Visa CEO: Covid caused permanent shift to digital payments

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Al Kelly believes there has been a permanent shift in how consumers worldwide pay for goods and services. His 91-year-old parents are a prime example.

The CEO of payments processing giant Visa recently visited his mother just after she’d finished buying her groceries online — something she’d never done prior to Covid-19. “She said to me I cannot believe I wasn’t doing this before the pandemic,’” Kelly said in an interview with The Associated Press.

Kelly is more than five years into his tenure as the head of one of the world’s largest payments companies and arguably, one of the world’s best-known brands. Since he took over, the company’s stock has tripled in value as more of us pay with Visa’s credit and debit cards — a trend bolstered by the pandemic, as once cash-only establishments started accepting plastic and shoppers did more transactions online.

But while the shift to online shopping is helping Visa’s bottom line, the company is facing new forms of competition, particularly from Silicon Valley, who have debuted alternative forms of payment that go around the traditional Visa and Mastercard networks.

Also read: Cryptos, far from the regulators’ glare

The company has also gotten pushback from Washington, where skeptical policymakers have questioned Visa’s dominance of the payments industry. Visa abandoned its intent to purchase Plaid, a company that helps merchants and banks better accept online payments, after the Justice Department sued to stop the merger, citing antitrust concerns.

Pandemic push

Visa does not issue credit or debit cards. It’s a payment processor, providing the network between the bank that issues that card and the merchant accepting that card as payment. In exchange, Visa charges a fee from every transaction that runs on its network, which translates into billions of dollars in profit and revenue each year.

During the pandemic, more consumers became comfortable purchasing routine items online or with their smart phones to avoid risky in-person interactions. This was particularly seen in parts of the economy that have traditionally been cash-heavy such as grocery stores, coffee shops and bars.

Kelly pointed to the growth in debit card usage in the pandemic as an example. Debit cards are typically thought of as equivalent to cash in the payments industry — they can be used to buy items, but also to withdraw cash at an ATM.

In the past year, debit card purchasing volumes on Visa’s network rose 23 per cent from a year ago, while cash withdrawals were only up 4 per cent. “People are choosing not to get cash to shop but actually using their debit cards to shop now,” he said.

Also read: Digital payments remain strong, marginal decline in November

Any shift away from cash and digital payments will ultimately be good for Visa’s bottom line. Even a shift of 1 per cent or 2 per cent of consumers’ payments away from cash and onto credit and debit cards could result in tens of billions of dollars of additional transactions crossing over Visa’s network.

To talk about the size and scope of Visa often requires dealing in numbers that are usually reserved for describing the federal government. Visa processed $10.4 trillion in payments on its network in the fiscal year ended in September.

That’s up roughly 16 per cent from fiscal 2019, before the pandemic disrupted global trade and travel. The only payment processor larger than Visa is China’s UnionPay, which benefits as a payment monopoly bolstered by the large Chinese population and the world’s second-largest economy.

Competition

For decades, Visa and its primary competitor Mastercard have held the dominant market position in how people pay for goods and services, with American Express a distant third. But that duopoly is being challenged by the likes of Venmo, Affirm, PayPal and other fintech companies now providing payments services to both customers and merchants. Apple operates its own payment system.

And cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin, etherium and others still hold the promise of being alternative forms of payment outside the traditional banking system. In short, how one pays for goods and services is not as simple as “cash or credit” — with the credit choices being Visa, Mastercard or American Express — as it was five years ago.

Kelly sees Visa’s ubiquity as one of its strongest selling points as more competition arises. True to its old advertising slogan, “it’s everywhere you want to be,” Visa has had years to build out the infrastructure and merchant network to accept its cards. “There will always be new forms to pay, but they will still need an infrastructure that creates utility and security that they need,” he said.

Also read: WhatsApp gets NPCI nod for doubling payments user base

But the increased competitive space for payments has made some merchants start questioning whether Visa’s armour may be weakened. Merchants have long been upset with the fees they pay to the processors to accept credit cards — which typically range from 1 per cent to 3 per cent. It’s often a retailer’s largest expense after payroll and the cost of buying goods. Merchants have previously used their collective power in Washington to cap fees on certain types of transactions, particularly debit cards.

