Visa launches card-on-file tokenisation service, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, Oct 7 (PTI) Visa, a digital payments platform, on Thursday launched its card-on-file (CoF) tokenisation services in India in line with the recently issued RBI guidelines. Card-on-file (CoF) tokenisation provides two key benefits – consumer and ecosystem security and an enhanced checkout experience, VISA said in a statement.

Launched in partnership with Juspay, the CoF tokenisation service is now available across e-commerce leaders such as Grofers, BigBasket and MakeMyTrip.

The RBI’s recent CoF tokenisation guidelines mandate replacing the actual card data with encrypted digital tokens, which are then used to facilitate and authenticate transactions.

This devaluation of sensitive card details alleviates risk and reduces vulnerability of sensitive data, as only tokens are present in transit, across the ‘in-rest’ and ‘in-use’ phases, it said.

These new guidelines are expected to enhance consumer trust in e-commerce payments, ensure seamless transaction experience as well as allow card issuers the comfort of authorising a higher number of transactions, it added. PTI DP HRS hrs



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Visa launches CoF tokenisation service for Grofers, BigBasket and MakeMyTrip

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Visa has launched a Card-on-File tokenisation service for e-commerce players Grofers, BigBasket and MakeMyTrip. The Reserve Bank of India’s CoF tokenisation guidelines mandate replacing the actual card data with encrypted digital tokens, which are then used to facilitate and authenticate transactions.

“Card-on-File (CoF) tokenisation provides two key benefits — consumer and ecosystem security and an enhanced checkout experience. Launched in partnership with Juspay, India’s first CoF tokenisation service is now available across e-commerce leaders such as Grofers, BigBasket and MakeMyTrip,” it said in a statement on Wednesday.

Secure payments

“Having launched CoF tokenisation services in over 130 countries globally, we are confident of the technology’s ability to build a safe, secure and seamless environment for digital payments. This will be critical in building consumer trust on merchant platforms and reassure them of the safety of their payment credentials on these platforms,” said TR Ramachandran, Group Country Manager, India and South Asia, Visa.

Also see: ADIF is hopeful of further consultation with RBI on tokenisation

Visa has enabled all its banking partners for tokenisation and is working closely with merchants, payment aggregators and gateways to ready the ecosystem for CoF tokenisation rollout, he added.

Tokenisation guidelines have to be met by January 1, 2022.

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Crisis and Mobile Money, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Rahul De’ and Abhipsa PalMobile payment usage across the globe witnessed a drastic spike after the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic. In India, the United Payments Interface (UPI) transactions, along with Aadhar enabled Payments System (AePS), Immediate Payment Service(IMPS), Fastag, and Bharat Bill reported surges in terms of both value and volume. UPI, which is the flagship platform for digital payments, clocked a record of three billion transactions in July, which was about rupees six lakh crore of value.

This growth in mobile money transactions is primarily understood in connection with two major patterns emerging from the pandemic. One, citizens feared surface contamination of cash and subsequent transmission of coronavirus through the exchange of “dirty money”. The contactless mobile wallets and payment systems offered a safe corridor for contamination-free transactions. The second reason was the barrier to obtaining physical banknotes amid the lockdowns, stay-at-home and quarantine orders, and social distancing norms. Not only did citizens face constraints in visiting the nearest bank or ATM during the lockdowns, but also the stay-at-home and work-from-home norms for banking sector employees curtailed services at the banks, and even created a shortage of cash at ATMs. As a result, people migrated to the most convenient alternative to physical money – mobile money.

This phenomenon is a repeat of history in India, as the nation witnessed a similar surge post the banknote crisis in 2016, triggered by demonetization. In the absence of the availability of cash in circulation, and shortage of cash in banks and ATMs, users migrated to the easiest alternative of using mobile money, visible in the sudden spike digital payments and its subsequent growth post-November 2016. This growth was further supported by the steady increase in digital penetration, both in terms of smartphone ownership and Internet access, with over forty percent of the Indian population having Internet access today. As cash returned to circulation in late 2017, users continued transactions with the newly adopted mode of payment.

We conducted a detailed market study in this period, 2017-18, and investigated the intentions of users to continue using mobile payments, even as cash returned to the economy. The respondents of the study were from across the country, and noted salient advantages of mobile payment technology that distinctly pointed towards their interest in continuing using it. Besides the convenience of not having to carry cash, there were many advantages: many services, such as paying bills, shopping, ordering food, etc, were bundled with the payment apps; the apps provided an opportunity to see and reflect on past purchases; and the systems offered additional security measures.

