
The inaugural Black Swan Summit India opened today in Bhubaneswar, Odisha, drawing 1,700+ delegates from 24 countries and nearly 100 speakers. Co-organised by the Singapore-based Global Finance & Technology Network (GFTN) and the Government of Odisha, the two-day event (5–6 February) centres on AI-enabled fintech, insurtech, and workforce development. President Droupadi Murmu is scheduled for Day 2.
Credible organisers, unproven event
GFTN was established by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) in October 2024 as a successor to Elevandi. Its chairman, Ravi Menon, is a former MAS Managing Director. Its CEO, Sopnendu Mohanty, spent a decade as MAS Chief FinTech Officer. GFTN runs the Singapore FinTech Festival (70,000+ participants from 142 countries in 2025), the world’s largest fintech gathering.
But Black Swan Summit is a brand-new franchise with zero prior editions globally. Perth, Armenia, and Uzbekistan editions are announced. The institutional backing is strong. The event itself is unproven.
Odisha’s ₹112 crore fintech gambit
Odisha has committed ₹112 crore under its BharatNetra strategy, launched in August 2025 following a partnership formalised during Singapore President Tharman Shanmugaratnam’s January 2025 visit. The state wants to turn Bhubaneswar into eastern India’s fintech capital, targeting 50,000+ jobs and Rs 40,000 crore in annual GSVA by 2036. IT Policy 2025 designates Bhubaneswar as “Fintech City” with eight planned tier-II digital hubs across the state.
Day 1: MOUs, graduates, and a job fair
The summit produced 17 MOUs covering job placement, women’s inclusivity, and AI Technopark development. Partners include Bajaj General Insurance, Spice Money, Vayana, and MUFG. The headline speaker roster featured Douglas Feagin (President, Ant International), Sanjiv Bajaj (Chairman & MD, Bajaj Finserv), Michael Schlein (CEO, Accion), and Ravi Menon.
More tangibly, the first cohort from a five-month fintech/insurtech training programme (developed with NUS Asian Institute of Digital Finance) graduated on stage. The programme selected 375 students from 3,800+ applicants across 60+ colleges. The broader target: 7,000 trained students over five years. A job fair co-hosted by GFTN and MUFG ran alongside the conference.
Regulatory timing works in its favour
The summit lands as India’s financial regulators are actively building AI governance frameworks. RBI’s FREE-AI Framework (August 2025) set six pillars for responsible AI in financial services, signalling openness to experimentation while requiring explainability and bias audits. SEBI’s June 2025 guidelines mandate board-approved AI governance and human-in-the-loop mechanisms. IRDAI raised insurance FDI limits to 100%. And India’s DPI stack (UPI processing 13+ billion monthly transactions, Account Aggregator at 2+ billion linked accounts) continues to expand cross-border through linkages with Singapore, UAE, and the BIS-led Project Nexus.
Bottom line
The institutional architecture is solid and the regulatory timing is right. The workforce focus (training programmes, job fairs, placement partnerships) gives the summit more tangible accountability than most fintech conferences. But 17 MOUs mean nothing until they convert to jobs and products. The real test comes in February 2027. For now, this is a credibly organised opening act that still needs to prove it can deliver.