UPI hits new record with ₹7.71-lakh crore worth of transactions in October

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Amidst festival season sales and opening up of the economy, UPI transactions touched a record high at ₹7.71 lakh crore in value terms in October.

This was a new record for UPI, which is fast becoming the most popular choice for digital payments. It was a 56 per cent jump from ₹6.54 lakh crore in transaction value recorded in September.

According to data released by National Payments Corporation of India on Monday, the number of transactions on the Unified Payments Interface platform amounted to 421 crore in October, compared to 365 crore in September.

Daily payments through UPI were averaging between ₹25,000 crore to ₹30,000 crore in October.

Also read: Mobile payments growing faster than card payments

The Immediate Payment Service (IMPS) also scaled a new high in October and processed 43.06 crore transactions worth ₹3.7 lakh crore. It had processed 38.48 crore transactions amounting to ₹3.24 lakh crore in September.

Meanwhile, there were 21.42 crore transactions via the NETC FASTags totalling ₹3,356.74 crore in October compared to 19.36 crore transactions worth ₹3,009.3 crore in September.

Mobile payments are now growing faster than card payments and are clocking over $1 trillion in annualised value in 2021, the 2021 India Mobile Payments Market Report by S&P Global Market Intelligence’s Financial Institutions Research team had said.

Also read: Strong growth in digital payments indicates a lasting shift in consumer payment behaviour

According to the report, payments made via apps that bypass credit card rails rose 67 per cent to $478 billion in 2020.

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Bitcoin and why its value has rocketed once again

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Bitcoin’s journey into mainstream finance has reached another major milestone – and another record price.

The cryptocurrency was trading at $66,975 (₹50,22,689) following the launch of an exchange traded fund (ETF) in the US which has dramatically increased bitcoin’s exposure to investors.

ETF fund

The fund, which opened on October 19, allows investors to speculate on the future value of bitcoin without actually owning it. It is the first time investors have been able to trade an asset related to bitcoin on the New York Stock Exchange, and was preceded by much media attention and hype in financial markets.

It began trading at $40 (₹3,000) a share and finished the day up 5 per cent with some $570 million (₹4274.62 crore or ₹42.7462 billion) of assets, making it the second most heavily traded new ETF on record (the first was set up by BlackRock, the world’s biggest asset management company).

Also see: Bitcoin edges off all-time high

And the impact on the price of bitcoin has been extraordinary. It soared past its all-time high of $64,895 to the new record of $66,975 and at the time of writing, was hovering around $65,000. This is a big change from mid-July 2021, when bitcoin hit a 2021 low of under $30,000, reflecting its huge volatility.

Crypto trading on a regulated market

Many financial institutions have previously tried to get approval for bitcoin ETFs without success. Until now, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the US government agency which protects investors, has been reluctant to approve any. This was partly due to the intense volatility of bitcoin, as well as broader concerns about the unregulated industry of cryptocurrencies.

But Gary Gensler, Chair of the SEC, said the commission would be more comfortable with “future-based” ETFs because they trade on a regulated market. This is a significant change of direction for the SEC which has happened since Gensler arrived at the helm in April 2021.

ETFs trade like any normal stock, are regulated, and anyone with a brokerage account can trade them. This new fund, named the ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF (or BITO for short), is the first to expose mainstream investors to the highs and lows of bitcoin’s value, without them having to go through the complex process of purchasing the coins themselves.

Also see: CoinDCX launches crypto trading facility for institutional investors

Although US investors could already buy bitcoin futures directly from the regulated Chicago Mercantile Exchange and unregulated exchanges such as BitMEX (as well as bitcoin directly from unregulated exchanges), the launch of an ETF opens up the market to a wider variety of investors, including pension funds — and adds to the growing acceptance of bitcoin in the financial markets.

