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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Paytm launches card tokenisation for online transactions

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Paytm Payments Services Ltd (PPSL), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Paytm, is offering ‘card on file’ tokenisation service through the launch of Paytm Token Gateway. It has partnered with platforms such as Myntra, Oyo, Domino’s and others for this service, as also payment giants like Visa, Mastercard and RuPay.

The card-on-file tokenisation service will be available for all Paytm consumers and merchants. It is aligned with Reserve Bank of India guidelines, which says the “saved cards” feature will not be allowed on a merchant network anymore.

The tokenisation service allows a user’s card details to be stored as a unique, irreversible ‘digital token’ for secure transactions. It offers seamless digital card payments by ensuring customers don’t have to remember their card details for every transaction.

Paytm Payments Bank rolls out ‘Paytm Transit card’

Praveen Sharma, MD and CEO, Paytm Payments Services Ltd, said, “Tokenisation is the future of digital payments and also ensures safety, as a user’s card details are not shared with anyone. Our merchant partners can now offer seamless, secure payments to their users.”

A tokenised card transaction is considered safer as the card details are not shared with the merchant.

The details are only shared with the issuing bank and the affiliated network. It will also require explicit customer consent via additional authentication.

WhatsApp gets NPCI nod for doubling payments user base

This will allow e-commerce companies to offer customers the ease of tokenising debit and credit cards. End-customers can thus continue to shop via the saved cards feature, which allows faster checkouts.

As per RBI guidelines, all merchants and/or ecommerce stores have to comply with the new card-on-file tokenisation feature by December 31, 2021.

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Visa complains to US govt about India backing for local rival RuPay, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Visa Inc has complained to the U.S. government that India’s “informal and formal” promotion of domestic payments rival RuPay hurts the U.S. giant in a key market, memos seen by Reuters show.

In public Visa has downplayed concerns about the rise of RuPay, which has been supported by public lobbying from Prime Minister Narendra Modi that has included likening the use of local cards to national service.

But U.S. government memos show Visa raised concerns about a “level playing field” in India during an Aug. 9 meeting between U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) Katherine Tai and company executives, including CEO Alfred Kelly.

Mastercard Inc has raised similar concerns privately with the USTR. Reuters reported in 2018 that the company had lodged a protest with the USTR that Modi was using nationalism to promote the local network.

“Visa remains concerned about India’s informal and formal policies that appear to favour the business of National Payments Corporation of India” (NPCI), the non-profit that runs RuPay, “over other domestic and foreign electronic payments companies,” said a USTR memo prepared for Tai ahead of the meeting.

Visa, USTR, Modi’s office and the NPCI did not respond to requests for comment.

Modi has promoted homegrown RuPay for years, posing a challenge to Visa and Mastercard in the fast-growing payments market. RuPay accounted for 63% of India’s 952 million debit and credit cards as of November 2020, according to the most recent regulatory data on the company, up from just 15% in 2017.

Publicly, Kelly said in May that for years there was “a lot of concern” that the likes of RuPay could be “potentially problematic” for Visa, but he stressed that his company remained India’s market leader.

“That’s going to be something we’re going to continually deal with and have dealt with for years. So there’s nothing new there,” he told an industry event.

‘NOT SO SUBTLE PRESSURE’Modi, in a 2018 speech, portrayed the use of RuPay as patriotic, saying that since “everyone cannot go to the border to protect the country, we can use RuPay card to serve the nation.”

When Visa raised its concerns during the USTR gathering on Aug. 9, it cited the Indian leader’s “speech where he basically called on India to use RuPay as a show of service to the country,” according to an email U.S. officials exchanged on the meeting’s readout.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said last year that “RuPay is the only card” banks should promote. The government has also promoted a RuPay-based card for public transportation payments.

While RuPay dominates the number of cards in India, most transactions still go through Visa and Mastercard as most RuPay cards were simply issued by banks under Modi’s financial inclusion programme, industry sources say.

Visa told the U.S. government it was concerned India’s “push to use transit cards linked to RuPay” and “the not so subtle pressure on banks to issue” RuPay cards, the USTR email showed.

Mastercard and Visa count India as a key growth market, but have been jolted by a 2018 central bank directive for them to store payments data “only in India” for “unfettered supervisory access”.

Mastercard faces an indefinite ban on issuing new cards in India after the central bank said it was not complying with the 2018 rules. A USTR official privately called the Mastercard ban “draconian”, Reuters reported in September.



