Uday Kotak, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Asserting that Indian banks have been behind the curve in tapping payments technology, Kotak Mahindra Bank Managing Director Uday Kotak on Friday said they need to wake up before large parts of the traditional financial markets move out from them. Indian bankers have been short-sighted on the payments business in the last couple of years as they saw no money in payments, Kotak said at Infinity Forum organised by the International Financial Services Centres Authority (IFSCA) and Bloomberg.

As a result, they have allowed the growth of unified payments interface (UPI) payments monopolised by two players, Google Pay and PhonePe which have got 85 per cent market share, he said.

Therefore, it’s a wake-up call for Indian banking, he said: “Wake up, you will see large parts of the traditional financial markets move out.”

Having said that, he said, “We have to keep in mind that consumer tech companies have revenue models outside of finance. For instance, the advertising model or the e-commerce model. Banks, by law, under Section 6 of the Banking Regulation Act cannot get into non-financial business as defined.”

Therefore, there are serious issues about how you are going to draw the lines and simultaneously, there is an issue about financial stability, he said.

“I was reading an article which said that when you put a regulated entity into competition with a fintech or a consumer tech, the standard approach of the consumer tech is to play fast and loose on regulation and gain market share at great speed.

“I am not against competition. All that I’m saying is we need to make sure that in the name of better competitive service, we don’t have a systemic and a stability challenge at the same time,” he said.

Recalling Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s assertion that the most important aspect of digital growth is consumer trust that has to be protected at all costs.

“So, we need to make sure that as we go for fintech and grow it, we must also be clear that we do not betray trust,” he said.

On the homegrown payments ecosystem, Kotak said UPI payments as well as Aadhaar unique identity basis for transactions are remarkable innovations and they could be exported globally.



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Kotak, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: Veteran banker Uday Kotak on Friday raised several concerns over the domination of Google Pay and PhonePe in the payments business. He said that while banks have been caught napping, policymakers also need to look at the issue from a financial stability point of view.

Speaking at an event organised by India’s International Financial Services Centres Authority and Bloomberg at GIFT City, Kotak said that Indian banks have been behind the curve and have allowed the growth of UPI payments to be monopolised by Google Pay and Walmart-owned PhonePe, who have got 85% of the market.

“It is a wake-up call for Indian banking: Wake up, or you will see a large part of the financial market move out. From a policy and financial stability point of view, which policymakers have to look at,” said Kotak. He said that bankers were shortsighted in the last two years. “They said there is no money in payments and let the payment market be taken by these two-three companies.”

Kotak said that bankers need to keep in mind that consumer tech companies have revenue models outside finance. “For example, the e-commerce model. Banks under section 6 of the Banking Regulation Act cannot get into non-financial business. There are serious issues of how we are going to draw the line and simultaneously there is an issue of financial stability,” said Kotak.

The chief of the country’s third-largest private bank also made a reference to the raising of deposits by payment platform Google Pay and to the central bank’s move to ban first loss default guarantees provided by lending platforms. He said that there was a need to establish who was responsible for the deposits and who was bearing the risk on loan assets.

According to Kotak, a competition between a regulated entity and a fintech or consumer tech usually ends up with the tech company being fast and loose on regulation and gaining market share at great speed. “I am not against competition. All I am saying, in the name of competitive service, we do not have a systemic and stability challenge at the same time,” he said. He urged authorities to take UPI and the Aadhaar-Enabled Payment Systems global. He said that there is already a partnership with Singapore, but there was a need to take this to other developing markets such as Bangladesh and African countries.



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Shopify survey, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Kruthikaa Lakshman

Contactless payments, especially UPI, is gaining traction this Diwali. Nearly 50% of festive shoppers said that they preferred to process payments via UPI as
opposed to any other form, a survey by e-commerce platform Shopify said.

The survey found that the preference for UPI remains consistent across both, online and offline shopping experiences.

The COVID-19 pandemic has had a lot to do with these trends, the survey said. Though the experience that predates the festival is anticipated by many, the
convenience and safety of online shopping has persisted by 76.9% of the shoppers this festive season, it added.

Shopify India released “The Festive Shopping Outlook Report 2021”, measuring consumer trends in the last month, in time for Diwali. Trends have shown that the festive shoppers who would traditionally begin buying for the season, a month in advance hadn’t done so this year.

With mobile phones and internet access to non-metro shoppers, more and more people were seen opting for the digital medium. Online shopping is prevalent after the pandemic has increased to larger areas of the country, according to the report.

60% shoppers use digital payments multiple times a week for festive season shopping: Survey

Contactless payment using radio frequency identification (RFID) or near field communication (NFC) is also constantly improving. The National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) recently partnered with YES Bank to launch RuPay On-the-Go contactless payments solutions, which is further pushing shoppers to opt for contactless payments, the survey added.

