PM Modi, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi [India], November 12: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday lauded the use of Unified Payments Interface (UPI) across the country and said the digital transactions in India has jumped 19 times in the last seven years.

“UPI has become the world’s leading country in terms of digital transactions in a very short span of time. In just seven years, digital transactions in India has jumped 19 times. Today our banking system is operational 24 hours, 7 days and 12 months anytime, anywhere in the country,” the Prime Minister said while speaking at the launch of two customer-centric initiatives of RBI.

PM Modi said, “Till 6-7 years ago, banking, pension, insurance, everything used to be like an ‘exclusive club in India’. Common citizens of the country, poor families, farmers, small traders-businessmen, women, Dalits-deprived-backwards, all these facilities were far away for all of them.”

The Prime Minister further pointed out that earlier, there were no bank branches, no staff, no internet, no awareness in the banking sector.

“The people who had the responsibility of taking these facilities to the poor also never paid any attention to it. Rather, various excuses were made for not changing. It was said that there is no bank branch, no staff, no internet, no awareness, no idea what were the arguments,” the Prime Minister said.

The Prime Minister also lauded the role of cooperative banks in strengthening the banking sector.

“To further strengthen the banking sector, cooperative banks were also brought under the purview of RBI. Due to this the governance of these banks is also improving and the trust in this system is getting stronger even among the lakhs of depositors who are there,” he said.

Earlier today, PM Modi launched two innovative customer-centric initiatives of the Reserve Bank of India.

The RBI Retail Direct Scheme is aimed at enhancing access to the government securities market for retail investors. It offers them a new avenue for directly investing in securities issued by the Government of India and the State Governments. Investors will be able to easily open and maintain their government securities account online with the RBI, free of cost.

The Reserve Bank – Integrated Ombudsman Scheme aims to further improve the grievance redress mechanism for resolving customer complaints against entities regulated by RBI. The central theme of the scheme is based on ‘One Nation-One Ombudsman’ with one portal, one email and one address for the customers to lodge their complaints.

There will be a single point of reference for customers to file their complaints, submit the documents, track status and provide feedback. A multi-lingual toll-free number will provide all relevant information on grievance redress and assistance for filing complaints.

India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi



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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 transactions cross 3.5 billion in August

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As lockdowns and other mobility restrictions were lifted, digital payments picked up again in June and the months thereafter.

The volume of transactions made through the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) channel stood at 3.55 billion in August, up from 3.24 billion in the previous month. The value of transactions rose to Rs 6.39 lakh crore from Rs 6.06 lakh crore in July, the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) said on Wednesday.

Transactions through UPI as through other payment channels had seen a marginal dip in April and May, when the outbreak of the second Covid wave affected consumption. As lockdowns and other mobility restrictions were lifted, digital payments picked up again in June and the months thereafter.

The market share of UPI has constantly been increasing and stood at 80% over the first four months of FY22, up from 73% in FY21, according to a report by Motilal Oswal Financial Services.

Other payment channels operated by the NPCI also saw an uptick in usage during August. The volume of financial transactions via Aadhaar enabled Payments System (AePS) rose to 108.48 million from 88.84 million in July. The value of these transactions rose to Rs 27,354 crore from Rs 23,447 crore.

Immediate Payment Service (IMPS) clocked 378 million transactions worth Rs 3.18 lakh crore in August, up from 350 million transactions worth Rs 3.09 lakh crore in July. Transactions through Bharat Bill Payments System (BBPS) rose to 59 million from 51 million in the previous month, and the value of transactions increased to Rs 10,307 crore from Rs 9,613 crore.

Toll payments made through FASTag increased to 201 million from 192 million and their value rose to Rs 3,077 crore from Rs 2,976 crore in July.

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PM Narendra Modi, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The latest addition to India’s growing catalogue of digital payments solutions, voucher-based digital payment mode e-RUPI, will create a transparent and efficient welfare delivery mechanism, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in the launch address of e-RUPI on Monday.

The purpose specific digital payment solution, developed by the National Payments Corporation of India in partnership with several government agencies, over its interoperable Unified Payments Interface (UPI) architecture will first be launched for covid vaccine dispensation at private hospitals, PM Modi said.

He added that the use cases for e-RUPI in subsequent years can be expanded from the delivery of various welfare subsidies linked to education, ration, healthcare, and fertilisers as well to relief efforts during natural calamities by different government, non-profit and corporate entities. It can also help in donations and scholarship programs for underprivileged sections of the society, Modi added.