As users started gaining familiarity with the payment apps, the second cash crisis dawned upon the nation as Covid-19 introduced a new set of threats and constraints to cash usage. This time, the market was prepared to transition to mobile payments, as merchants and consumers were now in the network of various technology providers, which also enabled cross-platform transactions.

After the effects of demonetization were reduced, and cash became freely available, usage of mobile money stopped growing as steeply as before, but payments firms and vendors continued to add features and facilities. New players, such as Amazon Pay, Yono, Dhani, entered the market with varied offerings. Some of the apps were made available in Indian languages – Bhim-UPI is available now in 20 different languages – and this further eased the challenges with using it.

Although the current surge in mobile payments is an immediate after-effect of the threat of coronavirus transmission through cash surfaces and the difficulty in physical banking amidst the lockdowns, the technology’s core underlying benefits served as a reliable and trustworthy alternative. As people and merchants began to use these technologies – network effects kicked in.

The more people that joined the digital payments network, the better it was for others to join. In a city like Bangalore, even small street vendors – ice-cream sellers, roasted peanut vendors, footpath trinket sellers – all prominently displayed their Bhim-UPI or Paytm QR codes. Larger stores and service vendors adopted these platforms. One of us had to request a somewhat stubborn newspaper vendor to also get a UPI account, and he eventually did, after almost a year’s resistance.

As we move into the final quarter of 2021, it is likely that the digital payments surge is likely to continue. People and businesses have tasted the convenience of this technology, and also understood the ways in which problems can occur, and how they can be overcome. They have learned a new way of doing ordinary things, like make payments, and have seen its convenience and value. They are likely to stick with it and encourage others to adopt it also.

(Rahul De’ is Professor of Information Systems at IIM Bangalore; Abhipsa Pal is Professor of Information Systems at IIM Kozhikode.)

DISCLAIMER: The views expressed are solely of the author and ETBFSI.com does not necessarily subscribe to it. ETBFSI.com shall not be responsible for any damage caused to any person/organisation directly or indirectly.



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UPI transaction value doubled to Rs 6.06 lakh crore in July, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Unified Payments Interface (UPI) transactions more than doubled in value in July over the year-ago period, outstripping payment by cards, which went up 42%, according to the latest Reserve Bank of India (RBI) data.

UPI transactions by value touched their highest ever in July at Rs 6.06 lakh crore, surpassing the previous record of Rs 5.47 lakh crore in June and up from Rs 2.91 lakh crore a year ago. Card spending at Rs 1.36 lakh crore in July, on the other hand, was the highest since April and rose from Rs 95,883 crore in the year earlier as the economy recovered.

UPI platforms saw a 109% jump as consumers took to digital payments for daily essentials at local stores as well as premium purchases.

“We are observing that a majority of online payments are through UPI platforms and apps such as Cred,” said Riyaaz Amlani, chief executive of Impresario Handmade Restaurants, which runs the Social, Smoke House Deli and Salt Water Café chains. Amlani said UPI adoption is rising as average order value at outlets has increased 20% after the pandemic’s second wave.

While the economy shows signs of recovery, discretionary spending using cards has grown but couldn’t match UPI, executives said.

Banks, Retailers Note Trend

Digital payments made on wallets and UPI platforms by volume rose to about 3.25 billion in July, from 1.5 billion a year ago. The number of payments using cards was 520 million, compared with 450 million a year earlier.

Le Marche Retail chief executive Amit Dutta said the premium grocery chain has observed the trend within stores as well as in-home transactions. “UPI payments are showing increased traction in the past year, driven by convenience and the transactions being contactless, compared to card swiping, where contact points are higher,” he said. Consumers not previously comfortable with UPI payments have overcome their initial hesitation, Dutta said.

Banks executives said card payments are also growing, though UPI platforms are growing faster.

“UPI growth rate is and will outstrip cards, and it comprises both peer-to-peer and merchants payments,” said Axis Bank head for cards and payments Sanjeev Moghe. “Cards are only for payment to merchants. As long as the cards segment is growing at over 30-40%, it is quite healthy.”

UPI, payment platforms and wallets account for 10-15% of sales at leading electronics retail chain Vijay Sales, said its director Nilesh Gupta, up from almost nil just a year ago. “Consumers are even buying high-ticket items through such modes. These platforms often offer cashback incentives to entice customers,” he said.

Digital Adoption

The government and the RBI have been focusing on facilitating digital adoption by enhancing acceptance infrastructure and introducing innovative payment options to deepen the reach of payment systems.

