NPCI and Fiserv launch ‘nFiNi’ programme

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The National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) and Nasdaq-listed Fiserv Inc. entered into an understanding that will enable the launch of plug-and-play RuPay credit card stack, ‘nFiNi’.

This BaaS (banking-as-a-service) programme provides a ready stack of services required for fintechs and banks to issue RuPay credit cards, NPCI said in a statement.

Fintechs will now be able to co-create new credit card programmes sponsored by banks on nFiNi. The programme will empower fintechs to swiftly and effectively launch new credit cards for retail as well as corporate customers, NPCI said.

“This will bring in significant efficiencies for banking and fintech institutions at various levels in terms of operations and customer management. The programme will further enable these institutions to expand their market base to new-to-credit customer,” the statement said.

NPCI is an umbrella organisation for operating retail payments and settlement systems in India. Fiserv Inc. is a global payments and financial technology company.

“Once on-boarded, the fintechs, which largely cater to the new-to-bank-and-credit customer, will be able to issue credit to this segment through the nFiNi platform,” NPCI said.

Powering RuPay cards

The nFiNi platform will power RuPay cards (including National Common Mobility Card) by offering access to needed services through the NPCI network combined with FirstVisionTM cloud-based open API integrations from Fiserv.

Nalin Bansal, Chief of Corporate Relationships & Fintechs, NPCI said, “We believe this will accelerate the penetration of RuPay cards in the country as well as lead to increased penetration of credit in the market in both urban and rural space.

“It is important to provide a robust tech stack of services to these institutions which will not only help them in seamless integration of products and services but also allow them to reach out to a greater number of customers more effectively.”

Rishi Chhabra, General Manager – India & Sri Lanka, Fiserv said the service-oriented architecture and open APIs of locally-hosted FirstVision facilitate rapid application development to enable new capabilities to be brought to market more quickly, while at the same time, facilitating regulatory compliance.

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NPCI, Fiserv to open RuPay API platform, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) has tied up with Nasdaq-listed fintech firm Fiserv to launch an application programming interface (API) platform for startups and banks looking to build credit card-based products on top of the RuPay rails, said senior company executives.

They said the collaboration will help faster and cheaper onboarding of customers and merchants by banks as well as enable fintech firms to build out new models of digital interfaces for customers launching RuPay credit card products.

“We are trying to expand the credit ecosystem in India, where a lot of great work has happened on the debit side,” Rishi Chhabra, head of India and Sri Lanka at Fiserv, told ET.

The Wisconsin-based firm, which has been operating in India for over a decade, works with seven of the top ten credit card issuing banks in India.

“While collaborating with NPCI one of the shared visions is to expand credit issuance in India,” said Chhabra. “Our tech stack on RuPay will support scalability from an onboarding perspective for both banks and fintechs. We have hundreds and thousands of micro-APIs for the fintech firms to code, consume and onboard and launch their services at scale.”

The collaboration comes at a time when card networks Mastercard and American Express have been barred by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) from issuing any new cards owing to non-compliance with data localisation mandate resulting in a clutch of card-issuing banks migrating their networks to Visa and NPCI’s homegrown RuPay.

According to Nalin Bansal, the chief of corporate relationships and fintechs at NPCI, the collaboration with Fiserv will help RuPay build an ecosystem around its credit card products, thereby attracting more fintech firms to innovate and scale these offerings.

“In India what we have achieved on debit, we haven’t been able to emulate on credit. The need now is how to make credit more affordable for a larger set of customers,” said Bansal. “The platform will help onboard fintech firms at a fairly reasonable cost and speed. These need not be high-end, premium products. It could be a credit card with lower feature sets and limits to the broad-based credit market in India.”

The platform, called ‘nFiNi’, will power RuPay cards by offering access to services through the NPCI network and Fiserv’s microservices-based platform-as-a-service with a set of APIs. This stack, among other things, will support orchestration of the digital user experience, enable push alerts for in-app, mobile messaging app and SMS notifications, simplified integration options and instant digital card provisioning, allowing customers to transact immediately after being approved for a card.



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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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India is fast becoming the global ransomware capital, says NPCI CEO, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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India is said to be fast becoming the global ransomware capital, with mounting cases of cyber-attacks, and the only way to reduce them substantially is to tokenize all payment mechanisms, regardless of high initial costs, Dilip Asbe, CEO of NPCI, tells Ashwin Manikandan and MC Govardhana Rangan.