“The launch of e-RUPI for digital transactions and Direct Benefit Transfers is a big step towards ensuring a more effective, transparent and leakage free welfare delivery system in India,” said PM Modi. “With this system, any government or non-government agency can avoid the use of cash to create a purpose specific voucher to intended beneficiaries. This will ensure that the funds will be utilised for its original purpose,” he added.

The payment system has been created by NPCI in association with the Department of Financial Services, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and the National Health Authority. In essence e-RUPI is a digital payments mode which will be in the form of SMS strings or a Quick Response (QR) code delivered directly to beneficiaries of the intended welfare scheme without any intermediary network.

The pilot for e-RUPI will test its applications for free vaccine delivery, with broad scope also set to soon cover NHA’s PMJAY payouts as well as other digitised stamps based use cases for food delivery, fertilisers, healthcare benefits as well as scholarships and ration payments.

“Technology is a tool for social empowerment and transparency,” PM Modi said in the address. “During the pandemic, India has set an example with its Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) architecture on effective delivery of benefits to the poor, when many countries struggled to find a solution.”

PM Modi also hailed India’s fintech and startup sectors for creating positive solutions towards social upliftment. Citing the UPI’s record volume in July where the channel reported an all-time high 324 crore transactions worth Rs 6.06 lakh crore, Modi said that indigenous payment solutions such as UPI, RuPay and Fastag have helped India lead digital payments innovations.

Now, the launch of e-RUPI marks the first issuance of a digital voucher in India that can be a purpose-specific substitute for bank notes, debit cards or biometric modes of payments. e-RUPI addresses main challenges with bank account based direct transactions such as lack of transparency on end-use, high authentication failure rates, inactive bank accounts as well as lack of cash out points in rural India, according to experts.

Earlier this month, the Reserve Bank of India deputy governor T Rabi Sankar in a speech also hinted that the central bank is working towards first of its kind Indian Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) – an Indian sovereign cryptocurrency.

However, e-RUPI would be different from a CBDC in that it won’t be interchangeable with cash or currency and can be redeemed only for the specific use case it has been created. NPCI and select banks – both public and private sector – onboarded as issuing entities will take payment orders from corporate or government agencies which will include the details of persons and the purpose for which payments will be booked. The authentication of the person can happen through the registered mobile number of intended beneficiaries.

The prepaid digital stamp is set to be accepted at enabled centres – first for vaccinations – without a mobile app or internet banking or any other physical interface.



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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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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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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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Indians prefer digital swipe, but keep cash handy amid Covid, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Digital modes of payment have soared manifold since the demonetisation in late 2016, but cash too has kept pace, more so during the Covid pandemic.

Digital transactions have grown at a CAGR of 66.4% to 40.1 billion transactions in FY20 from 3.1 billion transactions in FY15, as per the Reserve Bank of India data. The average daily digital transactions in India in January 2021 were at 142.6 million, up from 8.6 million in 2015.

Interestingly, the currency in circulation is also at its highest in a decade, as people prefer cash storage in anticipation of medical emergencies amid restrictions in movements.

Cash conundrum

From 12% of the GDP in FY16, currency usage slumped to 8% in FY17 following demonetisation and has been gradually rising since.

Currency in circulation rose 17% ( year-on-year) to Rs 28.6 lakh crore by end-March 2021, compared with 14% at the end of the previous fiscal year, the latest Reserve Bank of India (RBI) data showed. Cash in the system further increased to Rs 29.4 lakh crore as of May 7.

Withdrawal of benefit payouts and subsidies from Jan Dhan accounts, better agriculture output and farm-gate receipts are among the various factors attributed for the cash shortage.

Digital transactions

Digital transactions have grown at a CAGR of 66.4% to 40.1 billion transactions in FY20 from 3.1 billion transactions in FY15, as per central bank data. The average daily digital transactions in India in January 2021 were at 142.6 million, up from 8.6 million in 2015.

The growth of digital payments slowed in April 2021 over March, remained higher than in February, according to a report.

The Unified Payments Interface (UPI) transactions dropped from the Rs 5­ lakh crore peak in March to Rs 4.93 lakh crore via 264 crore transactions.

The Immediate Payment Service (IMPS) saw 32.29 crore transactions worth Rs 2.99­lakh crore in April as against 36.31 crore transactions of Rs 3.27 lakh crore in March.

Bharat Bill pay platform processed 3.51 crore transactions worth ₹Rs 5,201.92 crore in April as against 3.52 crore payments amounting to Rs 5,195.76 crore in March.

As the movement of people and goods slowed, the FASTags, AePS transactions through the NETC saw a sharp decline in April at 16.43 crore transactions worth Rs 2,776.9 crore. It was 19.32 crore transactions worth Rs 3,086.32 crore in March.