Further, the survey said that the digital payments platform has been opened by Google Pay for use in contactless UPI patents as well.

In terms of what shoppers shopped for during the season, the survey finds that gold and precious metal jewellery, which have been traditional festive gifting favorites, seem to have fallen out of favor this year.

This year, most shoppers were seen investing in tech gadgets. Electronic gadgets, according to the survey, are all set to command maximum consumer gifting budgets with close to 42% respondents showcasing increased propensity towards it.



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Mobile payments surpass credit cards in 2021: Report

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Mobile payments in India are now growing faster than card payments as more consumers and businesses adopt digital payments amidst the pandemic, said the 2021 India Mobile Payments Market Report.

According to the report, payments made via apps that bypass credit cards rose 67 per cent to $478 billion in 2020. They are clocking more than $1 trillion in annualised value in 2021.

“…we expect mobile payments to continue to grow faster than cards due to a growing consumer preference to use smartphones to pay,” said the report published by S&P Global Market Intelligence’s Financial Institutions Research team.

By comparison, credit card transaction value in the industry dropped by 14 per cent in fiscal 2021. For banks, the ongoing pandemic shaved off $524 million in credit card interchange revenue according to its estimates, as consumers hunkered down amid lockdown measures.

“Mobile payments in India accelerated their lead over cards amid the Covid-19 pandemic. Large technology companies intermediating mobile payments are becoming financial supermarkets by cultivating partnerships with financial institutions and securing regulatory licenses.”

It also said that demand for cash is slowing in the wake of rising mobile payment adoption. For each ATM withdrawal, Indians made 3.7 transactions using mobile phones in 2020.

It has also forecast that there continues to be room for rapid growth digital payments in India in the next few years.

“Based on a review of instant payments in four large Asia-Pacific economies, India processed the highest number of real-time transactions in 2020,” it said, while noting that the country’s real-time transactions per capita of 16 in 2020 was the lowest in the group, which includes Australia, Thailand and Singapore.

While PhonePe and Google Pay continue to dominate mobile payments, the report said it does not expect India’s mobile payments market to become a duopoly like in mainland China, where Alipay and WeChat process the bulk of mobile payments.

“Payment fintechs with business-to-business models burn significantly less cash than their consumer-facing brethren,” it further said, adding that large fintechs that work closely with large and small enterprises are poised for overseas expansion and business diversification.

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SBI General Insurance ties up with Google Pay for health insurance

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SBI General Insurance on Wednesday announced its technological collaboration with Google Pay that will enable users to buy SBI General’s health insurance on the Google Pay app.

“This is in line with SBI General’s vision to consistently expand its distribution of general insurance solutions through digital channels,” it said in a statement, adding that the collaboration also marks Google Pay’s first such alliance with an insurer in the country and will make health insurance available to customers.

Users will be able to buy both individual and family plans under Arogya Sanjeevani policy through Google Pay Spot.

“The pandemic has boosted the usage of digital platforms for various needs, and expectations from financial solutions have also matured. This collaboration is yet another endeavour to address this growing need for health insurance, thereby, bringing a larger number of people under the insurance fold,” said Prakash Chandra Kandpal, Managing Director and CEO, SBI General Insurance.

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WhatsApp may verify your documents to use Payments, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Facebook-owned messaging platform WhatsApp may soon ask to verify your identity to access the payment feature. WhatsApp pay was launched in 2018 in India as a part of trail run and after getting approval from National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI), the service was officially rolled out to the public last year. Now as per a report by XDA-Developers, the strings in the latest WhatsApp beta indicate that the platform will need to share their verification documents to access the payments feature.

As of now, to use the WhatsApp Pay service in India, you just have to verify the phone number linked to your bank account for UPI transactions. Currently, the platform doesn’t ask for any verification documents from users for any service. According to a report, WhatsApp v2.21.22.6 beta gets new strings that suggest the above mentioned change.

The company has not yet officially made an announcement about this change. Several other popular UPI-based apps such as Google Pay, Phone Pe and others don’t ask users for verification documents. The report suggests that WhatsApp’s move may be limited to business account users only.

The company is constantly working to improvise the ecommerce experience on the platform. Recently, it started to roll out a new feature called ‘Collections’. The feature allows you to shop items from the messaging platform using categories. In simple words, the feature allows business account holders to organise products in their catalogs according to the category so users can easily find the desired item without scrolling through the long list of items.