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Banking and finance firms on hiring spree across colleges, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Top banking and financial services firms are on a hiring overdrive across the country’s leading undergraduate and engineering colleges and business schools on the back of growth across businesses and an increasing push for digitisation in a post-pandemic world.

Apart from jobs in finance, operations, treasury, risk, analytics, research, investment banking and corporate banking, the big focus this year is on technology roles, a post-covid phenomenon where organisations in the BFS space have begun placing much greater emphasis on the need to scale up their digital offerings.

Axis Bank plans to bring in 50% more campus hires than last year; Goldman Sachs’ India campus hiring for 2022 will increase by 27% with over 1,900 hires, including interns; for JP Morgan, the campus intake will go up by 23% for full-time analysts and 38% for interns. Others including Citi, Deutsche Bank and Mastercard are hiring aggressively as well, especially for digital skills.

“For 2022, our campus hires will increase by 43%, 24% and 6% across graduate colleges, engineering colleges and business schools, respectively. This is reflective of our growth across businesses and the availability of world-class talent in India,” says Deepika Banerjee, co-head of Goldman Sachs Services. A key element of the firm’s campus hiring strategy in India is to onboard talent through internship.

For JP Morgan, campus recruitment contributes significantly in meeting increased hiring numbers by bringing in entry-talent talent. “The increase this year is fuelled by growth in hiring requirement across all lines of businesses and primarily for technology and techno-functional roles,” said Gaurav Ahluwalia, head of HR, India Corporate Centers, JP Morgan.

“Citi is committed to staying ahead of digital transformation across geographies and our institutional and corporate banking businesses in India. Talent from India is key to supporting these focus areas,” says Aditya Mittal, interim CHRO for Citi India.

With India having cemented its status as a global technology hub, an additional factor driving the demand for talent is the continued flow of work from global corporations into their global service centres in India, says Madhavi Lall, head HR, Deutsche Bank India. They expect to onboard a few hundred graduates and interns from the class of 2022 from across target institutes.

“We are actively hiring for digital skills, which constitutes the majority of our intake, and we are seeing a fair level of competition for talent in this space,” adds Lall.

The intense competition for talent in this space is not just pushing up salaries, but most firms are adding new campuses this year to the existing ones to expand their hiring pipeline.

Axis Bank has added campuses both in its MBA and engineering hiring programmes as the acceleration of its digital agenda and the strategic transformation of the organisation have also been an impetus. “This year, we are doubling down and increasing our hiring. As we rebound from the pandemic, business demand for talent has increased across both core and new age skills,” says head-HR Rajkamal Vempati.

In the coming year, Mastercard plans to hire around 500 graduates from the batch of 2022 under the Launchers program to fill roles in software development engineering, data engineering, analytics consulting, artificial intelligence and other areas. Campuses such as IIM Ahmedabad are seeing a surge in the number of companies. During the recent summer placements, there was an uptick of 27% in the number of companies that offer investment banking, market research and asset & wealth management roles compared to last year, said Ankur Sinha, chairperson of the placement committee.



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RBI lifts biz sanctions imposed on Diners Club, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India on Tuesday lifted the ban imposed on Diners Club International in April from onboarding new customers for flouting data storage norms. The banking regulator noted that the ban was being lifted after Diners was found to have complied with the stipulated rules.

“In view of the satisfactory compliance demonstrated by Diners Club International Ltd. with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) circular dated April 6, 2018 on Storage of Payment System Data, the restrictions imposed, vide order dated April 23, 2021, on on-boarding of fresh domestic customers have been lifted with immediate effect,” the regulator said in a statement.

In FY22, India’s banking regulator had barred three US-based card networks namely MasterCard, American Express and Diners Club International from doing new card business in India as these companies have been flagged as non-compliant with local data storage rules by RBI.

While New York-headquartered American Express and Illinois-based Diners Club were prohibited by the central bank on April 23 from issuing new cards on their respective networks. On July 14, Mastercard – one of the world’s leading card operators – was also barred from doing new card business in India owing to similar non-compliance.

As per RBI’s data localisation rules introduced first in April of 2018, payment operators in India must store data in a server physically present in India. Additionally, these entities are required to submit System Audit Report (SAR) conducted by a CERT-In empanelled auditor.

The Indian central bank had tightened data storage norms for PSOs in India through a notice issued to chief executives of all such licensed companies in India.

As per the rules introduced in March, all PSOs from FY22 were mandated to submit detailed “compliance certificates” to the central bank twice a year signed by the respective chief executives or managing director, confirming adherence to all RBI regulations around security and storage of payment data.

