“Japanese rural banks are are interested in increasing in operations and they need a window to India. The Japan Desk is filing a gap felt between Japanese investors and requirements in India,” SBI chair Arundhati Bhattacharya told reporters here following the launch of the Japan Desk.
“Japanese corporates need help to understand new financial and regulatory landscapes. Even Indian entrepreneurs require this kind of help and handholding,” she said.
The first such desk by state-run SBI will provide advisory to India bound Japanese investors, as well as financial and non-financial support to local establishments of Japanese corporates and to Japanese SMEs without India offices.
“Under the Japan-India Investment Promotion Partnership, we have targeted to have $30 billion worth of investment from Japan,” Japanese Ambassador to India Kenji Hiramatsu said at the event.
SBI will provide rupee financing to Japanese corporates through Letters of Credit issued by Japanese banks in favour of the SBI Tokyo branch.
Recalling Japan’s role in the making of China into a manufacturing giant, Bhattacharya, in her address at the inauguration, hoped the former would play a similar role for Indian manufacturing.