RBI fines SBI, 2 payment system operators, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The RBI has imposed a Rs 1-crore penalty on SBI for contravention of the Banking Regulation Act and holding shares in borrower companies exceeding 30%.

The RBI had also imposed fines on two payment system operators — Tata Communications Payment Solution (TCPSL) and Appnit Technologies. TCPSL was fined Rs 2 crore for not meeting guidelines on white-label ATM deployment. Appnit was penalised for not following RBI norms on maintenance of escrow account balance and net worth requirement.

In a press release, the central bank said that during inspection of SBI, it was detected that the bank held shares in borrower companies, as pledgee, of an amount exceeding 30% of paid-up share capital of those companies. This is in contravention of sub-section (2) of section (19) of the Banking Regulation act.

“In furtherance to the same, a notice was issued to the bank advising it to show cause as to why penalty should not be imposed on it,” the RBI said in a statement. After considering the bank’s reply to the notice, oral submissions made during the personal hearing, and additional submissions made by the bank, the RBI decided that a penalty was justified.



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Banks, ATM operators seek RBI to review penalty scheme for dry ATMs

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Banks and ATM operators are hopeful that the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) will soon review the penalty on ATMs that have run out of cash but many are on a wait-and-watch mode on the expansion of their ATM networks.

“With the penalty in place, it makes more sense to have ATMs on-site along with bank branches than to keep them off-site. This would ensure that the ATMs can be serviced easily and frequently,” noted a senior bank executive.

“We are hopeful that there will be some relief. Otherwise, the penalty could also impact expansion into semi-urban and rural areas as there are often logistical challenges in loading cash,” noted another banker.

The RBI had in August this year announced the scheme of penalty for non-replenishment of ATMs under which ATMs with no cash for more than ten hours in a month will attract a flat penalty of ₹10,000 each. The scheme has come into effect from October 1, 2021.

Scaling down

“The penalty may impact the deployment of ATMs in rural and remote locations. Withdrawals would become difficult in such a scenario, especially when there is a focus on financial inclusion,” said Radha Rama Dorai, Secretary, Confederation of ATM Industry (CATMi).

CATMi had recently also made a representation to the RBI pointing out that while it is supportive of the move that would help customers, the ATM industry is already under tremendous pressure due to Covid, will have no option but to scale down dramatically.

It estimates that about 70 to 80 per cent of semi-urban and rural ATMs and 20 to 30 per cent of urban ATMs will be liable for the penalty. The likely penalty on operators will be around ₹80-100 crore per month, it had said.

“We hope to get a positive response from the RBI on our representation,” said Dorai.

RBI Deputy Governor T Rabi Sankar had on October 8 also said the RBI is reviewing this penalty scheme after getting feedback from lenders.

“We have received various feedback — some positive and some raising concerns. There are issues specific to locations. We are trying to take all the feedback and have a review and see how best it can be implemented,” he had told reporters.

There are about 2.13 lakh ATMs in the country as of September 30, 2021, of which 1.15 lakh are on-site and the balance 97,383 are off-site.

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Yes Bank launches new category of accounts for entire family, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Yes Bank has launched a new category of value-added family savings accounts that comes with healthcare benefits and dedicated relationship managers for multiple accounts across family members.

The Yes Family proposition includes features curated to make everything from shopping & dining together and availing loans more convenient and rewarding. In addition, these accounts have a waiver of fees on ATM withdrawals and digital transactions and reward points on banking transactions that can be transferred within the family, and cashback and lifestyle offer.

Yes Family accounts include three programmes — Yes Prosperity, Yes Premia and Yes First programmes for different customer segments. “Through this proposition, we envisage increasing our monthly retail customer acquisition by 15% till December 2021,” said Prashant Kumar, MD & CEO, Yes Bank. Discounted locker rentals, competitive interest rates on fixed deposits, recurring deposits, home loans and auto loans are among other benefits built into the proposition.

The Yes Prosperity Family account is available to customers who maintain a combined average monthly balance (AMB) of Rs 50,000, Yes Premia Family for customers with an AMB of Rs 2 lakh or a net relationship value (NRV) of Rs 10 lakh at a family level while Yes First Family is available to customers maintaining AMB of Rs 8 lakh or an NRV of Rs 30 lakh at a family level.



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Carry your cards, ATMs are not dying, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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There are various reports and discussions on how ATMs are going to vanish soon. But I don’t find any supportive data to believe in it. Digital payments are adding billions of transactions every month and POS terminals are also trying to add the features of ATMs but ATMs will stay in the system for a long time as cash still plays a dominant role in the economy. In fact, there are many restaurants and stores which do not accept any mode of digital payments and believe in only cash. Here is what RBI data of the last two years shows: ATMs are not dying.