Dominance of a few players may not be in the best interest and there is a need to raise competition, Asbe said in the exclusive interaction.

Edited excerpts:

The Unified Payments Interface has recorded over 3 billion transactions a month in July and August for the first time. This is a doubling of growth in a year. What is driving this?
Our focus has been on enabling specific use cases. With the support of SEBI, we are nearing 50% of total retail IPO applications using UPI. It is helping expand investments, especially among the younger generations. Similarly, the AutoPay (recurring mandates) solution is gaining traction, and Netflix, Hotstar are in the initial stages of going live. e-RUPI has just been launched. We now have customers of more than 200 banks using the UPI platform, and we intend to roll this out to clients of 500 banks.

There have been discussions about payment failures. How effective has NPCI been in bringing down transaction failure rates since last year?
With the regulatory support, we now have multiple daily settlements including the weekends on all our systems including the card payments – the first of its kind in the world. This reduces settlement risks significantly and allows banks and others to put more volumes on NPCI systems. Last year, we saw an incredible increase in digital transactions. To manage this increased volume efficiently, NPCI, banks, with the dashboard published by Meity and the regulator have increased the capacity of core platforms. If you see month on month, the transaction failures have reduced substantially, and recent volume growth is proof of the pudding.

NPCI recently launched E-Rupi with the government of India. How is the live implementation of this service?
e-RUPI is a context-free, purpose-specific and person-specific solution. There could be many use cases that can leverage this new platform. The top 15 banks of the country have already enabled the workflows; however, the acceptance ecosystem will still have to be built. It reverses the standard UPI model of customers scanning the merchant QR code; here the merchant scans and thus needs the smart phone.

Cyber-attacks have been the biggest worry in the digital space. There have been some high-profile breaches of customer payment data. How is NPCI dealing with it?
This is a super critical issue for the ecosystem. This is something that keeps us worried and awake. Recently I read that India is becoming or has become the Ransomware capital of the world, and most of these demands are in crypto currencies. The regulator has recently delivered a strong “tokenisation framework” which reduces the risk to almost near zero for card payments, if the ecosystem adopts them effectively. While there may be some criticism that it may increase the consumer friction in short term, finally, if there is a large breach, the blame is always on the regulator. The question is who takes the liability, and how do we protect the customers from such breaches? We want all start-ups, irrespective of their size and risk appetites, to participate in payments to expand the market. But how does the regulator mitigate the risk than better technology implementation? As we all know, security standards and certifications are necessary but may not be adequate.

So does tokenization address it?
We at NPCI believe RBI’s initiative is a welcome step and with efficient implementation of tokenization, the customer experience and trust will actually increase. There is nothing to fear. I recall a similar situation when RBI decided to implement the 2-factor authentication in 2012. The entire industry was against the RBI and, in just a few years, everyone started praising the decision and now the world is adopting the same. Customer protection always involves tough actions which benefit the system in the long-run. The regulator must implement without hesitation and deal with short-term criticism.

What about security at NPCI itself?
We at NPCI ensure that robust and in-depth security standards are applied – from infrastructure to data security. We are gearing to implement this in RuPay in the next few days, and in addition the UPI with its inherent design offers safe and secure tokenization.

What is the rationale behind implementing the 30% market share cap rule for UPI? Even now two firms – PhonePe and GPay – are dominating 85% of the market. Will this be a problem?
The market share cap is implemented keeping in mind the concentration risk approach while ensuring that it doesn’t hinder the growth of UPI to the extent possible. We still believe the existing players such as Paytm, Amazon Pay and WhatsApp shall increase their market share in due course so that we don’t need to interfere or take any action to reduce or curtail the growth of UPI. Now, we also see that popular banks’ apps have been converted to full-fledged UPI apps (our long demand) example is iMobile, and we understand Yono and Payzapp shall enable soon. With these measures, we believe that the market share should balance itself out. We are actively consulting various players to increase their penetration in UPI. While digital is still at such a nascent stage, curtailing the UPI growth in the near future may not be in the best interests of the country. We still need huge growth in UPI, especially to enable the next 300 million users in the country who have smartphones and bank accounts, and the ecosystem efforts shall make it happen in the next 24 months.