Diverse opinions

Some are still sceptical of bitcoin due to its link with criminal activity, although a recent report suggests this seems to be diminishing. And Jamie Dimon, the CEO of investment bank JP Morgan, claims bitcoin is “worthless” and that regulators will “regulate the hell out of it”. Nevertheless, JP Morgan gave its wealth-management clients access to cryptocurrency funds in July 2021.

Banking blockbuster Eric Balchunas, a senior analyst at Bloomberg, is not surprised by the price appreciation and described the ETF launch as “a blockbuster, smash, home run debut (which) brings a lot of legitimacy and eyeballs into the crypto space”.

BITO and cryptocurrency

But what impact will BITO have on the cryptocurrency space? As a new product, it has already exposed more investors to the ups and downs of bitcoin’s value in a regulated market. Many of these are likely to have previously felt uncomfortable buying cryptocurrencies from unregulated exchanges and having to store the asset themselves.

Also see: Crypto users see the light at the end of the tunnel

Other investment funds with an interest in cryptocurrencies will be no doubt be encouraged by BITO’s success, and keen to list ETFs of their own which are exposed to bitcoin and its rivals. Several other ETF providers are likely to launch their bitcoin ETFs in the days following ProShares’ debut, including Invesco, VanEck, Valkyrie and Galaxy Digital.

It is a development which is bound to make investing in cryptocurrencies easier and more common — and an important stepping stone for their adoption into mainstream finance.

Author Credit: Andrew Urquhart, Professor of Finance & Financial Technology, ICMA Centre, Henley Business School, University of Reading, London

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RBI issues direction on compensation of private banks’ top officials, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The RBI said on Monday the fair value of the share-linked incentives paid to chief executive officers, whole-time directors and other key functionaries by the private banks should be recognised as an expense during the relevant accounting period. The RBI has also asked all banks, including local area banks, small finance banks and foreign banks to comply with its directions for all share-linked instruments granted after the accounting period ending March 31, 2021.

The central bank had issued guidelines on the compensation of whole-time directors/ chief executive officers/ material risk takers and control function staff in November 2019.

Issuing a clarification in this regard, the RBI said, “the fair value (of share-linked incentives) …should be recognised as expense beginning with the accounting period for which approval has been granted”.

In terms of the extant guidelines, share-linked instruments are required to be fairly valued on the date of grant using the Black-Scholes model.

The RBI issued the clarification saying “it has been observed” that banks do not recognise grants of the share-linked compensation as an expense in their books of account concurrently.



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Ray Dalio bats for crypto’s relevance, admits to having “some” Bitcoin, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: Renowned billionaire hedge fund manager Ray Dalio today admitted to owning “some” Bitcoin as he stressed the argument that the cryptocurrency can act as the best store of value in an inflationary environment.

The sharp change in Dalio’s position will come as music to the ears of cryptocurrency investors who have been battered by an intense meltdown in the asset class over the past week. The value of Bitcoin alone has crashed over 50 per cent from its record high although the cryptocurrency staged some comeback on Monday as it rose as much as 15 per cent.

At 08:27 pm, Bitcoin was trading 10.7 per cent higher at $37,711 on cryptocurrency exchange WazirX.

“I have some Bitcoin,” Dalio said in an interview at CoinBase’s Consensus 2021 event.

Dalio said that in an inflationary scenario, he would rather have “Bitcoins than bonds” as he echoed the argument some institutional investors have made recently in the cryptocurrency’s favour, i.e., Bitcoin could replace gold as a better hedge against runaway inflation that may happen in the West in the coming years.

The owner of the largest hedge fund in the world Bridgewater Associates, which manages assets worth over $100 billion, has recently warmed up to Bitcoin after being against it as soon as November.

“It seems to me that Bitcoin has succeeded in crossing the line from being a highly speculative idea that could well not be around in the short order to probably being around and probably having some value in the future,” the hedge fund manager had said in January.

However, Dalio reiterated that the cryptocurrencies will face existential threat from regulators and central banks.



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