“UPI transactions have moved the needle substantially in the past 12-15 months for neighbourhood grocery stores, riding on three reasons — convenience, instant credit and contactless transactions,” said Prem Kumar, founder of Ratan Tata-backed retail tech company SnapBizz, which devises technology for over 30,000 kirana stores and does business transactions of over $1 billion a year.

RBI said in its latest annual report that efforts were also directed toward ensuring smooth functioning of all payment systems despite disruptions in movement and access to infrastructure caused by the Covid-19 lockdown, with varying intensity and duration across various locations in the country.

Remittances also contributed a chunk of UPI volume. The platform is expected to see more traction once all banks develop systems to support inward remittances on UPI platform, said Emil Ruban, country manager India at Ria Money Transfer. “Many banks are yet to develop cross-border money transfer facilities,” he said.

A Euromonitor report said the trend is expected to continue, with increasing acceptance of UPI. “A large number of consumers started using UPI transactions for daily shopping activities especially at local retail stores, with the outbreak of the pandemic,” said Euromonitor consultant Vishnu Vardhan.



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Emerging Asia-Pacific markets incline towards cashless payments, shows McKinsey survey, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The number of users in emerging markets in Asia-Pacific, which includes India, has increased from 65% in 2017 to 88% in 2021, according to a survey by consultancy firm McKinsey.

The shift to digital banking was likely accelerated by existing trends such as increasing use of digital channels, including banking, broader use of video calls in place of face-to-face meetings, etc. These trends have intensified during the COVID-19 pandemic, and high levels of digital adoption are likely to hold even as the pandemic subsides, the survey suggests.

In emerging markets, FinTech apps and e-wallet penetration reached 54% in 2021, compared with 43% in developed Asia–Pacific. In 2017, the penetration was just 38% in emerging markets.

More than half of the respondents in most Asia–Pacific markets report that cash is used for less than 30% of weekly spending, the survey said.

The survey results indicate that banks can expand their digital offering, by leveraging existing assets. According to McKinskey, banks will need to reinvent its business and delivery models by focusing on three key areas – value of branches, customer engagement, and overall competitive positioning.

Approximately 97% of all Asia–Pacific consumers favour mobile and online banking, and 2% of consumers in developed Asia–Pacific and 3% in emerging Asia–Pacific continue to conduct most of their bank business at the branch.

With digital banking becoming more and more popular, the question of functionalities of bank branches arises. However, despite these numbers, McKinsey says that bank branches will continue to be consumers’ primary partner in managing money. Banks can make sure that branch staff have time to concentrate on activities like advising on loans, insurance, or investments to customers, and digitise other processes, it said.

To further engage customers in digital banking, McKinsey’s research suggests that banks should urge customers to buy banking products online. Even though 70% of respondents expressed openness for using digital channels for services beyond transactions, only 20-30% said they were comfortable to buy online banking products like savings accounts, loans, or credit cards.

Click here to read more stories on digital banking



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Bankers back to college to learn data analytics, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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– By Nidhi Chugh and Ishwari Chavan

The COVID-19 pandemic has pushed lenders to digitise their banking services, which has resulted in a rise in demand for employees to have a data science skill set.

Currently, 2.5 billion users across the world use banking services digitally, and 53% of the global population will opt for digital banking by 2026, a study by UK-based research firm Juniper Research had said.

Data driven banking – bankers are reskilling themselves

When Dinesh Khara took over as the chairman of State Bank of India a year ago, he said, his focus will be on analytics.

The demand for data science and data analytics professionals is possibly going to double, more than 2,00,000 as mentioned officially, mostly because of the emergence of neobanks, said Robin Bhowmik, chief business officer of Manipal Global Academy of BFSI, in an interaction with ETBFSI.

Manipal Global, started in 2008, offers various programmes to reskill banking employees, or train budding ones.

On an average, Manipal Global has trained one out of five bankers in the country, with over 2,50,000 bankers opting for various courses, Bhowmik said.

A total 15,000-20,000 bankers are trained every year by the academy.

This month, the academy launched its school of data science, where they will teach data engineering, data handling, impact analysis, python courses, in partnership with Axis Bank.

“The whole area of impact analysis within a banking setup is very fundamental to any data science field. We are also training them in a lot of simulations using tools like Python for example, which is one of the more popular open source tools, essentially used in this area,” Bhowmik said.

Apart from partnership with Axis Bank, Bhowmik said that he is in talks with another bank to further expand the course’s reach. The name of the bank was not mentioned during the interview.

Manipal Global also offers short term courses, remote courses, and other full-time courses, such as courses on FinTech.