These requirements are over and above the ones mandated by the central bank in April of 2018 where it asked all PSOs to submit board-approved annual System Audit Report (SAR) by CERT-empaneled auditors.

These companies were also asked to submit a one-time compliance report with data localization norms which mandate the data relating to payments in India will be stored in a server physically present in the country, by December of 2018.

RBI had asked these certificates to be submitted on April 30th and October 31st of every year.



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PhonePe launches tokenisation solution – The Hindu BusinessLine

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Digital payments major PhonePe on Tuesday announced the launch of PhonePe SafeCard, which is a tokenisation solution for online debit and credit card transactions.

“This solution will enable both PhonePe users and merchant partners to continue experiencing the convenience of saved card transactions with increased security, and in compliance with the new Reserve Bank of India guidelines,” it said in a statement, adding that the solution supports all major card networks such as Mastercard, Rupay and Visa.

SafeCard will also enable PhonePe merchant partners to offer and use tokenisation on their own platforms through a simple Application programming interface (API) integration.

“With this solution, merchant partners can create, process, delete and modify tokens for online card payments with customers’ consent,” it further said.

“PhonePe SafeCard ensures that the added security doesn’t impact the customer experience at all. We are also closely working with our large merchant base to take them live on this platform,” said Ankit Gaur, Director, Online Business, PhonePe.

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PayU launches tokenisation solution ‘PayU Token Hub’, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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PayU today launched its tokenisation solution ‘PayU Token Hub‘, which allows issuing banks to generate their own tokens. This solution is built by PayU and Wibmo, in partnership with Visa, MasterCard and leading banks.

“We welcome the new RBI guidelines. PayU Token Hub is fully interoperable, providing best of network and issuer tokens for card-on-file use cases extensible to device tap-and-pay.” said Manas Mishra, chief product officer.

‘PayU Token Hub’ will enable businesses to comply with RBI’s latest guidelines on online card data storage, and will soon expand to enable businesses to safely store and create tokens across other popular payment modes like UPI and Net Banking.

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Mastercard expands cryptocurrency services with wallets, loyalty rewards, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mastercard Inc said on Monday it would allow partners on its network to enable their consumers to buy, sell and hold cryptocurrency using a digital wallet, as well as reward them with digital currencies under loyalty programs.

The credit card giant said it would offer these services in partnership with Bakkt Holdings Inc, the digital assets platform founded by NYSE-owner Intercontinental Exchange.

Founded in 2018, Bakkt went public earlier this year through a $2.1 billion merger with a blank-check company. Shares of the company were up 77% at $16.19 on Monday.

Mastercard said its partners can also allow customers earn and spend rewards in cryptocurrency instead of loyalty points.

The company had said in February https://www.reuters.com/article/us-crypto-currency-mastercard-idUSKBN2AA2WF it would begin offering support for some cryptocurrencies on its network this year.

Last year, rival Visa Inc had partnered https://www.reuters.com/article/us-blockfi-crypto-currency-visa-idUSKBN28B603 with cryptocurrency startup BlockFi to offer a credit card that lets users earn bitcoin on purchases.

Bitcoin, the world’s largest cryptocurrency, touched a record high of $67,016 last week after the debut of the first U.S. bitcoin futures-based exchange traded fund. It has more than doubled in value this year.



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Is tokenisation the way forward? Here’s what the industry thinks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Tokenisation will help bring huge value to the digital payments space, and is likely to gain momentum in the coming months, said Ravi Varma Datla, Mastercard‘s vice president – digital products, South Asia.

Last month, the Reserve Bank of India issued guidelines, allowing card-on-file tokenisation. Tokenisation helps consumers to enter and save a 16-digit token on e-commerce or merchant platforms, instead of storing their card details.

“Card-on-File tokenisation enhances the safety and security of the entire transaction value chain in e-commerce payments. It builds trust and can significantly increase convenience for consumers and create efficiencies for merchants. It means there is no need for a consumer to enter his card number every time he transacts, or to login to an online shopping account to update their details due to redundant card credentials,” Datla said.

Last week, National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) announced the tokenisation system for RuPay cards. The NPCI Tokenisation system will support tokenisation of cards as an alternative to storing card details with merchants.

“We are confident that the NPCI Tokenisation System (NTS) for the tokenisation of RuPay cards will instill further trust in the millions of RuPay cardholders to carry out their day-to-day transactions securely,” said Kunal Kalawatia, chief of products at NPCI.

