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Competitor comparison · @tspfinance

Channels Like @tspfinance: 5 Competitors Compared (2026 Analysis)

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@tspfinance (21,900 subs, 262 videos) sits in a competitive set that includes @LearnWithFahima (35,000 subs), @NovaExplainsShorts (25,600 subs), and @sachdevaAI (24,700 subs). The clearest differentiator is positioning — tspfinance is the only one led by a credentialed advisor (CFA, SEBI, IRDAI) doing actual money education.

Channel data · captured Jun 3, 2026

Handle
@tspfinance
Subscribers
Videos
Country
Not listed

Honest take before we dig in: the algorithm's idea of "similar to @tspfinance" is looser than you'd expect. Out of these five, only one is really doing money content. The rest share the broader pattern — Indian creator, educational format, mid-five-figure subs — but the topic mix is all over the place. That's actually useful info if you're a creator scouting this space, because it tells you the personal finance lane in India isn't as crowded at the 20K mark as it might look from inside it.

@sachdevaAI (24,700 subs, 186 videos) shows up as a competitor mostly because of audience overlap with curious Indian viewers in their 20s-30s, not because of topic. Gaurav's channel is the JARVIS-inspired AI assistant world — tools, agents, prompt stuff. Completely different content. The reason they pop up together is probably that finance-curious viewers in India are also AI-curious, and YouTube's co-watch graph picks that up. Follow @sachdevaAI if you want the AI side of the same audience. They've got more subs than tspfinance with fewer videos (186 vs 262), so per-video efficiency is noticeably better — about 133 subs per video versus tsp's 84.

@TechBgr (13,800 subs, 687 videos) is the volume play in this group. 687 videos for under 14K subs means roughly 20 subs per upload — which is the opposite shape from tspfinance, who's pulling about 84 subs per video. Bageshwar's mix is tech and gaming, no real finance overlap, and the sub count is below tsp's. I'd say this is the channel a finance creator can learn the *least* from directly. But there's a useful lesson in the volume data: high upload cadence without a tight niche caps your growth rate. tspfinance is doing the opposite — fewer videos, sharper niche — and it's working better.

@LearnWithFahima (35,000 subs, 345 videos) is the actual closest competitor here, and it's not even close. Fahima teaches Class 11 and 12 CBSE Commerce — which means accounting, business studies, and the entry-level money concepts that overlap with what tspfinance does for adult beginners. Her audience is students; tsp's is "busy Indians." Same vocabulary, different life stage. She's the biggest in this set at 35K, and the gap from tsp (21.9K) is meaningful but not huge — under one good viral video. If you watch tspfinance because you want the *basics* explained well, Fahima is the academic version of that.

@NovaExplainsShorts (25,600 subs, 55 videos) is the strangest data point in the set. 55 videos to hit 25K subs means about 465 subs per upload — that's roughly 5.5x what tspfinance is doing per video. Country is unknown in the data, no description visible, but the "Shorts" in the handle gives it away: this is a Shorts-first channel, and Shorts subs convert at a totally different rate than long-form. So the comparison is a bit apples-to-oranges. Worth watching if you're a tspfinance fan curious about format experiments, less useful if you want depth.

@SushilDubeyDr (11,100 subs, 489 videos) is here because of the *shape*, not the topic. Dr. Sushil does classical homoeopathy education — completely unrelated to money — but the format mirrors tspfinance closely: credentialed Indian professional, teaching their actual expertise, building authority through volume. 489 videos for 11K subs is a low conversion rate, which is interesting given the niche depth. Probably tells you the homoeopathy audience on YouTube is smaller than the finance one, or that the format isn't hitting. Either way, a useful lurk for any "credentialed expert" creator.

If you watch @tspfinance, the channel you should also follow is @LearnWithFahima — same conceptual territory, different audience age. The rest of the set is good for noticing patterns but not for the topic itself. The genuinely missing competitors here are Indian personal finance creators in the 20K-50K range (Pranjal Kamra's older content, Asset Yogi-style explainers, etc.) — that those didn't show up in the scrape says more about discovery than about who's actually competing.

Common questions

Who are @tspfinance's biggest competitors on YouTube?

In the scraped set, the biggest by subscriber count is @LearnWithFahima at 35,000 subs, followed by @NovaExplainsShorts (25,600) and @sachdevaAI (24,700). But "biggest competitor" depends on what you mean — by topic overlap, @LearnWithFahima is the only one really in the same lane, since she covers commerce and basic money concepts for students. The others share audience demographics (Indian, educational YouTube viewers) but not subject matter. So tspfinance's *real* competitive set in personal finance is probably channels the scraper missed, not the AI and tech channels that showed up here.

How does @tspfinance compare to @sachdevaAI?

They're in different topical lanes. @tspfinance (21,900 subs, 262 videos) does personal finance education in India. @sachdevaAI (24,700 subs, 186 videos) does AI tools and assistant content inspired by JARVIS. Sachdeva is slightly bigger and significantly more efficient per video — roughly 133 subs per upload versus tspfinance's 84. They overlap on audience demographics (curious Indian viewers, 20s-30s) but not content. If you're a creator, the lesson from sachdeva isn't "do AI content" — it's that tighter topical positioning seems to drive better sub-per-video conversion.

What channels should I watch alongside @tspfinance?

From this set, @LearnWithFahima is the only one with real topical overlap — she teaches Class 11-12 CBSE Commerce, which covers the academic foundation under what tspfinance teaches to adults. Watch both if you want the concepts at different life stages. @NovaExplainsShorts is worth a look if you're interested in Shorts-first growth, since their 55 videos to 25K subs ratio is unusual. The others (TechBgr, sachdevaAI, SushilDubeyDr) are off-topic but interesting for format patterns. Outside this set, the obvious gap is direct Indian personal finance creators in the same size band.

Is @tspfinance the biggest channel in their niche?

Not within this competitor set — @LearnWithFahima (35,000), @NovaExplainsShorts (25,600), and @sachdevaAI (24,700) are all larger. But "niche" matters here. If you define the niche strictly as credentialed Indian personal finance education for adults, none of the channels in the scrape actually compete directly, so tspfinance might be a leader in a sub-segment that just isn't represented here. The honest answer is: in this specific list of 5 channels, tspfinance is 4th by sub count, but the list isn't a clean niche match.

What's the difference between @tspfinance and similar creators?

The big one is credentials. tspfinance is run by Sai Prasanth — CFA, MBA Finance, SEBI NISM-MFD, IRDAI IC38. None of the other channels in this set lead with professional licensure. @LearnWithFahima leads with academic achievement (CBSE topper), @SushilDubeyDr leads with medical credentials but in a different field, and the others don't emphasize credentials at all. For a finance channel, that licensing isn't just marketing — it constrains what tspfinance can legally recommend, which probably explains the "education, not advice" framing on the channel.

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