State of ATMs – June 2020

Banks Total ATMs ATMs in Rural
PSU Banks 1,34,518 28,900
Pvt Banks 73,098 6,034
SFBs 1,935 199
White Label 23,790 11,807
Total ATMs 2,34,267 46,965

State of ATMs – June 2021

Banks Total ATMs ATMs in Rural
PSU Banks 1,36,889 26,858
Pvt Banks 73,750 6,281
SFBs 2,156 237
White Label 25,995 13,580
Total ATMs 2,39,761 47,011

The data shows that there is a slight increase in the total ATMs from 2020 to 2021. By June 2020 total ATMs were 2,34,267 which increased to 2,39,761 by June 2021. The slight decrease is in the number of rural ATMs by PSU banks may be due to bank mergers.

ATMs are a useful product

ATM was one of the biggest innovations in the banking industry much before digital payments. It killed the long serpentine queues at the bank branches where people used to spend hours to get cash. ATMs allow people to withdraw cash anywhere, anytime according to their convenience. RBI has also ensured that banks have enough ATMs and imposes penalty on banks which don’t maintain their ATMs.

Digital versus ATM

With the rise of digital payments, people have certainly shifted to mobile payments which are far more convenient. But that doesn’t mean that they are not using the cash. India’s cash to GDP ratio is 14.7%, which is much higher compared to the OECD countries.

For online shopping and small payments, people are using mobile payments, but for large payments, they still chose either cash or cheque.

The rise of POS

I often find that POS has been another product that is equivalent to ATMs. Over the years POS also added new features and it’s not just a payment receiving terminal. It has also started dispensing cash and that trend is rising. There are more than five million merchants using POS terminals and many of them are offering cash withdrawal. Recently a payment gateway company Mswipe told me that they are dispensing cash around Rs 50 lakh per day at POS terminals. POS will certainly help small-ticket transactions and areas where there are fewer ATMs.

Need for rationalising ATMs

India has on average 20 ATMs for 100,000 people, the global average is 50. I also find a big mismatch in the placement of ATMs in urban areas. There are areas where dozens of ATMs are set up within a vicinity of 2-3 miles, but there are areas where there are no ATMs at all. I think banks and financial institutions should review their placements. Also, ATM machines need to be upgraded with new features that will inform customers about the shortage of cash before using the machine.

Though people are using digital in villages as well, I am aware of people who travel for 10-12 miles to withdraw cash from ATMs. Jan Dhan Yojana has brought millions of people into banking but still there are many more millions away from banking. And they will need cash.



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Kotak Mahindra Bank launches Micro ATMs across India, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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To deliver essential banking services conveniently to a larger section of consumers living in relatively far-off areas, private lender Kotak Mahindra Bank Ltd on Tuesday announced the launch of Micro ATMs across the country.

Customers of all banks who possess a debit card can use a Kotak Micro ATM for key banking services such as cash withdrawals and checking account balances. A mini version of an ATM, micro ATMs are small handheld devices. The bank will use its extensive Business Correspondents (BC) network to launch micro ATMs.

“The micro ATM is a simple, innovative and highly effective solution to deliver essential banking services such as cash withdrawals in a convenient manner to people residing in relatively remote locations,” said Puneet Kapoor, President – Products, Alternate Channels and Customer Experience Delivery, Kotak Mahindra Bank. “It is a viable alternative to a regular ATM, allowing for faster expansion and increasing banking touchpoints for consumers. Kotak’s network of micro ATMs across the country will help customers of all banks (Kotak and non-Kotak customers) get easy access to their bank accounts and promote financial inclusion.”

At the end of August, there were 2.13 lakh ATMs in the country, up from 2.09 lakh same time last year, a meagre growth of 1.5%. On the flip side, micro-ATMs have grown to 4.94 lakh as against 3.07 lakh in August last year, a rise of over 60%.

In the first phase, Kotak Mahindra Bank is introducing micro ATMs in the outskirts of the top 8 metro cities – locations where the demand for cash withdrawal services is high but the prevalence of ATMs is low.



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RBI says reviewing ATM outage circular after bank’s feedback, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India on Friday said that it was reviewing its recent scheme on ATM replenishment whereby the regulator put in place mechanisms to penalise lenders. The central bank deputy governor T Rabi Shankar said that they had received inputs from banks and were in the process of reviewing it.