Bankers back to college to learn data analytics
Surging demand for data science courses – what’s on the table

Prior to the official launch of the data science school, Bhowmik said that the course has already gathered interest from 500 candidates, and there is an application backlog of around 6,000 students.

“The intention is to have a batch of about 35 to 40 every alternate month. So Axis bank alone, I think wants about 120 people through this channel by March,” Bhowmik said.

After completion of the course, the candidate will be evaluated and hired by Axis Bank.

“The bank’s digital strategy is heavily focused towards adopting various data and analytics programs. Hyper personalisation is one such program – data science will be one of the key enablers, starting to identify different customer persona, anticipate their needs and recommend accordingly,” Balaji N, president and head of the Business Intelligence Unit at Axis Bank, said via email responses to ETBFSI.

How will candidates use these skills

After the course, the employee will be able to deploy business intelligence as a function, use data analytics in KYC processes, help in data hygiene – building databases for customer behaviour and customer segmentation.

“Other than simplification of customer journeys on our platform, we are also focusing on building future-ready capabilities, such as integrating alternate unconventional data for risk-moderated business expansion and greater usage of cloud for data engineering and data science workload,” Balaji said.

India’s “youth bulge” is expected to benefit sectors across the board, and even more so for BFSI with the rising importance of data in digital payments.

India’s “youth bulge” is expected to benefit sectors across the board, and even more so for BFSI with the rising importance of data in digital payments.



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IPO-bound Pine Labs raises $100 million from US investment fund, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: Pine Labs, which plans to go public in the US next year, said on Thursday that it has raised $100 million from US-based Invesco Developing Markets Fund. The new funding comes just months after it raised $600 million in two tranches from a host of global and domestic investors, which valued the firm at $3.5 billion. Pine Labs’s valuation in its latest round could not be immediately determined.

ET reported earlier on Thursday that the firm had appointed Wall Street bankers Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to steer its US listing and was in talks with investors to raise $100 million. Sources said the firm is eyeing a valuation of $6 billion for its IPO. The Noida-based firm is backed by Sequoia Capital, Temasek Holdings, Actis, PayPal and Mastercard, amongst others.

“Over the last 18 months we have scaled our prepaid issuing stack, online payments, and also the buy now pay later (BNPL) offering. We continue to make progress in the larger Asian markets with our BNPL platform. [We’re] very excited to have a marquee investor like Invesco join us in the journey,” B. Amrish Rau, chief executive officer of Pine Labs, said in a statement.

Pine Labs predominantly specialises in developing software and deployment solutions for point of sale (PoS) devices for storefronts. It has been diversifying its offerings on its newly developed software platform with enterprise solutions such as BNPL integration, invoice management, payment gateway and issuing prepaid cards. The third-highest-valued fintech firm in India behind Paytm and PhonePe, the startup posted a net revenue of Rs 800 crore in FY21, according to company estimates shared with ET in July.

Digital payments continue to see steady growth in India, fuelled by the Covid-19 pandemic. Consumer-focused fintech startups such as Paytm and Mobikwik have also filed their draft prospectuses to go public on domestic exchanges later this year.

Risk investors, both global and domestic, have flocked to the sector in India amid regulatory constraints in investing in China. Late last month, Prosus acquired digital payments processor BillDesk in a $4.7-billion all-cash deal.



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PayPal heats up buy now, pay later race with $2.7 billion Japan deal, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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FILE PHOTO: The PayPal logo is seen at an office building in Berlin, Germany, March 5, 2019. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch

US payments giant PayPal Holdings Inc said it would acquire Japanese buy now, pay later (BNPL) firm Paidy in a $2.7 billion largely cash deal, taking another step to claim the top spot in an industry witnessing a pandemic-led boom.

The deal tracks rival Square Inc’s agreement last month to buy Australian BNPL success story Afterpay Ltd for $29 billion, which experts said was likely the beginning of a consolidation in the sector.

The BNPL business model has been hugely successful during the pandemic, fuelled by federal stimulus checks, and upended consumer credit markets.

These alternative credit firms make money by charging merchants a fee to offer small point-of-sale loans which shoppers repay in interest-free instalments, bypassing credit checks.

Heavyweights like Apple Inc and Goldman Sachs are the latest heavyweights that have been reported to be readying a version of the service.

Paypal, already considered a leader in the BNPL market, also entered Australia last year, raising the stakes for smaller companies such as Sezzle Inc and Z1P.AX Co Ltd, stocks of which were down in midday trading on Wednesday.

“The acquisition will expand PayPal’s capabilities, distribution and relevance in the domestic payments market in Japan, the third largest ecommerce market in the world, complementing the company’s existing cross-border ecommerce business in the country,” PayPal said in a statement on Tuesday.

