ECB inches closer to ‘digital euro’, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Frankfurt, July 14, 2021 -The European Central Bank is expected to take the next step towards a “digital euro” Wednesday by launching the project’s exploration phase, but questions remain about potential pitfalls and benefits for eurozone citizens.

The move comes as the coronavirus pandemic has hastened a shift away from cash, and as central bankers around the world nervously track the rise of private cryptocurrencies like bitcoin.

Here’s a look at what a digital euro would mean for the 19-nation club.

– What is a digital euro? – A digital euro, sometimes dubbed “e-euro”, would be an electronic version of euro notes and coins.

It would for the first time allow individuals (and companies) to have deposits directly with the ECB. This could be safer than with commercial banks, which could go bust, or than holding cash that could be stolen or lost.

The ECB has promised that any future digital euro would be “a fast, easy and secure way” to make payments. The service would be free and payments could be made by card or smartphone.

This would allow the Frankfurt-based institution to compete with foreign card companies such as Visa and Mastercard or digital payment services like PayPal, sectors where no strong European players have emerged.

A digital euro would “complement cash, not replace it”, the ECB has stressed.

The ECB is still studying which technology is best suited to develop the digital currency.

– Why now? – The Covid-19 pandemic has accelerated a decline in the use of cash as customers try to avoid contact.

The ECB is also wary of falling behind virtual money issued by private actors like bitcoin and Facebook’s yet-to-be-launched diem, formerly known as libra.

And there’s pressure to keep up with digital currency pilot projects launched by other central banks, before the ECB misses the boat and consumers end up putting their money elsewhere.

If people in the eurozone were to switch en masse to virtual currencies that operate outside the ECB’s reach it could hamper the effectiveness of its monetary policy measures.

– What are the risks? – Citizens might avoid traditional accounts in favour of going digital, weakening retail banks in the euro area.

The risk would be higher in times of crisis, when savers might be tempted to flee to the safety of a digital euro and trigger a run on banks.

To avoid this, the ECB will likely cap the number of e-euros people could hold in digital wallets, with executive board member Fabio Panetta suggesting a threshold of around 3,000 euros ($3,500).

Concerns about privacy and ensuring the digital euro can’t be used for money laundering will also be part of the ECB’s thinking as it weighs the pros and cons in the months ahead.

A key challenge that might emerge is that users “would have to be convinced to switch to a new payment method that is hardly different from existing ones”, said Deutsche Bank analyst Heike Mai.

– Who else is doing it? – Privately issued digital currencies have been around for years and tend to be highly volatile. They are also under growing scrutiny from regulators.

Bitcoin hit a record high of nearly $65,000 in April but has since plummeted by around 50 percent, largely because of a Chinese crackdown on cryptocurrency trading.

So-called stablecoins are seen as less volatile because they are pegged to traditional currencies like the US dollar or the euro. This is the route Facebook has chosen for its highly anticipated diem project.

Many central banks are looking into offering their own virtual money — known as Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) — as a stable and risk-free alternative.

The Chinese central bank has started trials with a digital renminbi, while the Bank of England has created a task force to research a possible “britcoin”.

The US Federal Reserve and the Bank of Japan are also exploring CBDCs.

– When can I spend mine? – Having completed the preliminary research and a public consultation, the ECB is expected to move to a formal investigation phase focused on the design of a digital euro next, set to take around two years.

Panetta told the Financial Times that if the project is then given the go-ahead, it would take another three years to get the digital currency ready for use — meaning the rollout is not expected before 2026.



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Visa says spending on crypto-linked cards topped $1 bn in first half this year, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Visa Inc said on Wednesday its customers spent more than $1 billion on its crypto-linked cards in the first half of this year, as the payments processor takes steps to make crypto transactions smoother.

The company said it was partnering with 50 cryptocurrency platforms to make it easier for customers to convert and spend digital currencies at 70 million merchants worldwide.

The move is in line with Visa‘s broader acceptance of digital currencies. In March, the company announced it will allow the use of the USD Coin to settle transactions on its payment network.

Investor sentiment on cryptocurrencies has somewhat soured recently, with regulatory crackdowns in China and elsewhere. Bitcoin, the world’s biggest cryptocurrency, has seen a punishing slide following the euphoria earlier this year which took it to record highs.

However, a clutch of high profile names are continuing to strengthen their involvement with the digital assets. Last week, Japan’s investment giant SoftBank Group Corp invested $200 million in Mercado Bitcoin, one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges in Latin America.

