1 Billion People, Trillions in Growth: Why LATAM & SEA Are The Next Economic Powerhouses by Leading Digital Finance Revolution
Developed by Valor Capital and Credit Saison, study points to a massive $1.67 trillion financing gap for SMEs and MSMEs in both regions, which can be unlocked by digital finance, cross-border collaboration and blockchain.
SAO PAULO and SINGAPORE, April 28, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Latin America and Southeast Asia, home to over one billion people, are emerging as global economic powerhouses — driven by investments in infrastructure, middle-class expansion, and digital transformation. This is according to a report by Valor Capital Group and Credit Saison, which highlights that despite their readiness for growth, both regions continue to face financial inefficiencies and regulatory barriers.
The first-of-its-kind comparative study calls for increased investments in digital finance, cross-border collaboration, and blockchain to unlock their full potential, emphasizing how these regions are reshaping global trade and finance. While economic expansion is evident, countries in LATAM and SEA remain financially fragmented — limiting access to credit and hindering commercial integration.
'Latin America and Southeast Asia are no longer just emerging markets; they are defining the future of digital finance, trade, and economic collaboration,' says Bruno Batavia, Director of Emerging Tech at Valor Capital. According to him, unlocking their full potential will require regulatory modernization, regional partnerships, and financial innovation to be central to the agenda. 'The next decade will be crucial in determining whether these regions can overcome their historical financial limitations and emerge as fully integrated players in the global economy.'
Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are the backbone of these economies, but 87% of their financing needs in Latin America remain unmet, resulting in a $1.4 trillion financing gap. In Southeast Asia, 51% of micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) face difficulties accessing financial services, creating a $272 billion deficit. Traditional banking systems, still reliant on outdated credit assessment models and manual processes, are unable to keep up with growing demand, stifling the growth of millions of businesses.
'This report serves as a critical blueprint for stakeholders seeking to harness the immense potential these regions offer. Credit Saison has been in Brazil since 2023, and has been present in Southeast Asia for over ten years, with the unique ability to deploy investments via private credit and venture capital to support the growth of fintechs and founders in both debt and equity. Through our experiences as an operator in global markets with steep Japanese heritage, partnerships and knowledge exchange are critical to navigating and adapting to local nuances and forming successful strategies in the market. For Credit Saison, it's always about winning together with our partners. We look forward to deepening our engagement in both regions to collaboratively unlock pathways to sustainable growth,' said Qin En Looi, Partner at Saison Capital, the corporate venture capital arm of Credit Saison.
Cross-border payments represent another significant challenge. Remittance fees in both regions average 6.1% — more than double the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) target of 3%. This translates to an annual cost of $7 billion for consumers, reducing disposable income and limiting financial mobility. Additionally, international payments can take up to five business days to settle, undermining the efficiency of global trade networks.
Venture Capital and Fintechs Driving Change
In response to these challenges, innovation in the fintech sector and the rise of venture capital investments are transforming the financial landscape. Southeast Asia created 151 new venture capital funds in 2021, while Latin America peaked at 69 funds in 2019, indicating strong investor confidence. The total number of funding rounds nearly doubled in Southeast Asia, while in Latin America, the total volume of investments grew 8.7 times, underscoring the rapid evolution of the financial ecosystem.
This influx of capital has led to significant acquisitions in the fintech sector, expanding the region's appeal to global investors. Notable examples include Visa's $1 billion acquisition of Brazilian fintech Pismo, TikTok's $1.5 billion investment in Indonesia's Tokopedia, and PropertyGuru's $1.1 billion acquisition in Southeast Asia. These transactions highlight the increasing volume of investments in financial infrastructure.
'In Brazil, although we lead in fintech innovation, we have one of the world's most complex currency exchange systems, requiring over 100 transaction codes for financial operations, which creates operational inefficiencies. In Mexico, the lack of local debt funds forces fintech startups to rely on equity financing, which hinders their scalability,' explains Bruno Batavia, Director of Emerging Tech at Valor Capital.
About Valor Capital Group
Founded in 2011 and with a presence in New York, Silicon Valley, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, and Mexico City, Valor Capital is a pioneering Venture Capital and Growth Equity fund manager with a 'cross-border' strategy, aiming to act as a bridge between the technology markets of the United States and Latin America. Its funds invest in transformative businesses, from early-stage startups to expansion-stage companies. Valor is committed to the success of its portfolio companies, offering capital, operational support, and global connections. Learn more at valorcapitalgroup.com.