“The idea behind the penalty on outages in ATMs was to ensure that these services are available as much as possible in areas where the attention to ATMs is less, which is largely rural and semi-urban areas,” Shankar said. “We have received various feedback, some positive while some raise concerns. There are issues specific to location (of ATMs). We are trying to take all the feedback and have a review and see how best it can be implemented.”

ET was the first to report in its September 9 edition that lenders had approached the RBI seeking relaxation in its scheme citing issues of replenishing ATMs in rural geographies that could significantly push up costs and make business unviable.

In August, the banking regulator directed banks and white label ATM operators to strengthen systems that will allow them to monitor the availability of cash in ATMs and ensure timely replenishment to avoid cash-out situations. As part of the circular, a penalty of Rs 10,000 per ATM will be levied in the event of a cash-out situation for more than 10 hours in a month.

Banks were of the view that cash availability will drop as they go deeper in rural geographies as the cost to set up and maintain ATMs is high.

“Cost of transportation for ATM fitted notes is very high in rural India because of the distance between ATMs and the sparse network,” a banker said on the condition of anonymity. “Generally cash management companies and ATM service providers visit once in a few days to replenish cash and fix other tech or hardware issues.”

Banks have been slowly reducing ATM presence as they operationalise overall costs. Recently, Small finance bank Suryoday decided to shut down all its 26 automated teller machines, giving customers the option to use their debit cards on other banks’ ATMs, becoming the first domestic lender to completely do away with such machines. The small finance bank is formulating a strategy where it would offer its customers 5-7 transactions free per month when they use the ATM network of other banks to withdraw cash.

At the end of August there were 2.13 lakh ATMs in the country up from 2.09 lakh same time last year, a meagre growth of 1.5%. On the flip side the micro-ATMs have grown to 4.94 lakh as against 3.07 lakh in August last year, a rise of over 60%.

In order to make the business more viable the RBI recently increased the interchange fee on ATM transactions from Rs 15 to Rs 17. ATM interchange is the charge paid by the bank that issues the card (issuer) to the bank where the card is used to withdraw cash (acquirer).

In addition to this, the cap on fee that can be charged to the customer, which is capped at Rs 20 per transaction, was also increased to Rs 21.



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Suryoday SFB to discontinue ATMs from October 1

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Suryoday Small Finance Bank has decided to discontinue its ATMs from October 1.

“Due to operational reasons, Suryoday Bank ATMs will be discontinued with effect from October 1, 2021,” the bank has said on its website.

Customers can use their Suryoday Bank debit cards at ATMs of any other banks to withdraw cash, it further said. For other banking services, customers can use Internet and Mobile Banking services.

Suryoday SFB has become the first lender to discontinue ATM services.

According to RBI data, it had 25 on-site and 1 off-site ATM and 2.8 lakh debit cards by July end 2021.

Many banks have been facing challenges in operating ATMs due to high operational costs.

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Suryoday Small Finance Bank to shut down own ATMs, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Suryoday Small Finance Bank on Tuesday informed its customers that it would discontinue operating its ATM network from October 1 due to viability issues.

It is now looking at increasing the number of free cash withdrawals for its customers to ensure that they are not impacted by the move.

“We have very less volume of cash transactions. Today nobody walks to an ATM to withdraw cash and with the proliferation of AEPS, UPI and wallets, owning a small network of ATMs was not viable,” said R Baskar Babu co-founder and CEO of Suryoday Small Finance Bank.

The Bank, which has just 26 ATMs and 550 branches. Instead the Bank wants to open more micro ATMs.

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ATM players in a tough spot

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Stakeholders in the ATM ecosystem, including banks, White Label ATM Operators (WLAOs) and managed service providers (Brown Label ATM operators/ BLAOs), may take a long hard look at their networks in the wake of the Reserve Bank of India deciding to bring in a ‘Scheme of Penalty for Non-replenishment of ATMs’ with effect from October 1.

While all players in the ecosystem appreciate the objective of the central bank’s scheme, which seeks to ensure that sufficient cash is available to the public through ATMs, they emphasise it does not take into account the fact that they are up against infrastructure bottlenecks.

In this regard, they cite the limited capacity of cash logistics service providers to support ATMs, especially in rural- and semi-urban areas, and the 2018 Home Ministry guidelines, which placed timing restrictions on cash loading and cash transportation.

Further, the fact that ATM downtime can occur not only on account of cash-outs but also due to the very small aperture terminal for data communication not working, the machine having some problem, and power supply issues, among others, seems to have escaped the RBI’s attention when formulating the scheme.

Flat penalty

The flat penalty of ₹10,000 per ATM for cash-out at any ATM of more than 10 hours in a month has got the goat of players as it will eat into their margins, possibly turning ATM operations financially unviable. Some of them are weighing the option of pulling the plug on ATMs in rural- and semi-urban areas.