Amazon has said it will stop accepting Visa credit cards issued in the United Kingdom early next year, saying Visa’s fees are too high compared to Mastercard and other payment processors. Visa has pushed back. Visa and Amazon have a co-branded credit card together that is up for renewal soon, and Amazon may be looking for leverage.

“Consumers should be able to use their Visa cards wherever they choose,” Kelly said. ”When a merchant restricts choice, no one wins. In this case, the merchant is not respecting the choice of the consumer.”

Industry analysts and investors have taken the Amazon spat as a sign that Visa may face increased competition in coming years or may face future conflicts with big merchants upset with the fees they are paying to Visa and Mastercard to use their respective payment networks. Visa shares have fallen more than 7 per cent this month alone.

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NBFCs assets to improve on tailwinds, says Crisil Ratings

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Assets under management (AUM) of non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) is set to grow 8-10 per cent to about ₹30-lakh crore in FY2023, riding on two tailwinds — improving economic activity, and strengthened balance sheet buffers, according to CRISIL Ratings.

This compares with an estimated growth of 6-8 per cent this fiscal (to about ₹27 -akh crore) and 2 per cent last fiscal (about ₹25-lakh crore AUM outstanding).

However, the credit rating agency cautioned that NBFCs face three headwinds — competition from Banks, expected increase in gross non-performing assets and funding access, which is yet to fully normalise.

The agency noted that intensifying competition from banks, flush with liquidity, that have sharpened focus on retail loans.

It assessed that GNPAs are expected to increase, mostly because of the revision in recognition norms and, to some extent, due to slippages from the restructured book.

Gurpreet Chhatwal, Managing Director, CRISIL Ratings Ltd, said: “Many NBFCs have built higher liquidity, capital and provisioning buffers in the recent past.

“That, combined with improving economic activity, puts them in a comfortable position to capitalise on growth opportunities. However, competition from banks will intensify.”

Asset quality worries have also manifested due to recent regulatory clarifications, and uncertainty over the performance of the restructured book.

While home loans and gold loans will be the least impacted, unsecured, and micro, small and medium enterprises loans will bear the brunt.

Chhatwal observed that net-net, growth will be driven by NBFCs with strong parentage and better funding access in the two largest segments — home loans and vehicle finance.

CRISIL noted that organic consolidation is also underway with larger NBFCs gaining share.

In three fiscals through 2021, the market share of the top 5 NBFCs has risen 600 basis points (bps) to 46 per cent.

The agency said the ability to identify niches that cater to the relatively difficult-to-address customer segments and asset classes will fuel long-term growth for the sector.

CRISIL expects retail loans to see reasonably broad-based growth in the current and next fiscals supported by pick-up in demand and consequently underlying sales.

Gold, home and unsecured loans should clock the fastest growth rates. On the other hand, wholesale credit would continue to degrow as platforms such as alternate investment funds gain currency.

Stressed assets

The agency expects GNPAs to increase by 25-300 basis points (bps) based on asset class because of the new recognition norm.

However, the increase in GNPAs because of the revised recognition norms will be largely an accounting impact because, given the improving economy, the credit profiles of borrowers are not expected to deteriorate. Consequently, ultimate credit losses are not expected to change significantly.

CRISIL said the performance of the restructured book is a key monitorable.

The agency noted that while there has been across-the-segment improvement in the monthly collection efficiency ratio (MCR) of NBFCs for the quarter ended September 2021, the quantum of restructuring done under the RBI Resolution Framework 2.0 is more than last year.

Since this mostly involved offering moratorium, the performance of this book after moratorium is monitorable.

Overall, fragile assets (GNPAs + slippages due to the impact of regulatory norms and from the restructured book) are seen at ₹1.3-1.6 lakh crore, tantamount to 5-6 per cent of the industry’s AUM as of March 2022.