Also read: What is tokenisation, and how can it ensure safe transactions?

When buying a product or service online, consumers are usually forced to store their credit or debit card details. This is where tokenisation plays a significant role in ensuring consumers’ safety.

“What makes this type of token unique is that it can be used just like your normal card for online payments but only by the merchant that requested it. This means that if a bad-guy or hacker gets their hands on a token – it simply cannot be used. For the sake of identification and reconciliation, RBI has permitted merchants to display the last 4 digits of the original card number to the consumers,” Datla said.

Datla added that as of today, customers have no single view of all the merchants where they have saved their card number. With tokenisation, customers can reach out to their respective banks and view the list of all the tokens saved at merchants and also request to delete or update them.

Recently, Visa launched its card-on-file tokenisation service in India. The company has enabled its tokenisation services across 130 countries. As a large number of shoppers make the shift to online payments, Sujai Raina, Visa’s India business development head, believes it will ensure a frictionless checkout experience for consumers, and drive higher payment success rates for merchants and issuers.

“We believe the RBI’s directive to roll out card-on-file tokenisation in addition to the earlier device-based tokenisation protocols, will help build a safe, secure and seamless environment for digital payments, thus enhancing consumer trust across digital platforms,” he said.

When asked Mastercard about its plan to launch its tokenisation services in India, Datla said the company is working with its partner banks, merchants, payment aggregators, and other stakeholders towards a smooth rollout.

So far, Mastercard has rolled out tokenisation for consumers in over 2,500 banks across the globe. The company has found that the tokenisation has enabled a safer payment ecosystem, and has also increased transaction volume across the digital channel to return greater revenue for merchants, Datla said.

Datla also believes that tokenisation will help make digital payments seamless. “By replacing sensitive payment data with digital tokens, a superior ecommerce experience is created which provides increased security, approval rates and a frictionless consumer experience,” Datla said.



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Razorpay launches card tokenisation solution in partnership with Mastercard, RuPay and Visa

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Fintech platform Razorpay has announced a new tokenisation solution for businesses in India to enable their end-customers to continue experiencing the convenience of saved card transactions, now with added security and in compliance with RBI guidelines.

The solution termed ‘Razorpay TokenHQ’ is a multi-network Card-on-File (CoF) Tokenisation solution that will work across all major card networks including Mastercard, RuPay, and Visa.

Almost the entire base of five million businesses using Razorpay’s services will be ready to support tokenised card transactions.

RBI guidelines

Earlier this year, the Reserve Bank of India had issued a new set of guidelines that disallow businesses, payment aggregators, and acquiring banks from storing customers’ credit/debit/prepaid card information. The new guidelines allow only card networks and card issuers to store customer card information, and sanctions businesses to use tokens for offering saved card experience during online payments.

Benefits of tokenisation

COF tokenisation is the process of turning sensitive cardholder data into a string of randomly generated numbers called a “token”, which has no meaningful value if breached. All stakeholders are required to ensure full compliance with the tokenisation framework by 31st December 2021.

Also see: NPCI launches NTS platform for card tokenisation

In absence of tokenisation, customers will have to enter their card information manually, every time they transact online. This can be an inconvenience to customers and increases the chances of error in entering data leading to transaction failures.

“Tokenisation, as a technology solution bridges this inconvenience gap and enables customers and businesses to sustain “business as usual”, by converting customer card information into a coded “token”,” Razorpay said in an official release.

Homegrown solution

Shashank Kumar, CTO and Co-founder, Razorpay, said, “The RBI has been making great strides to enhance the security and convenience of digital payments in India. Newer regulations offer tremendous opportunities for us to innovate and develop localised solutions that work well for Indian businesses. Tokenisation is one such regulatory development, and Razorpay TokenHQ is a homegrown solution that will enable businesses to continue to offer seamless payments while ensuring individuals have control over their card data.”

He further added, “There are over 950 million debit & credit cards in India and this number will only grow given the rise of non-cash transactions in India’s hinterlands. We hope to see a lot of developments in building smart, secure fintech solutions for businesses and their end-users in the times ahead.”

Available for all businesses

Razorpay TokenHQ will be available for all businesses as well as merchants using other payment gateways. Merchants can use Razorpay’s solution to tokenise cards and route payments using their existing payment partnerships.

Also see: Coming soon, new framework for offline digital payments

Merchants with customised setups can start integrating Razorpay TokenHQ through APIs.

Using Razorpay TokenHQ, businesses would be able to create, process, delete and modify tokens for online card payments with customers’ consent.

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