The MDR was waived in 2020. What has been the impact on Rupay card issuances?
Majority of the MDR (charges from the merchants to accept digital payments) funds the acceptance or infrastructure deployment of those services. The network or the clearing house gets about 10 to 15% of these charges. This is the only source of revenue for the ecosystem to fund the increasing the acceptance infrastructure, superior customer service or protection, prudent cyber security investments and the upscale central IT infrastructure by the entire chain of players part of digital payments. We believe that reasonable MDR charges should be levied so that the digital ecosystem can expand and grow. RuPay and UPI, the home-grown systems are put to disadvantage to some extent due to this regulation.

Coming back to cyber attacks, how can RBI’s new rules on tokenization help?
What RBI is saying is – you can’t store. There is an acceptance ecosystem and issuance ecosystem and there is a network. What the RBI is saying is that apart from the network and issuer, nobody can save card details. Tokenization is something like an alias number for the card which can be stored by anyone. So even if there is a breach, the customer card data won’t be impacted. UPI on the other hand is already a tokenized system right from the design. For cards – the number is part of the authentication design. While it puts a short-term burden on the ecosystem so there will be criticism of the regulator, but we must look long term.

Has NPCI gone live with tokenization?
We have gone live with Jio and are in the process of going live with GPay. We have given the communication to the regulator that we will be ready for tokenization by 30th September and we will onboard our ecosystem before the RBI deadline of 31st December. Bank by bank we will have to certify our partners, which will be done.

The RBI has announced a Payments Infrastructure Development Fund (PIDF). How is the progress on the implementation of this?
It’s already operational. PIDF objective is to create an acceptance ecosystem in J&K and North East. Both POS and QR have different acceptance models. The question is whether demand comes first or supply. PIDF is aimed at fixing the supply side in tier 3 and beyond. PIDF is a big enabler to get the next 300 million into the digital journey. With increased smartphone penetration

What is the outlook on Bharat Bill Payment Systems?
We are very bullish on BBPS and good growth. We are building an ecosystem around BBPPs. There are Operating Units that are licensed by RBI. Around 15+ are licensed and we have over 15 more interested in becoming OUs. The ecosystem I think will grow around BBPS with banks, fintech and startups.

RBI is now reportedly mulling over deferring the New Umbrella Entity scheme. Would the introduction of NUE affect innovation being led by NPCI? How do you view competition in this space?
We have always shaped the market with localised innovation, and we shall continue to do so, with or without NUEs. We have been competing very hard with on card and mobile payments with international card schemes that are well entrenched in the world market. We or for that matter anybody cannot survive nor succeed without innovation and faster execution in such a fast-moving payment space.

NPCI’s design as of today is more like not for profit. Can NPCI compete with NUE which is likely to come up and operate on commercial terms?
RBI and the top banks (with support of IBA) in the country created NPCI as “public good” and nurtured and made this organisation reasonably successful selflessly. China appears to adopt what India did a decade back, but again every country has different objectives and agendas.



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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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Only card networks and issuing banks may get to tokenise data, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Only card-issuing banks and card scheme operators, such as the National Payments Corporation of India, Visa and Mastercard, would be allowed to tokenise customer card data, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is said to have indicated to the industry in a meeting Monday.

The central bank has clarified to the industry that none of the intermediaries, even licensed payment gateways and acquiring banks, would be allowed to store card data and offer tokenised files to merchants under the upcoming payment aggregator and payment gateway regulatory regime kicking in from 2022, two sources aware of the matter told ET.

Under the new norms, every online merchant processing transactions for customers will only have access to a ‘tokenised’ key linked with the consumer’s cards instead of the entire card file. The meeting saw participation of members from industry pockets such as payments, banking and web-commerce, the sources added.

“The central bank has reiterated its stance that it only sees tokenisation as an alternative solution for merchants aiming to offer a one-click checkout facility to customers,” said a source present at the meeting.

“It has also been made clear that only card networks and issuing banks will be allowed to tokenise files corresponding to customer card details. Payment aggregators and merchants will have to devise systems to avail this tokenised link from their respective banks or networks,” the person added.