About Credit Saison Brazil
Established in 2023, Credit Saison Brazil (CSBR) is a financial company with a mission to bring people, partners and technology together, creating resilient and innovative financial solutions for positive impact.
CSBR provides a comprehensive offering of both credit and equity investment opportunities to support the innovators and builders of Brazil, and is committed to being a transformative partner in creating opportunities and enabling dreams.
The company is part of Credit Saison Co. Ltd. from Japan, and Saison International as its international headquarters in Singapore with core businesses in lending and corporate venture capital. Founded in 1951, Credit Saison Co. Ltd is one of Japan's largest non-bank financial companies with over 70 years of history and listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. The Company has evolved from a credit-card issuer to a diversified financial services provider across payments, leasing, finance, real estate and entertainment.
Over 1,500 employees work across the company's markets (ex-Japan) of Brazil, Mexico, India, Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand and Singapore.
About Saison Capital
Saison Capital (saisoncapital.com) is an early-stage venture capital fund (pre-seed to Series B) with a focus on emerging markets. The firm backs ambitious founders at the pre-seed or seed stage and focuses on web3, fintech and commerce.
Operating from the Asia Pacific region but deploying capital on a global scale, Saison Capital harnesses Credit Saison's extensive financial services operating background and resources across key markets, including Singapore, Indonesia, India, Vietnam, Thailand, Philippines, Cambodia, Japan, Brazil and Mexico. Saison Capital is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Credit Saison.
View original content to download multimedia: https://www.prnewswire.com/apac/news-releases/1-billion-people-trillions-in-growth-why-latam--sea-are-the-next-economic-powerhouses-by-leading-digital-finance-revolution-302439265.html
SOURCE Saison International

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Hypebeast
an hour ago
- Hypebeast
HAVEN's Summer 2025 Collection Centers on the Pacific Northwest's Terrain
Vancouver-based labelHAVENhas unveiled a coastal campaign for its Summer 2025 collection, returning with a capsule of essentials designed for the warm days and cool nights of Summer in the Pacific Northwest. Utilizing cotton-linen gabardines, Japan denim, and lightweight Super 140s wool, the label offers a range of core garments characterized by the label's functional, minimalist ethos. HAVEN opts for a light and neutral color palette inspired by the woodland coast of Vancouver, led by tones of beige, sage green, brown, off-white, and indigo. The collection is anchored by matching linen gabardine sets, comprising a work jacket that reinterprets the classic military BDU (battle dress uniform) garments. Offered in a dark brown and beige colorway, the jacket's ergonomic tailoring and underarm gussets elevate the utilitarian design with contemporary elegance. In indigo and white, Japanese linen denim shirts and trousers offer a cooling feel and soft hand. The denim Helix Pant features twisted side seams for a sculpted fit and added mobility, and functional details, like slant hand pockets, storm welt back pockets, and snap-adjustable waist tabs. HAVEN tops the collection off with wool Summer shirting, including wool versions of the aforementioned denim shirts in beige, green, and brown checks. Utilizing Super 140s wool, known for its ultra-fine quality, the collection also offers short-sleeve camp collar shirts in the same three colorways. See the gallery above for a closer look at the campaign. HAVEN's Summer 2025 Delivery 1 is out now at the brand'swebsiteand physical store.