Wells Fargo & Co said in May it would onboard an actively managed cryptocurrency strategy for its wealthy clients, while Goldman Sachs Group Inc launched a crypto trading team the same month.



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Amazon Pay ICICI Bank credit card surpasses two million customers, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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ICICI Bank and Amazon Pay have announced that the Bank has crossed the milestone of issuing two million ‘Amazon Pay ICICI Bankcredit cards. In the process. Having been introduced in 2018, the card has emerged as the fastest co-branded credit card to cross this milestone in the country.

The card also holds the record of being the fastest co-branded credit card in India to cross the milestone of one million issuances in October last year. Thereafter, the card has onboarded another one million customers in the last nine months, with over 80% of new customers availing the card completely digitally, without any physical interaction.

Any registered customer of Amazon.in, including those who are not customers of ICICI Bank, can apply for the card digitally, from anywhere in the country. This is among the first credit cards in India which introduced ‘Video KYC’ for customers in June 2020.

“The Amazon Pay ICICI Bank credit card has received an exciting response from customers across the country. The best-in-industry rewards, seamless access to credit and the easy onboarding process are the key contributors of this excitement.” said Sudipta Roy, Head – Unsecured Assets, ICICI Bank.

“At Amazon Pay, we are transforming the way customers make digital payments. The Amazon Pay ICICI Bank credit card is one of the most rewarding, convenient and trusted payment experiences in the country. Over 2 million customers have shown their trust in us and how they value the experience.” said Vikas Bansal, Director – Amazon Pay India.

The reward earnings are credited monthly, after the billing cycle date of the card to the customer’s Amazon Pay balance. They can redeem these earnings to purchase from more than 16 crore items available on Amazon.in across. The reward earnings can also be used with Amazon Pay partner merchants for transactions like flight tickets, booking hotels, food delivery, movie tickets and much more.

“We’re delighted that the Amazon Pay ICICI Bank credit card powered by Visa has crossed two million cards, with the last one million cards issued in less than a year, despite the ongoing pandemic. This reinforces the belief that consumers prefer cards that give them great rewards and ease of payment.” said Shailesh Paul, Head of Merchant Sales & Acquiring and CyberSource, India and South Asia, Visa.



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Neo bank funding more than halves in pandemic even as FinTechs race ahead, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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It’s time to slow down a bit for neo banks which have seen phenomenal growth in the last few years.

Funding activity to the sector has dropped around two-thirds in 2020 over the sharp jump in 2019.

Total funding to the sector stood at $32.2 million over seven deals against $109.4 million raised through 13 deals in 2019, according to a report. In 2018, $31.9 million was raised across nine deals.

This year, there have been seven deals so far raising $22.2 million.

Around 16 new neo banks or digital banks were launched in 2019, 10 in 2020.

The Open deal

However, several large deals are in the pipeline. Amazon, Google and card network major Visa are separately eyeing a stake in neo-banking startup Open, which is looking to raise a new round of funding of about $100-$120 million, two people aware of the matter said. If successful, Open’s valuation is likely to jump three times to around $600-700 million post the funding round. Even as negotiations with the global technology majors like Amazon and Google are underway, Open is also in talks with a leading sovereign wealth fund as well as private equity firm TPG as they look to participate in the funding round that could be oversubscribed.

What is a neo bank?

Neo banks are 100% digital in nature. They operate entirely online without any physical branch. Neo Banks offer multiple financial services from money transfer to opening a bank account. Neo banks partner with the traditional banks and help them acquire customers in the most seamless manner.

ICICI Bank, India’s largest private bank has taken a lead in the Neo Banks segment and has partnered with three Neo Banks, Open, Instant Pay and Yelo.

Neo banks in India

In India lack of regulations have somewhat hindered the growth of this sector as banking regulator RBI does not recognise these companies as a separate class of banking intermediaries yet. Hence, neo-banks in India are loosely defined and don’t follow any standard regulatory code. Rather, the regulations follow the nature of partnerships they form with licensed lenders. However, a fully functional neo-bank may need approvals to be a business correspondent, a payment aggregator and require a formal agreement with a regulated bank detailing ethical lending practices.



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Index publisher MSCI looking at launch of crypto indexes, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Global securities index publisher MSCI is looking at launching indexes for cryptocurrency assets, according to Chief Executive Henry Fernandez, in what would be another step towards mainstream acceptance for digital currencies and the companies trading in them.

Fernandez, speaking at a Clubhouse event organized by venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz earlier this week, said MSCI has been talking to experts and is aiming to launch crypto indexes.

He gave no details on what assets any index would focus on nor any timeline for their introduction and MSCI later declined a Reuters request to elaborate on his comments.