If they shut down these ATMs, it will undermine the cause of financial inclusion as people getting direct benefit transfer (DBT) under various government schemes will not have access to one of the key alternative channels for doing banking transactions. About 20 per cent of the total 2,39,761 ATMs deployed by banks and WLAOs as of June-end were in rural areas, per RBI data. About 28 per cent of the total ATMs has been deployed in semi-urban areas.

The condition “when the customer is not able to withdraw cash due to non-availability of cash in a particular ATM” for counting instances of cash-outs in an ATM has not gone down well with players in the ATM ecosytem.

Their fear is that the regulator may slap penalties even in cases where cash is available in the ATM, but is not able to dispense due to some technical issues.

Pranay Jhaveri, Member of the Board of Directors of the Confederation of ATM Industry (CATMi), said: “While the intention of the RBI to improve end consumer servicing is positive, I think, some of the infrastructure challenges that we are facing, don’t seem to have been taken into account.

“I am not sure if they have consulted the industry players – banks, managed service providers, white label ATM operators, and cash-in-transit (CIT) companies.”

He emphasised that after the RBI, in 2018, prescribed that banks can engage only those cash management logistics providers which meet minimum standards, including minimum net worth of ₹100 crore, minimum fleet size of 300 specifically fabricated cash vans, and two armed security guards (gunmen) in each cash van, there are only a handful of CIT companies. “Essentially, when one considers Tier-IV, Tier-V, and Tier-VI centres, CITs might service these centres, maybe, once or twice a week.

“For example, in a city like Mumbai, CITs service ATMs possibly every single day,” said Jhaveri.

He underscored that CITs/ cash replenishment agencies can’t replicate the daily service/ support capability they provide to an ATM in, say, Bandra (Mumbai) or Mount Road (Chennai) to an ATM in a village in UP or Bihar.

Loading of cash

As per the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) 2018 guidelines, no cash loading of the ATMs or cash transportation activities can be done after 9 pm in urban areas; after 6 pm in rural areas; and before 9am or after 4 pm in the districts notified by the Central government as Left Wing Extremism-affected areas.

ATM operators pointed out that bank branches are unable to give them cash to fill the ATMs till about 12 noon as they are dependent on cash deposits from customers. This further restricting their actual hours for logistics operations.

So, the entities that have deployed ATMs are caught between a rock and a hard place. If an ATM goes cash-out in a rural or semi-urban centre after the MHA prescribed cash loading and transportation hours, it can take anywhere between 12-16 hours to replenish it with cash.

Hence, there is a distinct possibility of such an ATM being cash-out for more than 10 hours in a month due to the MHA’s restrictions, resulting in RBI imposing penalties. Also, the players in the ATM ecosystem cannot overcome the cash-out problem by filling the ATMs with higher denomination notes as the ₹2,000 bank note is becoming scarce.

As per the RBI’s latest annual report, the last time an indent was placed for ₹2,000 bank note and the same was supplied was in 2018-19. Bank branches with onsite ATMs may be able to ensure that there is no cash-out in their machines.

But when it comes to offsite bank ATMs, ATMs managed by BLAOs and those deployed by WLAOs, there is only so much that stakeholders do to ensure continuous uptime as many of the variables are outside their control.

Banks will simply pass on the penalties imposed by RBI to WLAOs and BLAOs, said the MD of a WLAO.

In this regard, he mentioned that Central Bank of India’s request for proposal for deployment of 2,600 Cash Dispensers (including 50 mobile ATMs) requires the bidder to give an indemnity covering damages, loss suffered by the bank arising out of “claims made by regulatory authorities”.

Per industry estimates, cash-out penalty of ₹10,000 a month means a loss of about 30 per cent of WLAOs monthly revenue from an ATM. This will severely dent their bottomline.

So, the four WLAOs, who collectively deployed 52 per cent of their total 25,995 ATMs (as of June-end 2021) in rural areas and 33 per cent in semi-urban areas, may be left with no incentive to either add ATMs or even continue with the existing ones, the WLAO official quoted above said.

Similarly, if banks pass on regulatory penalties levied on them to the service providers (majority of bank-deployed ATMs are outsourced to managed service providers), it would put a huge burden on their financial position.

A tough call

Some of the players in the ATM industry will soon find themselves at a crossroads. If the regulator implements the ‘Scheme of Penalty for non-replenishment of ATMs’ as it is, they may have to take a tough call – either scale down the network to avoid penalties or exit business altogether. This can have implications for people living in the hinterland.

 

 

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