Associated Press
12 hours ago
- Associated Press
China, Central Asia make continuous efforts to deepen agricultural cooperation
BEIJING, June 15, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- A report from People's Daily: Central Asia serves as a globally significant arid agriculture region. By leveraging their natural resources and geographic advantages, Central Asian nations have implemented strategic policies in recent years to bolster agriculture development, enhance productivity, and expand agricultural exports. Within this framework, China has steadily deepened agricultural cooperation with Central Asian countries, collaboratively advancing environmentally sustainable and green development practices. A growing diversity of specialty products from Central Asia are now entering the Chinese market and gaining popularity among consumers, including Kazakhstan's camel milk, Uzbekistan's cherries, Tajikistan's dried fruits, Kyrgyzstan's honey, and Turkmenistan's cotton. Bilateral agricultural trade between China and Central Asian countries has experienced robust growth. Data shows that trade in agricultural products between China and the five Central Asian countries surged from 2.875 billion in 2023 - a 40-fold increase over two decades. On May 21, China and Kazakhstan signed a new agreement permitting the entry of Kazakh poultry into the Chinese market. To date, over 2,500 Kazakh agricultural enterprises have secured authorization to export 29 categories of agricultural products to China. Kazakhstan, endowed with abundant agricultural resources and robust production capacity, ranks among the world's leading grain exporters. In 2024, bilateral agricultural trade between China and Kazakhstan reached $1.4 billion, a 10.5% year-over-year increase. Notably, Kazakhstan's exports to China alone stood at $1.05 billion, with key commodities including animal feed, grains, oil crops, and vegetable oils. Impressive growth was observed in specific sectors: animal feed exports surged by 485%, vegetable oils rose by 26%, and rapeseed oil exports increased by 57%. In the first quarter of 2025, bilateral agricultural trade hit $430.5 million, marking a 45% increase year on year. China now serves as Kazakhstan's largest market for agricultural exports, solidifying the strategic partnership between the two nations. To streamline cross-border trade, China Customs has established 8 dedicated 'green channels' for accelerated clearance of agricultural products from Central Asia, primarily facilitated through land ports. These measures provide robust logistical support for enhancing agricultural exports from Central Asian nations to China. China is concurrently deepening agricultural science and technology partnerships with Central Asian countries under the frameworks of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO). Chinese enterprises and universities have collaborated with Central Asian countries to launch demonstration farms and technology centers, significantly improving the quality and yield of local agricultural output. A notable example is Northwest A&F University, based in northwest China's Shaanxi province, which has co-established 8 overseas agricultural technology demonstration parks with Kazakhstan, and other Central Asian countries. These facilities focus on joint efforts in crop breeding, water-saving irrigation systems, and soil enhancement technologies, thereby elevating regional agricultural productivity. Additionally, China provides onsite training programs, remote technical guidance, and capacity-building programs to empower agricultural professionals. Professor Zhang Zhengmao of Northwest A&F University, who has conducted field research across 10 regions in Kazakhstan, highlighted the country's agricultural potential. He noted Kazakhstan's fertile soils and abundant sunlight - ideal for wheat cultivation - but emphasized that local wheat varieties often lack disease resistance and face issues of lodging. 'This is precisely where Chinese agricultural research expertise can address regional challenges,' he stated. To develop wheat varieties better adapted to Kazakhstan's environmental conditions, Professor Zhang's research team is collaborating with breeding institutions in China's Gansu province and Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region. They employ a method called cross-regional shuttle breeding, systematically selecting and testing wheat strains across diverse ecological zones to enhance adaptability and productivity. 'Our trials demonstrate that the selected varieties exhibit marked improvements in grain count, kernel weight, and uniformity,' he noted. The deputy general manager of Kazakhstan's Aiju agro-processing and logistics park in Kazakhstan noted that Chinese high-yield wheat varieties have significantly boosted both output and quality of local crops. 'The products are now exported to China and have gained strong market acceptance among Chinese consumers,' he added. In Kyrgyzstan, the China-Kyrgyzstan fruit breeding technology demonstration park, also established by Northwest A&F University, is focusing on expanding increase apple production. While apples are a staple fruit in Kyrgyzstan, their cultivation is hindered by the country's hot, arid summers. Professor Zhang Dong of Northwest A&F University and his team, after nearly seven years of research, have developed rootstock-scion combinations through selective breeding. These hybrids outperform traditional seedlings in water efficiency, survival rate, and yield, increasing output by over 300 kilograms per mu (667 square meters). 'In Uzbekistan, we harnessed the abundant sunlight to introduce solar-powered sprinkler systems and smart irrigation technologies that integrate water and fertilizer delivery,' explained Professor Zhu Delan of Northwest A&F University. This system replaced conventional flood irrigation, resulting in a 50% increase in cotton yields, a 50% reduction in water use, and a 40% cut in investment costs,' Professor Zhu revealed. Kazakh Minister of Agriculture Aidarbek Saparov underscored China's role as a vital and expanding market for agricultural exports from Kazakhstan and other Central Asian countries. He highlighted the tremendous potential for deepening agricultural cooperation between both sides, emphasizing mutual benefits in trade and technical exchange. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE People's Daily

Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Developers seek to build 750 affordable rentals in Kapolei
A master-planned community long envisioned for Kapolei could begin to take shape early next year with initial homes that help ease Oahu's short supply of affordable rental housing. Developers of the roughly 500-acre project known as Kapolei West between the City of Kapolei and Ko Olina Resort &Marina have advanced plans to produce an initial 17-acre subdivision of 750 rental apartments that would be affordable in perpetuity to households with low and moderate incomes. Affiliates of Utah-based firm The Wasatch Group are aiming to start construction in February and finish homes in four phases from August 2027 to July 2028. 'We're very excited about getting going, ' said Kip Sheppard, head of Wasatch affiliate Laulima Affordable Housing LLC developing the 750-unit project to be named Aloha Aina. 'It's been a long time coming.' Aloha Aina's four phases involve 70 units for low-income seniors, 180 units for low-income families and two phases with a combined 500 units for moderate-income households. The first phase, according to Sheppard, could either be the piece for seniors or 236 units for moderate-income households, depending on whether low-cost financing can be obtained from the state later this year. Two pools, community gardens, two clubhouses and residential units in eight buildings rising up to six stories are part of the Aloha Aina project, which is expected to cost $447 million and would provide tenants with the lowest utility rates of any West Oahu community due in part to photovoltaic power and construction materials, according to the developer. If successful, Wasatch will start forming an initial piece of Kapolei West that was first envisioned more than 30 years ago and was previously pursued by multiple developers. The property for decades was among thousands of acres of sugarcane plantation lands in the area owned by Campbell Estate programmed to become part of Kapolei as Oahu's secondary urban center. An original version of the community later dubbed Kapolei West by the estate was proposed in 1991 by Ko Olina's initial developer Herbert Horita, who had an option to buy the roughly 500-acre site bordering the resort. Horita's plan was to produce 3, 500 homes around a second golf course for the resort. But development of Ko Olina stalled under Horita due to the bursting of the Japanese investment bubble followed by an economic downturn in Hawaii that lasted for most of the 1990s. In 2001 developer Jeff Stone, who with partners acquired the then-mostly undeveloped resort in 1998, announced plans to purchase 324 acres of the Kapolei West site to produce Seaside at Kapolei with 2, 900 homes, a golf course and a 33-acre commercial center. Financing challenges in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks derailed Stone's plan. An affiliate of Campbell Estate's successor, James Campbell Co., several years later obtained land-use and zoning approvals for Kapolei West allowing up to 2, 500 homes, a 23-acre regional mall, a golf course and 25 acres of park space. In 2016 a Chinese company paid Campbell Co. $103 million for the Kapolei West site. But China Oceanwide Holdings Ltd. failed to develop the land amid a Chinese-government clampdown on overseas investment, and in 2022 sold the property to Wasatch for $75 million, according to property records. As part of land-use approvals, the property owner is required to make 30 % of all homes affordable to low and moderate-income households, with 10 % being affordable to households earning no more than 80 % of the median income and 20 % affordable to households earning no more than 120 % of the median income. Aloha Aina would satisfy this requirement, though Wasatch is aiming to make its 10 % share, or 250 homes, affordable to households earning no more than 60 % of the median income, including 18 reserved for households earning half that. Apartments throughout Aloha Aina mostly will range in size from 606 to 1, 218 square feet with one, two or three bedrooms in addition to a half-dozen, 493-square-foot studios. Maximum monthly rents for tenants earning up to 60 % of the median income can be $1, 596 for studios, $1, 710 for one-bedroom units, $2, 052 for two-bedroom units and $2, 371 for three-bedroom units under state guidelines. The income level this year equates to $63, 840 for a single person, $72, 960 for a couple and $91, 200 for a family of four. The other 500 units could have tenants earning up to twice as much, or $127, 680 for a single person, $145, 920 for a couple and $182, 400 for a family of four. Corresponding maximum monthly rents could range from $3, 192 for a studio up to $4, 743 for a three-bedroom apartment. To finance the 250 low-income apartments, Aloha Aina's developer has applied for about $130 million in combined tax-free bond financing, a low-interest loan and tax credits from the Hawaii Housing Finance and Development Corp., a state agency that helps finance affordable housing. Such financing is awarded to developers on a competitive basis. If Wasatch's application is approved, the developer intends to proceed first with the 70 units for low-income seniors to be called Maluhia followed by the 180 units for low-income families to be named The Hoku. The developer also is seeking exemptions from having to pay certain city fees estimated to total about $4.4 million, including a $2 million wastewater system charge, $1.3 million in building permit fees and a $933, 750 road improvement fee. HHFDC has yet to act on the developer's applications. If the requested financing is not approved this year, Wasatch intends to proceed first with the moderate-income portions of the project.