Noopur Chaturvedi appointed CEO of NPCI Bharat BillPay

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National Payments Corporation of India, on Thursday, announced the appointment of Noopur Chaturvedi as the Chief Executive Officer of NPCI Bharat BillPay.

“As CEO, Chaturvedi’s mandate is to work on RBI’s vision to scale up the Bharat Bill Pay (BBPS) platform and make it the preferred solution for all bill payments. She will work closely with the BBPS ecosystem to grow digital bill payments with superior customer experience,” NPCI said in a statement.

NPCI Bharat BillPay is a wholly-owned subsidiary of NPCI. It came into effect from April 1, 2021.

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ICICI Prudential Life ties up with NPCI for UPI Autopay

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ICICI Prudential Life Insurance has tied up with the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) to provide a Unified Payments Interface Autopay facility to its customers.

“This tie-up is another step in the company’s digitalisation journey, which provides customers with a hassle-free and seamless experience across the policy lifecycle,” it said in a statement.

While purchasing a life insurance policy, customers can link their bank accounts with UPI Autopay for payment of premium.

The UPI Autopay e-mandate can be activated by customers by using their smartphones to make regular renewal premium payments in a paperless format.

“At a time when social distancing is the order of the day, the UPI payment mode is fast becoming a preferred route of payment due to the contactless and frictionless experience it provides. Customers can set up the e-mandate facility to make their regular renewal premium payments and ensure financial security for self and their families,” said Ashish Rao, Chief, Customer Experience and Operations, ICICI Prudential Life Insurance.

Customers can enable the UPI Auotpay feature on their UPI apps. Alternatively, it can be enabled for banks through an e-mandate.

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Merchantrade Asia ties up with NPCI International, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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What is e-RUPI and how does it work?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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-By Tarika Sethia

What is e-RUPI?

The new digital product, e-RUPI is a paperless one-time payment system and a person and purpose-specific digital product.

The contactless e-RUPI is a secure way of transacting as it keeps the beneficiary’s information confidential and can also be tracked by the issuer. It is authorised via a verification code and does not require handling of cash due to its wholly digital and prepaid mode. Additionally, the beneficiary is not required to have a bank account or a digital payment app thus, being a catalyst in boosting financial inclusion in the country.

e-RUPI connects the sponsors of the services with the beneficiaries and service providers in a digital manner without the requirement of any physical interface.

How can we redeem e-RUPI?

e-RUPI is a prepaid voucher that can be redeemed without a debit or a credit card, digital payments app or internet banking services. It is a QR based or SMS string-based digital voucher that is delivered to the mobile phones of the beneficiaries by the government or by a selected few organisations.

The user can give an e-RUPI voucher instead of cash at the counters of merchants accepting e-RUPI. Covid-19 vaccine jabs can also be received via these newly launched vouchers. Moreover, a variety of donations can be made by this prepaid digital voucher with the assurance of a targeted, transparent and leakage-free transaction. Even the private sector can leverage these e-vouchers as part of their employee benefit and corporate social responsibility programmes.

The pilot avenue of e-RUPI is the health sector where payments via these electronic vouchers will be accepted. The product will gradually move into other segments.

Who is the architect of e-RUPI?

This digital innovation was brought to the fore by the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI). It was launched in collaboration with the Department of Financial Services (DFS), National Health Authority (NHA), Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW), and other partner banks.

Which banks have gone live with e-RUPI?

From Axis Bank to ICICI, from Bank of Baroda to Punjab National Bank, in total 11 banks are currently in sync with the e-RUPI product. Bharat Pe, BHIM Baroda Merchant Pay, HDFC Business App, PNB Merchant Pay and YONO SBI Merchant are the acquiring apps dealing with the NPCI’s recent launch.

How is e-RUPI different from UPI?

The Unified Payments Interface (UPI) is a direct bank-to-bank transfer that requires the presence of a bank account or a digital payments app while e-RUPI works independent of bank accounts.

What is e-RUPI and how does it work?

Under UPI payments, there is no way of tracking the money paid, however, e-RUPI facilitates payment tracking for the issuer.

NPCI’s data reveals that UPI experiences a fail rate or technical decline rate (TD) of 1.43% which is an improvement from the high that it had reached of 3.4% in December 2020. In another move, e-RUPI is designed with a pre-recorded amount thus, leading to a much smaller transaction failure rate. An amount is already stored in the voucher within which the payment is made.



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PM Narendra Modi launches e-RUPI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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“India has moved forward with a futuristic innovation today. e-RUPI vouchers will play a big role in strengthening Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) and raise digital penetration in the country. Targeted, transparent and leakage-free delivery via e-RUPI will be beneficial to all.”

e-RUPI, this real-time and paperless service was launched today at 4:30 p.m. by PM Narendra Modi via video conferencing. Developed by the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) on its UPI platform, e-RUPI is a QR code or SMS string-based e-Voucher, which is delivered to the mobile of the beneficiaries.