This does not factor in the impact of a third wave of Covid-19, especially the just-discovered Omicron variant, which is a risk factor.

Krishnan Sitaraman, Senior Director and Deputy Chief Ratings Officer, CRISIL Ratings Ltd, said, “While there may be apprehensions about rising reported GNPAs, additional disclosures by NBFCs around underlying delinquency profiles and collection efficiencies can help allay them.

“Those with low leverage, high liquidity and strong parentage are expected to benefit from better funding access at optimal rates. For the rest and especially mid-sized and smaller players, co-lending, securitisation, or other partnerships with banks will facilitate a funding-light business model.”

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Nomura business index hits new high of 114

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The Nomura India Business Resumption Index (NIBRI) has risen to yet another high of 114 for the week ending November 21 from 110.3 in the prior week, suggesting the business resumption index is 14 percentage points (pp) above pre-pandemic levels (i.e., 100).

Google workplace mobility rose sharply by 18.1 pp, while retail and recreation fell by 3.3 pp and the Apple driving index rose by 3.6 pp. The labour participation rate remained tepid at 39.8 per cent, while power demand rose by 0.2 per cent w-o-w, as payback from the 5.5 per cent rose in the prior week.

“A mix of supply-side headwinds and demand-side tailwinds continue to obscure the growth outlook. On the demand side, there is evidence of strong festival demand among consumers, an uptick in credit growth and robust core imports in October. Low infection rates and reopenings are also boosting mobility and services activity,” Nomura said.

“However, October auto sales have been lacklustre, reflecting not only semiconductor shortages but also the impact of weak rural demand on two-wheeler sales. The energy crunch seems to be easing, with a rise in coal stocks at power plants. Overall, we maintain our GDP growth outlook of 9.2 per cent for FY22, with a downside risk of ~1 pp due to supply issues,” Nomura added.

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Moody’s upgrades outlook for Indian banking system

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Moody’s Investors Service has revised the outlook for the Indian banking system to “stable” from “negative” on the back of stabilising asset quality and improved capital drive.

The global credit rating agency, in its Banking system outlook for India, observed that the deterioration of asset quality since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic has been moderate, and an improving operating environment will support asset quality.

Moody’s upgrades India’s rating outlook to ‘Stable’ from ‘Negative’

Declining credit costs as a result of improving asset quality will lead to improvements in profitability. The agency assessed that capital will remain above pre-pandemic levels.

Moody’s expects India’s economy to continue to recover in the next 12-18 months, with GDP growing 9.3 per cent in the fiscal year ending March 2022 and 7.9 per cent in the following year.

The agency opined that the pick-up in economic activity will drive credit growth, which it expects to be 10-13 per cent annually. Weak corporate financials and funding constraints at finance companies have been key negative factors for banks but these risks have receded.

Asset quality will be stable

According to Moody’s, the deterioration of asset quality since the onset of the pandemic has been more moderate than it expected despite relatively limited regulatory support for borrowers.

The agency noted that the quality of corporate loans has improved, indicating that banks have recognised and provisioned for all legacy problem loans in this segment.

Covid second wave raises asset risks for banks: Moody’s

“The quality of retail loans has deteriorated, but to a limited degree because large-scale job losses have not occurred. We expect asset quality will further improve, leading to decline in credit costs, as economic activity normalises,” Moody’s said.

Raising equity capital

Capital ratios have risen across rated banks in the past year because most have issued new shares, per the agency.

Moody’s said public sector banks’ ability to raise equity capital from the market is particularly credit positive because it reduces their dependence on the government for capital.

However, further increases in capital will be limited because banks will use most of retained earnings to support an acceleration of loan growth, according to the agency.

The agency estimated that banks’ returns on assets will rise as credit costs will decline while banks’ core profitability will be stable.

If interest rates rise, net interest margins will increase, but it will also lead to mark-to-market losses on banks’ large holdings of government securities, it said.

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UPI records 365 crore transactions worth ₹6.54-lakh cr in September

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Digital payments continued to register robust growth in September amidst the festival season and normalisation of economic activities.