The Aadhaar enabled Payment System saw 7.42 crore transactions valued at Rs 22,139.05 crore in April as against 7.78 crore payments worth Rs 22,697.82 crore in March.



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Digital payments slow down in April as virus transmission accelerates, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The slowdown in the economic activity due to lockdowns and restrictions in April echoed in the digital payment transactions in April.

The growth of digital payments slowed in April over March, remained higher than in February, according to a report.

The Unified Payments Interface (UPI) transactions dropped from the Rs 5­lakh crore peak in March to Rs 4.93 lakh crore via 264 crore transactions.

The Immediate Payment Service (IMPS) saw 32.29 crore transactions worth Rs 2.99­lakh crore in April as against 36.31 crore transactions of Rs 3.27 lakh crore in March.

Bharat Bill pay platform processed 3.51 crore transactions worth ₹Rs 5,201.92 crore in April as against 3.52 crore payments amounting to Rs 5,195.76 crore in March.

As the movement of people and goods slowed, the FASTags, AePS transactions through the NETC saw a sharp decline in April at 16.43 crore transactions worth Rs 2,776.9 crore. It was 19.32 crore transactions worth Rs 3,086.32 crore in March.

The Aadhaar enabled Payment System saw 7.42 crore transactions valued at Rs 22,139.05 crore in April as against 7.78 crore payments worth Rs 22,697.82 crore in March.

Last fiscal

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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Merchants payments is next battleground for SBI, HDFC Bank and ICICI Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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State Bank of India, HDFC Bank and ICICI Bank have lined up a slew of plans to capture the payments and settlement market as they ramp up their digitisation initiatives.

ICICI Bank, India’s second-largest private sector lender by assets is eyeing a large share of the potential Rs 31 lakh crore of payments and settlement market to more than 2 crores small, big, offline and online businesses by fiscal 2022 by offering these wholesalers and retailers payment systems bundled with cash management and credit facilities.

The bank is targeting income from fee, credit and savings due to use of technology by offering these services to these large and small establishments spread across the country. As per RBI data the market for merchant services is Rs 2.32 lakh crore or about Rs 24 lakh to Rs 25 lakh crore in fiscal 2020 and is expected to increase 45% to Rs 31 lakh crore by fiscal 2022.

The merchant stack will provide “seamless banking services” to over 2 crore retail merchants in the country.

The bank also expects to extend other services like short term loans of tenure between six months to 1 year.

HDFC Bank

HDFC Bank, the country’s largest private sector lender, has set an ambitious target to expand its merchant base by ten-fold

in the next three years, eyeing a sizable share of India’s rapidly growing digital payments market.

The lender is planning to reach out to more than 20 million small and medium merchants and also professional services like doctors,

pharmacies, salons and laundry services across metro, semi urban and rural India in the next 3 years. HDFC Bank has about two

million merchants on its network as of FY20. The lender on Wednesday launched a new banking and payment solution for its merchant called SmartHub Merchant Solution 3.0. This will allow merchants and self-employed professionals to instantly open a current account and start accepting payments both through physical and digital channels.

It has tied up with global card network Visa to enable some of the payment solutions. The features would also be digitizing Khata, enabling collection reminders, inventory management, billing software and lending to merchants’ basis their banking history.

HDFC Bank processes about 48% of the overall card transactions at the merchant level in terms of volumes and about a fourth of the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) volumes.

State Bank of India

SBI Payments, a subsidiary of India’s largest lender State Bank of India, will launch YONO Merchant App to provide low-cost digital payments infrastructure to merchants.

YONO Merchant App will expand digitization of merchant payments in the country, SBI said in a release.

Aiming to enable millions of merchants through mobile-led technology to accept digital payments, SBI plan to deploy low-cost acceptance infrastructure across India over the next two years targeting 20 million potential merchants across India in retail and enterprise segment. This will help boost digital payments acceptance infrastructure in tier 3, 4 as well as north eastern cities.

YONO SBI Merchant will act as a soft PoS (point of sale) solution for which it has partnered with global payments technology major Visa to enable Tap to Phone feature. The partnerships aim to give the necessary boost to scale up acceptance infrastructure across the country,

Bank launched YONO Platform three years ago, YONO, has 35.8 million registered users.

In the next 2-3 years, SBI is aiming to digitize millions of merchants by upgrading their mobile phones into a PoS device accepting all form factors, accessing Value Added Services such as loyalty, GST invoicing, inventory management, among others and connecting into an interface to avail other banking products at a click of a button. The bank is aiming to grow our merchant touch points multi-fold crossing 5-10 million within 2-3 years.



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