Tokenisation is an encryption technology that enables card operators to mask actual details of a debit or credit card by substituting with a secure, unique digital token linked to a customer device.

Only this proxy token can be stored by merchants and aggregators to process payments to offer one-click checkouts. Those merchants without access to tokenised links will have to ask customers to fill in the entire details of their card including the 16-digit number every time they make a payment.

The central bank’s insistence on strict card storage norms is on the back of several recent high-profile cyber attacks such as those on JusPay, Mobikwik, Big Basket, Air India and Upstox.

RBI is said to be firm on its stand on customer security where it doesn’t want entities that are not under its direct supervision to be storing card details of customers on servers.

While payment aggregators will be allowed to store card details for processing of redressals and chargebacks, the new rules will stipulate a fixed time under which this data will have to be deleted.

ET reported last week that industry forums, including the Payments Council of India (PCI), have suggested alternative solutions beyond encryption through tokenisation – such as secure reference on files – to minimise customer inconvenience to the central bank.

RBI didn’t respond to ET’s mailed queries.



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Karnataka Bank launches KBL FASTag, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mangaluru-headquartered private sector lender Karnataka Bank on Wednesday launched its “KBL FASTag”, a pre-loaded payment instrument to facilitate seamless movement of vehicles at the toll plazas across the country, in association with National Payment Corporation of India (NPCI) and FASTag processor Worldline.

Bank’s MD & CEO Mahabaleshwara MS said customers could buy the FASTag through online from the bank’s website or by visiting its branch. “FASTag can be pre-loaded digitally for the required amount and can be recharged online through Credit Card/Debit Card/Net Banking/IMPS etc. The applicable toll amount gets automatically debited through the sensors at the toll plaza.”

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Mashreq Bank, NPCI International partner to offer UPI in the UAE

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NPCI International Payments Ltd (NIPL) has partnered with Mashreq to offer acceptance of its mobile-based real-time payment system, Unified Payments Interface (UPI), in the UAE.

“This partnership will enable over two million Indians who travel to UAE for business or leisure purposes every year to pay for their purchases seamlessly using UPI-based mobile applications across shops and merchant stores in the UAE,” said a joint statement on Friday.

The tie-up is expected to boost the digital payment ecosystem in the UAE and will prove to be a major stepping stone for the wider reach of UPI in the international markets, it further said.

“We are excited about our partnership with Mashreq Bank, which will enable consumers from India transact seamlessly using NPCI’s world-renowned UPI platform and deliver seamless user experience,” said Ritesh Shukla, Chief Executive Officer, NIPL.

In July, NIPL and Royal Monetary Authority RMA of Bhutan had partnered to enable and implement BHIM UPI QR-based payments in Bhutan.

“Given the position of UAE as an international commerce and tourism hub, retail merchants in the Emirates always enable the latest payment methods that are expected by our international clients,” said Kartik Taneja, EVP, Head of Payments Mashreq Bank.

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NPCI global arm ties up with Mashreq Bank for UPI payments in UAE, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NPCI‘s global arm NPCI International Payments Ltd (NIPL) has partnered with UAE-based Mashreq Bank to provide its mobile-based real-time payment system UPI in the gulf nation. This strategic partnership will be a significant game-changer in the digital payment ecosystem in the UAE, a release said on Friday.

With this tie-up, more than 2 million (20 lakh) Indians travelling to the UAE are expected to benefit from Unified Payments Interface (UPI) enabled mobile applications to pay for their purchases in a shop or merchant establishment across the country.

Developed by National Payments Corporation of India, UPI facilitates inter-bank transactions.

Mashreq said the tie-up is very timely with growing appetite for mobile-based payments and the bank has witnessed 20 per cent month-on-month growth in pick-up rate.

The implementation of UPI also opens a whole new world of opportunities for enterprises in the UAE and allows them to compete with much larger retailers, it said.

The partnership with Mashreq Bank will enable consumers from India to transact seamlessly using NPCI’s world-renowned UPI platform and deliver a seamless user experience, said Ritesh Shukla, Chief Executive Officer, NIPL.

UPI is one of the most successful real-time payments technology globally that offers secure and simple person to person (P2P) and person to merchant (P2M) transactions.

In 2020, UPI allowed transactions worth USD 457 billion, which is equivalent to approximately 15 per cent of India’s GDP.



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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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