The Unified Payments Interface (UPI) registered 365 crore transactions worth ₹6.54-lakh crore in September, as per data released by the National Payments Corporation of India on Friday.

The UPI platform had clocked 355 crore transactions amounting to ₹6.39-lakh crore in August.

This was the third consecutive month where UPI transactions remained well above the 300-crore mark.

Immediate Payment Service (IMPS) also registered a rise in transactions and processed 38.44 crore payments of ₹3.24-lakh crore in September. As many as 37.79 crore transactions amounting to ₹3.18-lakh crore took place through IMPS in August.

Transactions on NETC FASTags, however, declined to 19.36 crore in September amounting to ₹3,009.3 crore in value terms compared to 20.12 crore transactions worth ₹3,076.56 crore in August.

AePS transactions also decreased. As many as 9.09 crore transactions amounting to ₹23,292.33 crore took place through AePS in September against 10.84 crore payments worth ₹27,333.87 crore in August.

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Fino Payments Bank to continue its focus on ‘emerging India’

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IPO-bound Fino Payments Bank is betting big on technological innovation and customers beyond tier-2 towns to fuel its future growth.

“While innovation remains ever-present, technology and customer trust lies at the core of all that we do and forms the foundation for our entire business model. We have and will continue to strengthen our focus within ‘emerging India’, catering to a population that we believe presents a large market opportunity and has typically been overlooked by the majority of the large Indian financial institutions,” Fino Payments Bank has said in its draft red herring prospectus, adding that this section of society is often underserved and typically does not have access to basic banking services.

Training merchants

It has also said it plans to continue investing in technology throughout its business, particularly for on-boarding and training of merchants and will also enhance its ‘phygital’ delivery model.

As of March 31, 2021, Fino Payments Bank had 6.41 lakh merchants, 17,269 active BCs and 25.7 lakh CASA accounts. It also operates 54 branches and 143 customer service points.

The bank had filed draft documents with market regulator SEBI for an initial public offer in July this year. It is looking to raise about ₹1,300 crore, including a fresh issue of ₹300 crore as well as an offer for sale component

Since the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic, the lender has also seen high levels of transactions through micro-ATM, AePS networks and BC banking operations also received an impetus with increased transactions.

Decline in domestic remittance

In its DRHP, the bank however, noted that there has been a significant decline in domestic remittance transactions as migrant workers relocated from urban areas to hometown. Although its remittance transactions have largely recovered since the initial outbreak and lockdown, it currently remains approximately six per cent below its typical domestic remittance throughput.

Its CMS temporary operations were also impacted due to moratoriums on lending and reduced cash handling requirements. But as the lockdowns eased, this has quickly returned to normal transaction levels.

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Mudra loan ratio trebles to 20% during pandemic as stress hits small businesses, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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A man displays new 2000 Indian rupee banknotes after withdrawing them from a State Bank of India (SBI) branch in Kolkata, India, November 10, 2016. REUTERS/Rupak De Chowdhuri/Files

Gross NPAs in the Mudra loan book is estimated to have reached around 20 per cent at June-end 2021, from around 6 per cent at March-end 2020.

As the stress builds up in the economy due to pandemic, lenders are seeing a sharp uptick in NPAs in Mudra loans, which have trebled in June 2021 over the pre-Covid fiscal of 2019-20.

Gross NPAs in the Mudra loan book is estimated to have reached around 20 per cent at June-end 2021, from around 6 per cent at March-end 2020.

In Maharashtra, public sector banks’ Mudra loan NPAs have risen to 32 per cent at June-end 2021, from 26 per cent at June-end 2020.

SBI’s NPA on Mudra loans in the state is at 59 per cent as on June-end 2021 followed by Punjab National Bank at 44 per cent, Indian Bank at 33 per cent and Bank of Maharashtra at 31 per cent at June-end 2021.

In Jharkahnd, Canara Bank Mudra NPAs as high as 114.35 per cent as bad loans were Rs 183.63 crore against the outstanding amount of loans at Rs 160.58 crore.