“e-RUPI is a person and purpose-specific digital payment solution.” said PM Modi at the conference.

Launched in collaboration with the Department of Financial Services, Ministry of Health & Family Welfare and National Health Authority, the users of this seamless one-time payment mechanism will be able to redeem the voucher without a card, digital payments app or internet banking access, at the service provider. The e-RUPI vouchers can also be used to make the payment for COVID-19 vaccine shots.

e-RUPI connects the sponsors of the services with the beneficiaries and service providers in a digital manner without the requirement of any physical interface. It also ensures that the payment to the service provider is made only after the transaction is completed. Being pre-paid in nature, it assures timely payment to the service provider without the involvement of any intermediary.

Digital payments recorded a growth of 30.19 per cent during the year ended March 2021, reflecting the adoption and deepening of cashless transactions in the country, RBI data showed. India has grown copiously in the digital arena after the introduction of the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) in 2016. 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.



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All about RuPay, India’s payments network, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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-By Ishan Shah & Tarika Sethia

What is RuPay?

The National Payments Corporation of India’s (NPCI) brainchild, RuPay is a native card payments network initiated by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). It is a financial services and payment services system launched in 2012 and dedicated to the country in 2014. A fusion between ‘rupee’ and ‘payment’ inspired its name along with the intent to bring India into the global payments market via its indigenous card facility.

Why was RuPay launched?

The proposition of a cashless India was enhanced with the introduction of the RuPay cards. Building a cashless economy requires financial inclusion and RuPay reached rural India and boosted digital payments with the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana scheme. Under PMJDY, 258 million RuPay debit cards were issued in 2020 alone from public sector banks under the Indian government’s financial plan. From 15% in 2017 to over 60% in 2020, RuPay’s Indian market share has accelerated.

Moreover, with no domestic payments network, banks were forced to pay high affiliation charges to multinationals like Mastercard and Visa for trusted associations. Hence, NPCI was created as a non-profit payments company to construct an affordable and accessible payments network for Indians.

Where are RuPay cards accepted?

They are accepted at all ATMs, by POS machines in India, and for domestic online and offline shopping. They aren’t accepted internationally except at those ATMs, POS machines and e-commerce websites where ‘Discover Financial Service’ (DFS) and ‘Diner’ is enabled. Presently, cards under RuPay Global are accepted at over 42.4 million POS locations and over 1.90 million ATM locations in over 185 countries.

Why a RuPay card?

Being a domestic framework, banks issuing RuPay cards are at an advantage as they are not required to pay network registration fees unlike in the case of a Visa or MasterCard registration. With a zero merchant discount rate (MDR), banks have also agreed to charge nothing on UPI and RuPay card transactions. This has made RuPay transactions preferable while also stimulating FinTechs to innovate and provide better payment products to customers because of the ease of UPI and RuPay payments framework.

All about RuPay, India's payments network

It also has a greater reach in rural areas. Under the PMJDY scheme, free RuPay debit cards were given to all bank account holders. As all processing of transactions happens in the country, there is also a lower settlement cost.

RuPay has both debit and credit cards for individuals, corporates, and prepaid cards; there’s a ‘Kisan Credit Card’ available as well. There’s also a ‘contactless’ card that facilitates transactions on a single tap, making payments without disclosing crucial card details.

What does RuPay’s future look like?

With a recent ban on new issuances by MasterCard, RuPay has an opportunistic freeway to capture the credit and debit card market in India. As of November 2020, around 603.6 million RuPay cards have been issued by nearly 1,158 banks.

All about RuPay, India's payments network

Banks are also pushing towards a higher RuPay card issuance after FM Nirmala Sitharaman said, “RuPay card will have to be the only card you promote. Whoever needs a card, RuPay will be the only card you would promote and I would not think it is necessary today in India when RuPay is becoming global, for Indians to be given any other card first than RuPay itself,” at the 73rd annual general meeting of the Indian Banks’ Association (IBA) last year.

Even in the credit space, Visa and MasterCard have made themselves comfortable at the top with huge amounts of credit card transactions happening via POS machines. RuPay can conquer the card space.



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RBI’s new rules on interchange fee, 24/7 bulk clearing facility functional, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India‘s new directions on raising interchange fee and making available the facility of bulk clearing round the clock have become effective from Sunday onwards.

The RBI in June raised the interchange fee for financial transactions from Rs 15 to Rs 17, while for non-financial transactions the increase was done from Rs 5 to Rs 6. These new rates have become applicable from August 1, 2021, as per the RBI’s direction.

An interchange fee is a fee charged by banks to the merchant who processes a credit card or debit card payment.

