Tokenised Trade Finance: Can Blockchain Finally Bridge India’s US $300 Billion Export-Credit Gap?



Khushi V Rangdhol
Jun 30, 2025 07:23

India faces a $300 billion export-credit gap, but blockchain’s “tokenised trade finance” could streamline processes, digitizing LCs and invoices to enhance access for small firms.



Tokenised Trade Finance: Can Blockchain Finally Bridge India's US $300 Billion Export-Credit Gap?

India’s exporters ship about US $770 billion in goods and services a year, yet small and mid-size firms still struggle to turn purchase orders into bank credit. The Asian Development Bank’s latest Trade Finance Gaps, Growth and Jobs survey pegs the global shortfall at US $2.5 trillion in 2022, up almost 50 % from the pandemic low. Industry groups and IFC studies put India’s share of that gap at roughly US $300 billion, concentrated in working-capital loans that never reach MSMEs. Blockchain builders say the cure may be “tokenised trade finance”—digitising invoices, letters of credit and collateral into on-chain assets that investors anywhere can fund in real time.

Why Letters of Credit Still Run on Paper

A typical textile exporter in Tiruppur ships fabric to a buyer in Milan under a letter of credit (LC). The LC passes through four banks, six paper documents and a manual checking loop that often lasts 7–10 days. Any mismatch—an extra comma on a bill of lading—can freeze payment. Banks therefore ration credit to known corporates and over-collateralise the rest, leaving smaller suppliers in limbo.

How Tokenisation Changes The Workflow

  1. Document digitisation. Bills of lading, inspection reports and warehouse receipts are hashed and timestamped on a permissioned ledger.
  2. Smart-contract LC. Terms encoded in the contract self-execute: when the shipping line uploads IoT-verified arrival data, payment triggers automatically.
  3. Invoice tokens. The receivable becomes a fungible token that can be discounted or repo-financed by global liquidity pools 24/7.

A blockchain record cannot eliminate fraud, but it slashes the cost and time of document matching—banks can extend credit against real-time data rather than days-old PDFs.

Three Live Rails to Watch

India’s Own Experiments

What Could Go Right

What Could Stall Progress

A Playbook from Hong Kong and Singapore

Both hubs treat tokenised trade assets as uncertificated securities, clearing them through licensed “market operators.” That certainty let the Hong Kong Monetary Authority settle its 2023 tokenised green bond in T + 1, five times faster than a vanilla global note. If Mumbai and Delhi emulate that legal plumbing, token pools in Hong Kong or Dubai could seamlessly fund Gujarat-issued LC tokens—matching India’s exporters with foreign dollar liquidity at speed.

Outlook

Tokenisation will not magic away India’s US $300 billion export-credit gap overnight, but early pilots show it can shave days off settlement, unlock new investor bases and shrink compliance costs—the trio of frictions that lock MSMEs out of trade finance. The next 12 months will be decisive: if GIFT City rolls out its rulebook and RBI joins mBridge trials, the first fully regulated, on-chain LC corridors could be live by 2026. That would turn blockchain from conference jargon into a working capital machine—exactly where Indian exporters need help most.

 

Image source: Shutterstock


Source: https://blockchain.news/news/tokenised-trade-finance-can-blockchain-finally-bridge-indias-us-300-billion-export-credit-gap