Among private sector banks, HDFC Bank’s Mudra loan NPA in Jharkhand was at 26.21 per cent, followed by IDFC First Bank at 24.93 per cent.

The Credit Guarantee Fund for Micro Units (CGFMU) provides guarantee against loan losses in Mudra loans, but 75 per cent of NPAs in Mudra loans, while the rest of losses have to be borne by the banks.

Loan losses

Public sector banks (PSBs) have seen a sharp surge in the amount of Mudra loans turning into non-performing assets (NPAs) over the last three years. NPAs in Mudra loans had jumped to Rs 18,835 crore in 2019-20, from Rs 11,483 crore in 2018-19 and Rs 7,277 in 2017-18, according to the Finance Ministry data.

Mudra loan disbursements by state-owned banks rose to Rs 3.82 lakh crore in 2019-20, from Rs 3.05 lakh crore in 2018-19 and Rs 2.12 lakh crore in 2017-18. The Mudra loan NPAs as a percentage of total loans rose to 4.92 per cent in 2019-20 from 3.42 per cent in 2017-18.

Banks and financial institutions have sanctioned Rs 14.96 lakh crore to over 28.68 crore beneficiaries in the last six years. The average ticket size of the loans is about Rs 52,000, it said.

Under PMMY collateral-free loans of up to ₹10 Lakh are extended by Member Lending Institutions (MLIs) viz Scheduled Commercial Banks, Regional Rural Banks (RRBs), Small Finance Banks (SFBs), Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs), Micro Finance Institutions (MFIs) etc.

The scheme

Under the scheme, credit up to Rs 10 lakh is provided by banks and non-banking financial companies to small and new businesses.

The loans are given for income generating activities in manufacturing, trading and services sectors and for activities allied to agriculture.

The government has sanctioned loans of Rs 15.5 lakh crore under PMMY since its inception in April 2015.

Till March 31, 2021, the Government had sanctioned 29.55 crore loans under the scheme. Of this more than 6.8 crore loans worth Rs 5.2 lakh crores have been given to new entrepreneurs.

For FY22, loans worth Rs 3,804 crore have been sanctioned by 13 public sector banks (PSBs) as on June 25.



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UPI registers robust growth in August

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Digital payments continued to grow at a robust pace and touched a new record in August with further easing of lockdown restrictions by many States and resumption of economic activities.

Unified Payments Interface registered 355 crore transactions worth ₹6.39 lakh crore in August 2021, according to data released by the National Payments Corporation of India on Wednesday. Transactions on the UPI platform had breached the ₹6 lakh crore-mark in July to amount to ₹6.06 lakh crore.

The Immediate Payment Service (IMPS) also witnessed a sharp growth in transactions. The number of transactions on the IMPS platform rose to 37.79 crore in August and valued at ₹3.18 lakh crore. It had processed 34.97 crore transactions amounting to ₹3.09 lakh crore in July.

ALSO READ e-RUPI could be bigger than UPI, say experts

FASTag collection up

Payments on NETC FASTag crossed 20 crore in terms of volume in August to 20.12 crore. In value terms, it amounted to ₹3,076.56 crore. In contrast, 19.23 crore transactions worth ₹2,976.39 crore were processed on NETC FASTag in July.

Aadhar Enabled PaymentSystem (AePS) transactions, too, scaled the 10-crore transaction mark last month. As many as 10.84 crore payments worth ₹27,353.87 crore took place through AePS in August compared to 8.88 crore transactions totalling ₹23,447.11 crore in July.

The BharatBill Pay platform registered 5.88 crore payments totalling ₹10,307.4 crore in August versus 5.1 crore transactions amounting to ₹9,612.87 crore in July.

ALSO READ UPI sets new record in July

“We believe that continued opening of the economy and markets coupled with the upcoming festive season would enable spends to grow at a better pace over the medium term ,” Motilal Oswal had said in its Digital Payments Tracker report for July that looked at card and UPI spending.