Besides, the National Automated Clearing House (NACH) has been made available on all days of the week, effective August 1, 2021.

NACH, a bulk payment system operated by the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) facilitates one-to-many credit transfers such as payment of dividend, interest, salary and pension.

It also facilitates the collection of payments pertaining to electricity, gas, telephone, water, periodic instalments towards loans, investments in mutual funds and insurance premiums.

During the bi-monthly monetary policy review in June, RBI governor Shaktikanta Das had announced that in order to further enhance the convenience of customers, the NACH will be available on all days of the week.

The facility was available only when banks were open, usually between Monday to Friday. Auto-debit instructions given by the bank account holder were not processed on days the bank were closed like Sundays, bank holidays and even gazetted holidays. Further, since most companies use NACH for salary credits these also did not happen on bank holidays.

Meanwhile, ICICI Bank has revised charges for cash withdrawals from ATMs, cheque books and other financial transactions from August 1. The revised charges will be applicable for domestic savings account holders including salary accounts.



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BIS Innovation Hub, Monetary Authority of Singapore propose enhancing global real-time retail payments network connectivity, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Bank for International Settlements Innovation Hub Singapore Centre and the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) has published a proposed blueprint for enhancing global payments network connectivity via multilateral linkages of countries’ national retail payment systems.

Titled Project Nexus, this blueprint outlines how countries can fully integrate their retail payment systems onto a single cross-border network, allowing customers to make cross-border transfers instantly and securely via their mobile phones or internet devices.

“Project Nexus is trying to achieve the equivalent of internet protocols for payments systems. That means creating a model through which any country can join by adopting certain technical and governance requirements,” said Benoît Cœuré, Head of the BIS Innovation Hub.

The main elements

The Nexus blueprint comprises Nexus Gateways, which would be developed and implemented by the operators of participating countries’ national payment systems, will serve to coordinate compliance, foreign exchange conversion, message translation and the sequencing of payments among all participants. These gateways will be predicated on a common set of technical standards, functionalities and operational guidelines set out within the proposal.

Another element of the blueprint is overarching Nexus Scheme that sets out the governance framework and rulebook for participating retail payment systems, banks and payment service providers to coordinate and effect cross-border payments through the network.

Sopnendu Mohanty, Chief FinTech Officer, MAS, said “To achieve significant cost-reduction in cross-border payment transfers, enhancements must be made on two fronts: direct connectivity between domestic faster payment systems, and frictionless foreign exchange on shared common wholesale settlement infrastructures. The BIS Innovation Hub Singapore Centre is working on both. The Nexus project maps out a much-needed set of standards to achieve seamless cross-border payment systems connectivity.”

How it will work

Under the Nexus blueprint, participating countries will only need to adopt the Nexus protocols once to gain access to the broader cross-border payments network. This removes the need for countries to negotiate payment linkages with each jurisdiction on a bilateral basis.

The Nexus blueprint was developed through extensive consultation with multiple central banks and financial institutions across the globe. It builds on the pioneering bilateral linkage between Singapore’s PayNow and Thailand’s PromptPay launched in April 2021, and benefits from the experience of the National Payments Corporation of India’s (NPCI) development and operation of the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) system. The blueprint can be built upon through continued research and engagement with regulators, payment operators, banks, and other industry participants collaborating towards a technical proof-of-concept.

“Country-to-country and regional payment connections already exist,” notes Andrew McCormack, Head of the BISIH Singapore Centre. “But they require significant coordination efforts, which increase exponentially with more participants. Three countries require three bilateral links but 20 countries would require 190 bilateral links.”

“This blueprint will bring like-minded regulators and instant payments operators along with global bodies like the G20 and the Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures (CPMI) together to make real-time cross-border payments a reality in the next two to four years”, noted Arif Khan, Chief Digital Officer, NPCI.



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Pencilton raises $330K in a pre-seed round by Jupiter, others, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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HYDERABAD: Pencilton, a teen-focused fintech company, has announced raising $330K in a pre-seed round led by Jupiter (registered as Amica Financial Technologies Pvt. Ltd). The round also saw participation from Nilesh Patel and Prashant Singh (Founders, LeadSquared), Ashish Sharma (MD, Innoven Capital), Abhishek Goyal (Founder of Tracxn), Himanshu Sharma (Founder, Aspiring Minds), Kunal Sinha (Founder, GlowRoad), Vignesh Ramanujam (Partner, Spoonfeed) and angel investor Tirumalareddy Karri.

Pencilton offers a debit card, PencilCard, to teenagers and students to help them manage their expenses while teaching them the basics of money management. An upgrade is expected to its debit card in a few weeks that works with the Pencilton app to enable financial inclusion and digital financial literacy for teenagers. With the new funding, the company aims at product enhancement by building industry-leading backend systems for card issuance, management, and further launching of upgraded products. The company was founded by Vishwajit Pureti, Ashish Singh, Pallavi Tipparaju, and Viraj Gadde in 2020.

