Citi launches co-branded credit cards with SE Asia's Grab in push for more customers
Citigroup has teamed up with Singapore-based ride-hailing firm Grab to launch co-branded credit cards, as it looks to boost its Asian customer base by about 13% via partnerships with digital firms, a senior Citi executive said.
The new cards mark the latest step in Grab’s big push into the financial services sector, an area it has earmarked for growth. For the U.S. bank, it is in line with its strategy to offer its products within online ecosystems as consumers spend more time on smartphones.
The Citi-Grab co-branded cards will be issued in the Philippines on Tuesday and in Thailand later this year, before being rolled our in other Southeast Asian markets.
“Today we have about 16 million customers in Asia, and our aspiration is to increase this by about two million in the next few years through partnerships alone,” Gonzalo Luchetti, Citi’s head of consumer banking for Asia Pacific, Europe, the Middle East and Africa, told Reuters.
Citi launched a co-branded credit card with Indian payments firm Paytm last month and with Qantas two years ago.
The bank’s net income from Asia Pacific was $4.4 billion in 2018, with a third of its $15.3 billion revenue coming from Southeast Asia - where Grab is the leading ride-hailing firm.
Grab, which started as a taxi-hailing app firm, has been aggressively expanding into financial services and said, earlier this year, that it was pursuing lending licenses across Southeast Asia.
“The Citi-Grab credit card is a natural next step as we create more value for our digital first, always in GrabPay users,” Huey Tyng Ooi, managing director of GrabPay Singapore, Malaysia, and the Philippines, said in a statement.
Grab is also exploring spinning off its financial services unit and has mandated banks to approach potential minority investors, Reuters reported last month, citing sources.
Banks and insurance firms are among the potential investors in the Grab unit, a source has said.
Lenders around the world are trying to partner with digital players to get closer to consumers.
A recent case in point would be Goldman Sachs’ credit card deal with Apple that can potentially connect Goldman with hundreds of millions of iPhone users.
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Competition is fierce, however, as banks try to work with the most successful digital players, who in return are vying with each other to get the better deal with banks.
“We are not the only ones to see the blinding insight that customers are spending more time on their phones whether in payment, ride sharing or chat ecosystems, but it is all about how you execute a partnership,” Citi’s Luchetti said.
“Thirty years ago, if you wanted to be relevant to clients, you needed to have as many branches as you could. Today ... people spend hours every day in these virtual cities, and the equivalent of having a branch in every corner is being able to provide your services within these digital ecosystems.”
Citi has closed hundreds of branches in Asia in recent years, shrinking its network from 600 to roughly 250, while, like its competitors, spending heavily on digital initiatives.
“Now we have reached a point of decent stability,” Luchetti said. “If you asked me to make a bet on how many branches we’ll have in a few years, I would say a number in the low 200s.”