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Tamil Nadu FICCI Chairman, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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It is estimated that in the first phase of the lockdown, the revenue shortfall was over 44% in Tamil Nadu’s Micro, Small & Medium Enterprises (MSME) sector and the extension of the lockdown could increase the revenue loss to 60%, said Dr. GSK Velu, Chairman FICCI TN State and Trivitron Healthcare Chairman & Managing Director.

He said the state has more than 6.89 lakh registered enterprises, accounting for 15% of the total MSMEs in the country and went on to add that the MSMEs in Tamil Nadu are caught in a peculiar situation.

“Apart from resulting in a severe shortage of working capital, the Covid-19 crisis had caused delays in payment, labour shortages, and disruptions in the supply chain,” he explained.

Velu said that the growth of healthcare manufacturing is very important for India’s economic development.He said the Indian healthcare sector is full of opportunities for medical devices and the diagnostic industry and Trivitron is one of the leading destinations that offer advanced healthcare devices, products, and facilities catering to a greater proportion of the population around the globe at the best cost without compromising the quality. The company focuses on “Make in India” which will accelerate the growth of the country’s manufacturing sector.

“Manufacturing will help in operational excellence, provide large-scale employment and this initiative will also enable a significant section of the population to get jobs and move out of poverty.

He said that through the Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan, some favourable domestic manufacturing encouragement policies of the government, the domestic manufacturers stepped forward to make India self-reliant on medical devices.

“Not only Trivitron, as a medical device manufacturer but the whole industry and customers will get more relaxation and it will surely give a boost to manufacture indigenous medical devices. GST exemption is nothing but an incentive and reward for Indian manufacturers/Importers.” Velu said.

While speaking about the impact that Covid-19 has had on the lab testing industry at large, he said that the pandemic threw up a host of challenges.

“In the first phase of Covid-19, the only way to fight it is via boosting the testing, whereas in the second phase we got the vaccine to fight the Covid-19, but still the labs were on the front foot to diagnose the disease through RT-PCR and Antibody tests. So, lab testing has become very essential as we have experienced the need for more labs during the two waves. Trivitron has sold 55+ million Covid tests in the country,” he said.

He went on to add that the company is looking to increase its product lines by adding more products and technologies and is facilitating the development of custom-tailored products for developed, developing, and underdeveloped economies. Further, he said talks are on to cover the entire MENA region, which shall establish Trivitron as the only Health technology organization of Indian origin to cater to every country in the Gulf and Africa.



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SBI’s biz activity index improves significantly in the week ended Aug 9

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State Bank of India’s business activity index has shown significant improvement in activity since May-end 2021, with the latest reading for the week ended August 9, 2021 of 101.6.

The index reading for May 22, 2021 was 61.4 and for July 21, 2021, was 94.2.

“Recovery is visible in labour participation rate, electricity demand, Google mobility and Apple mobility index. However, there is slight dip in RTO revenue collection and vegetables arrival from last week,” said Soumya Kanti Ghosh, Group Chief Economic Adviser, State Bank of India (SBI).

Also read: Public sector banks report sharp slippages in MSME loans in Q1

Agri production

In a report titled “Covid-19: Vaccinate, Vaccinate & Vaccinate!”, Ghosh observed that the month-on-month (m-o-m) rural recovery in July (as per key leading indicators) is expected to be steady, if not exceptional, as compared to June.

Rural indicators continue to be steady though patchy at times, as per the report.

“The rural recovery is far better than the pre-second wave. Looking ahead, agricultural production and rural demand are expected to remain resilient,” he said.

Covid vaccination

The report assessed that going by the present vaccination rate of 45 lakh per day, the critical mass (70 per cent) may be covered with first dose of the Covid-19 vaccination by November-end 2021 and second dose by March 15, 2022.

Also read: 10 top banks create secondary market for corporate loans

“India’s cumulative Covid-19 vaccination coverage has crossed the 52 crore mark and till now more than 54.04 crore vaccine doses provided to States/Union Territories,” it added.

In the last one month, speed of vaccination accelerated with the 7-day moving average currently at about 45 lakhs, and 43 per cent of eligible population vaccinated with first dose and 12 per cent with second dose.

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