In a statement, Vishwajit Pureti said, “This round is important as it serves as a vehicle for us to have some of the best minds from the fintech and startup ecosystem, join us on our mission. We are going to announce many industry-leading initiatives that will help bring the best of fintech tools and digital financial literacy to students across India.”

The company has recently introduced the PencilCard, a RuPay debit card for teens across India that can be activated and managed via the Pencilton app. Teens can use the debit card to manage, receive and spend their pocket money through the help of the app. In addition, parents can also use the app to give pocket money, setting parental controls such as the spend limits, approval of money requests, etc.

Pencilton chose the RuPay card platform as it is a product built in India and line with the Government’s ‘Make in India’ policy. It also allows Pencilton to work closely with NPCI to innovate on various aspects of the fintech ecosystem that will soon help bring some never-before-seen features of fintech, not just in India but the whole world, to the fingertips of the next generation.

“The teen/pre-teen banking segment is nascent and growing rapidly. We believe that the Pencilton team understands the space and is solving both kids’ and parents’ needs,” said Rahool Gadkari, Director of Product, Jupiter, in a statemet.

Pencilton aspires to educate the younger generation on financial literacy and management and become the most innovative and prominent player in this space.



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NPCI begins pilot for voice-based payments, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI), which has developed key digital payments railroads such as the Unified Payments Interface, Fastag and Aadhaar Enabled Payment System (AePS), is now testing a voice-based payments service for feature phone users in low connectivity zones, sources aware of the matter told ET.

The service is likely to be rolled out on top of the interoperable UPI protocol. The key differentiator would be that the feature phone users won’t need a third-party app or stable internet connection to complete their transactions.

The ‘Interactive Voice Response’ (IVR) payments project is currently in beta-testing mode with the Reserve Bank of India closely monitoring the pilot as per provisions laid under the central bank’s Regulatory Sandbox (RS), the sources said. A larger rollout would be subject to approvals from RBI after the culmination of the first phase of testing.

The solution has been created by Bengaluru-based fintech Ubona Technologies with a private sector bank currently enabling transactions on the backend, sources added. ET couldn’t independently verify the name of this lender.

Both NPCI and RBI are learnt to be testing various feature phone-based payment solutions that cut the need to have an internet connection or an expensive authentication device like biometric scanner or point of sale (PoS) device, a source said.

NPCI didn’t respond to ET’s mailed queries. A spokesperson from Ubona couldn’t be immediately contacted.

As envisaged by the NPCI the service will allow users of feature phones to make merchant payments as well as peer-to-peer (p2p) transactions by simply generating an authentication PIN linked to their bank account and debit card as well as the registered mobile number.

This is similar to how UPI PINs are generated. However, instead of a smartphone through third party internet apps, feature phone users will be able to generate authentication PIN through a common dial-in service which may be operated by NPCI.

The PIN can be then used at merchant points enabled for such transactions wherein the account holder can use their feature phones to select the payment size and merchant details through a Dual Tone Multi Frequency (DTMF) system which will likely guide the user through the two-factor authentication (2FA) flow in local languages.

DTMF is a technology used with touch tone phones to allow callers to use keypads that correspond to the number of the menu option and select preferred options.

The other leg of this system involves acquirer banks enabling their merchants with a proxy identity number that can be used to authenticate the acceptance part of the transaction. The existing interoperable standards between banks on UPI network allow two or more banks to communicate and vet small-ticket payments in real time.

“There are several legs of this payment system which need to be solved for mass adoption, such as strengthening security and access, as well as enabling banks with concurrent calling infrastructure that can handle thousands of calls at a time,” said a source cited above. “However, these considerations are for the future when NPCI and RBI allows a larger rollout of this service. The initial results are promising,” the person added.

“Another pressing concern is that millions of cards have expired under RBI’s chip-and-pin rules. For such a service, these cards would not be valid anymore,” the source added.

As part of NPCI’s pilot, several leading payment acquirers have been shown demos of this service for feedback, the sources added.

ET had exclusively reported in December 2020 that RBI was testing offline payments through feature phones in a handful of villages in coastal Karnataka in partnership with global card network Visa, private lender Yes Bank and digital wallet venture Yuva Pay.

There are at least four other such experiments in the work as well under RBI’s first RS cohort, all largely focusing on developing an offline payments network for feature phone users to make payments without an internet connection.

As defined by RBI, an RS refers to live testing of new products or services in a controlled/test regulatory environment for which regulators may permit certain relaxations for the limited purpose of the testing. RBI had introduced this concept in 2019 with live experimentations starting in 2020.



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