If you have a WhatsApp business account, you can create a collection by following these steps. Tap on the three dots at the top right corner of the app > tap on Business Tools > select Catalog > tap on Add New Collection. Apart from this, the company released the ‘Carts’ feature that makes it easier for customers to buy multiple items.



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Google says firmly sees itself as partner to India’s financial ecosystem

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Internet major Google on Friday said it firmly sees itself as a partner to the existing financial ecosystem in India and that instances of partnerships being described as Google Pay’s offerings fuel misinterpretation.

While the company did not elaborate on any specific instances, the latest assertion comes against the backdrop of reports suggesting that Google Pay has launched fixed deposit offerings in partnership with a bank.

The company emphasised that in every geography where Google Pay is present, its stance is consistently one of partnering with the existing financial services and banking systems to help scale and enable frictionless delivery of financial products and services and contribute to financial inclusion.

In a blog post, Google India said a few instances where these offerings have been reported as ‘Google Pay’s offerings’, which “fuels misinterpretation”.

“To be clear, we have always looked at our role firmly as a partner to the existing financial ecosystem that brings unique skill sets and offerings to drive further adoption of digital payments in the country,” it said.

Offerings on UPI network

According to Google, several of its offerings are built on top of NPCI’s pioneering UPI payment network and infrastructure, “which has grown over 190X in the last 4 years, to processing over INR 6 trillion in value today”.

Furthering that objective, in 2019, “we had announced the launch of the Spot Platform on Google Pay, a surface for merchants of all types — offline or digital native, small or large, across use cases – to find payment-ready users,” it noted.

The internet major also noted that its spot platform works as an additional discovery channel for many businesses to build and offer users new experiences to drive their services’ adoption.

The use cases span across ticket purchase, food ordering, paying for essential services like utility bills, shopping and getting access to various financial products.

Spot experiences

Providing a detailed explanation, Google said that many of these Spot experiences especially in the financial products/ service categories — be it insurance, wealth management, credit or other financial services — are regulated industries and each merchant is required to be duly authorised to provide those services before they are onboarded onto the platform.

“Today we have close to 400 merchant spots on Google Pay, and in this journey, we have seen that financial product offerings perform especially well, with offerings from spot experiences delivered by financial services players like CashE, Groww, 5paisa, Zest Money etc. seeing significant growth and engagement from users on Google Pay,” the blogpost said.

Also, the company noted that this engagement underscores that payments platforms are a great surface to deliver financial services to users across the country.

“As Google Pay, our role is firmly circumscribed to providing these merchants a surface where Google Pay users can discover and gain from these offerings — be it credit products, insurance or any others… We are committed to play our role by using technology as a means to level social inequalities and contribute to this vision operating within the purview of India’s legal and regulatory frameworks,” it stated.

Earlier this week, Google Pay’s partnership with Equitas SFB was announced. Consumers can book fixed deposits fully digitally without opening a savings account with the lender through its ‘spot’ integrated with the Google Pay platform.

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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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Google’s push into Indian retail banking is a threat to traditional lenders, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Will banking meet the sorry fate of newspapers? With the tech industry creeping up on licensed deposit-taking institutions in India, it’s time to take the question seriously.

Alphabet Inc.’s Google already provides one of the two most popular payment wallets in the country. But now Google Pay wants to push time-deposit products of small Indian banks that don’t have much of a retail liability franchise of their own. According to a press release, Equitas Small Finance Bank will offer Google Pay customers up to 6.85% interest on one-year funds as part of a “branded commercial experience” on the platform. The Mint newspaper, which has reviewed the application interface built by Setu, a Bangalore-based fintech, says other lenders may also sign up.

The move has global significance. It shows the tenuous nature of the hold financial institutions have on a core operation like deposit-taking, and their vulnerability to an assault from online search, social media and e-commerce behemoths. Alphabet, Facebook Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. may pose a far bigger challenge to brick-and-mortar lenders than fintech startups that don’t have the scale of platform businesses. Just like in India, deposit-strapped challenger banks might throw the keys to tech intermediaries with hundreds of millions of active users. When the giants storm the fortress, even larger banks will lose control of banking.

China’s homegrown tech titans have already shown how easy it is to dislodge traditional lenders from lending. In a growing network of users, real-time nonfinancial data can be a more powerful predictive tool than credit scores relied upon by banks. Adding a layer of financial activity to an online platform brings in yet more information. Before Beijing stepped in to clip its wings, Jack Ma’s Ant Group Co. pursued this advantage to the hilt.

Silicon Valley never had a chance in China. However, it’s in a stronger position in the world’s second-most-populous nation, where everything to do with money is increasingly about plugging into an open network. Banks’ historic moat has been breached by tech innovation.

