent M&A Deals Figure: 40 $7.01 Billion Indian offshoring in 2011 at current levels Figure: 41 Employee demand to increase four fold by 2011 |
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