After the acquisition, Paidy will continue to operate its existing business and maintain its brand. Founder and Chairman Russell Cummer and President and Chief Executive Riku Sugie will continue to hold their roles in the company, PayPal said.

The Financial Times had reported last month that Paidy was considering becoming a publicly listed company.

The transaction is expected to close in the fourth quarter of 2021, and will be minimally dilutive to PayPal’s adjusted earnings per share in 2022.

BofA Securities was the sole financial adviser to PayPal on the deal, and White & Case was lead legal adviser. Goldman Sachs advised Paidy, and Cooley LLP and Mori Hamada & Matsumoto provided it legal counsel.

(Reporting by Anirudh Saligrama in Bengaluru; Writing by Sayantani Ghosh; Editing by Ramakrishnan M. And Kim Coghill)



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ICICI Bank customers can now pay dues of other credit cards on iMobile Pay app, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Customers of ICICI Bank can now pay and manage dues of their credit cards, of any bank, using the bank’s mobile application ‘iMobile Pay‘, the bank said in a release today.

Customers can add credit cards of any bank to the application, and then pay and manage their dues.

“With a large section of customers using multiple cards for their various needs, this new solution aims to help them decongest the process of their credit card bill payments,” said Bijith Bhaskar, head of digital channels and partnership at ICICI Bank.

Users can also set bill payment reminders of all the cards they have added, view payment history, share payment confirmation through WhatsApp, and manage and change due dates as per the billing cycle of their cards, the bank said in the release.

The bank has also provided a simple 4-step process to avail this new feature:

> Login to iMobile Pay and select ‘Cards and Forex’ section

> Go to ‘Other Bank Credit Card’

> Tap on ‘Add a card’ and enter the required details

> Authenticate the one time password (OTP) sent on the registered mobile number, and card will be added instantly

> Once the card is added, it can be viewed and managed under the ‘Other Bank Credit Card’ tab



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UPI transactions hit a record high in August, but the growth pace slows, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Unified payments interface (UPI) transactions hit a new record high in volume as well as in value for the third straight month in August.

UPI saw 3.55 billion transactions worth Rs 6.39 lakh crore in August, which is a 9.6% increase in volume and 5.4% surge in value compared with July.

However, the pace of growth has slowed in August. In July UPI had notched a record 3.24 billion transactions, up 15% over June figures. UPI transactions were subdued in April and May due to Covid restrictions.

In August 2021

Transactions through Bharat Bill Pay stood at 58.88 million, worth Rs 10,307 crore in August, a growth of 15.15% in volume and 7.2% in value from July.

FASTag transactions were at 201.2 million and Rs 3,076 crore in value in August, a 4.61% rise in volume and a 3.36% surge in value compared with July.

Transactions through Immediate Payment Service were at 377.94 million in terms of volume and Rs 3.18 lakh crore in value in August, an 8.05% rise in volume and 3.03% surge in value when compared with July.

Pandemic push

Since the beginning of the year, UPI transactions have grown 54% from 2.3 billion in January.

Since its launch in 2016, the UPI crossed 1 billion transactions for the first time in October 2019, which more than doubled to over 2 billion transactions in October 2020. The growth exploded during the pandemic as more people opted for contactless payment.

However, the transactions have picked up since the beginning of the pandemic as more consumers opted for digital payment options. They had been rising steadily to top 5 trln rupees in March and then 6 trln rupees in July.

Last fiscal jump

UPI transaction volumes surged 43.2% in the first quarter of the last fiscal, 98.5% in the second quarter 104.6% in the third and 112.5% in the fourth quarter.

While IMPS volumes degrew 9.6% in Q1, they rose 26% om Q2. 40.5% in the third quarter and 42.9% in the fourth quarter.

National Automated Clearing House (NACH) volumes grew 32.8 in the first quarter, 13 in second, 0.9 in third while they degrew 10.2 in the fourth.

BBPS volumes grew 66% in Q1, 103.2 in Q2, 84.4 in Q3 and 102.7 in Q4 while National Electronic Toll Collection, the NHAI’s Fastag system logged 83.9 growth in Q1, 249.2 in Q2, 195 in Q3 and 75.3 in the fourth quarter.

On the other hand, RTGS volumes degrew 26.2 in Q1, logged 3.1 in Q2, 10.2 in third and 31.1 in the fourth quarter.

NEFT volumes degrew 3.9% in the first quarter, grew 9.8 in second, 23.2 in third, 17.8 in the fourth quarter.



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