For instance, the government’s digital identification system for 1.3 billion people has made paper trails and physical presence redundant, and turned the banks’ cumbersome know-your-customer processes (verifying an address or being introduced by another account holder) into a cheap utility with standard protocols. A wallet can establish customer identity as easily as a bank and manage the process of seeking her consent.

Nor do India’s deposit-taking institutions have any special advantage left in moving retail money. Yes, they still hold the accounts for sending or receiving funds. But rather than transacting on their bank apps or cards, customers prefer to use Google Pay or Walmart Inc.’s PhonePe to pay one another and merchants. The two wallets were used to transfer 5 trillion rupees ($70 billion) last month, giving the duo an 85% share of a market that has more than 50 apps, including from banks.

That’s the power of platforms’ data-network-activity, or DNA, loop, as researchers at the Bank for International Settlements describe it. When Facebook’s WhatsApp Pay is fully ready, the half a billion Indian users of the messaging service are bound to give it a leg-up in financial businesses.

The environment is ripe for Silicon Valley to encroach into banking. Equitas doesn’t have a pre-existing relationship with the Google Pay customer to whom it’s marketing fixed-term products. Even after getting the money, the lender might not get to build long-term association with the saver. Once the deposit matures, the money will simply get swept back into whichever bank’s account it came from. Since it won’t even take two minutes for a platform to book deposits from scratch, if another lender offers a better deal, idle funds might go there next. Customer loyalty, which is often just plain inertia, will no longer ensure stickiness. Savers will gain.

If the playbook is successful, the likes of PhonePe and WhatsApp Pay might also want to copy it. For a fee, platforms can easily extend their insights into consumer behavior and payment flows to influence deposit mobilization. The higher the commission, the lower the banks’ profit. India’s state-run lenders, in particular, will need to become more efficient. Or they’ll have to lobby with regulators to rein in the tech giants. Amazon, Google and Facebook were all competing to build a brand-new payment network in India, But the central bank has put the license on hold because of data safety concerns, according to a separate report in Mint last week.

Globally, banks and regulators have been bracing themselves for the challenge from Diem, a Facebook-backed project that promises to replicate major global currencies to broaden financial inclusion. But lenders can be on a slippery slope even without new payment instruments. As Big Tech asserts control over the flow of yield-seeking savings, an imposing high-street presence will no longer serve as a ticket to cheap funding.

Regulated institutions may be left holding a license to take deposits — and a thick rule book accompanying that privilege — but platforms will decide if a bank’s promotional offer is to be displayed prominently or buried in an obscure corner. The same slow, painful decline that gutted the print media after readers and advertisers moved online and publishers lost their sway over them may be waiting in the wings for banking, too.

(Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this column are that of the writer. The facts and opinions expressed here do not reflect the views of www.economictimes.com.)



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WhatsApp brings new ‘payments backgrounds’ feature in India, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Designed in partnership with the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI), on the Unified Payment Interface (UPI), the payments feature on WhatsApp enables transactions with over 227 banks.

In a bid to strengthen its payment services offering in India, instant messaging platform WhatsApp has introduced ‘Payments Backgrounds feature on the platform.

“Built for India, this new feature is relevant, exciting, and memorable as it helps people easily convey a feeling along with sending money,” said a company statement on Tuesday.

Designed in partnership with the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI), on the Unified Payment Interface (UPI), the payments feature on WhatsApp is an India-first, real-time payment system that enables transactions with over 227 banks, it said.

Manesh Mahatme, Director of WhatsApp Payments said: “WhatsApp is a safe space where people share their thoughts and feelings with their friends and family. With Payments Backgrounds, our effort is to bring excitement to everyday payments through WhatsApp and enable our users to express themselves if they wish, through a range of emotive themes denoting celebrations, affection, warmth or fun.”

“We believe that sending and receiving money is so much more than just a transaction. Often, it’s the stories behind the exchanges that are priceless. We look forward to creating more features and functionalities and continue making payments on WhatsApp an interesting and interactive experience,” he added.

Conversations around payments

Conversations involving payments are often imagined to be simply transactional. WhatsApp has created this thematic range of artful expressions to complement sending payments on birthdays, holidays, or for gifts and travel, the company said.

As per WhatsApp, the core idea of this feature update is to create a more personalised experience for the sender as well as the receiver by adding an element of expression when friends and family exchange money.

“Whether it is friends splitting the bill after a meal, sending money to near and dear ones as a token of your love or gifting your sister on the occasion of Rakshabandhan, payment backgrounds make sending money personal and brings alive the story behind every payment,” the statement said.

WhatsApp has been trying hard to make a mark in the already crowded online payments segment in India with strong incumbents including Paytm, Google Pay, PhonePe, Amazon Pay already having consolidated their position.



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