Companies including Bank of New York Mellon Corp, Mastercard, Visa and Goldman Sachs have taken small steps towards supporting cryptocurrencies but they are still little used in day-to-day life.

In May, the S&P Dow Jones Indices unveiled new cryptocurrency indexes, bringing bitcoin and ethereum to the trading floors of Wall Street. The new indexes, S&P Bitcoin Index, S&P Ethereum Index and S&P Crypto Mega Cap Index, will measure the performance of digital assets tied to them.

Crypto exchange Coinbase Global, of which Andreessen Horowitz is the biggest shareholder, also successfully listed on the tech-heavy NASDAQ in April, as bitcoin hit a record peak.

MSCI has been looking to expand its offerings, with Fernandez saying on Clubhouse the areas of private credit and environmental, social and governance (ESG) held opportunities for the company.

In April, the company launched 20 thematic indexes to help investors bet on “megatrends” in China that are aligned with the Chinese government’s policy goals.

The company publishes popular indexes for global equities and other securities, used by asset managers and investors to guide the allocation of $14.5 trillion in assets globally as of the end of 2020.

Inclusion in its indexes tends to open the door to more funds investing in the asset in question.



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Google Pay launches cards tokenisation with SBI, other banks in collaboration with Visa, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Google Pay on Wednesday said it has expanded its network of bank partners offering cards tokenisation on the Google Pay app and added lenders including SBI, IndusInd Bank, Federal Bank, and HSBC India. “After successfully rolling out tokenisation with Kotak Mahindra Bank, SBI Cards, and Axis Bank, Google Pay has now added debit cards by SBI, IndusInd Bank, and Federal Bank and credit cards by IndusInd Bank and HSBC India to its slate,” a statement said.

Tokenisation is a feature that enables users to make debit or credit card payments through a secure digital token attached to their phone without having to physically share their credit or debit card details.

The feature also works with online merchants, delivering more native and seamless OTP experiences without redirecting users to 3D Secure sites.

Google Pay said with tokenisation, it will enable safe and secure omnichannel experiences to help consumers use near-field communication (NFC) capable devices/phones to make contactless payments at over 2.5 million visa merchant locations, scan and pay at more than 1.5 million Bharat QR-enabled merchants, and pay bills and recharges from within their Google Pay app using their credit card.

“We’re committed to offering the most secure payments experience to our growing base of users, and tokenisation helps to replace sensitive data such as credit and debit card numbers with tokens, eliminating any chances of fraud. We are hopeful that the tokenisation feature will further encourage users to transact securely and safely in the current times and expand merchant transactions both online and offline,” Sajith Sivanandan, Business Head at Google Pay and NBU – APAC, said.

He added that the addition of SBI and Federal debit cards, IndusInd Bank debit and credit cards, and HSBC credit cards helps extend this offering to millions of card users on the Visa network.

“We are working closely with other banking partners to further expand the adoption of card-based payments with tokenisation in India,” he said.

Visa India and South Asia Group Country Manager TR Ramachandran said with tokenised, contactless forms of payment, millions of mobile first users will be able to use their credit and debit cards on Google Pay, bolstering confidence in a large segment that is new to digital.

Visa has already issued over two billion token credentials globally and with Google Pay live in India, these numbers are expected to grow significantly, he added.



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Google Pay expands cards tokenisation with SBI, IndusInd, HSBC and Federal Bank

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Digital payments platform Google Pay has announced further expansion in the footprint of bank partners offering cards tokenisation on the Google Pay app.

Tokenisation is a feature that enables users to make debit or credit card payments through a secure digital token attached to their phone without having to physically share their credit or debit card details.

The platform had earlier rolled out tokenisation with Kotak Mahindra Bank, SBI Cards and Axis Bank. It has now added debit cards by SBI, IndusInd Bank and Federal Bank and Credit cards by IndusInd Bank and HSBC India to its slate.

Also read: Google Pay users in US can transfer money to India, Singapore

The feature also works with online merchants. With tokenisation, Google Pay users can use Near-field communication (NFC) capable devices/phones to make contactless payments at over 2.5 million Visa merchant locations. They can scan and pay at more than 1.5 million Bharat QR enabled merchants as well as pay bills and recharges from within their Google Pay app using their credit card, Google said.

Sajith Sivanandan, Business Head- Google Pay and NBU – APAC said, “We are committed to offer the most secure payments experience to our growing base of users, and tokenisation helps to replace sensitive data such as credit and debit card numbers with tokens, eliminating any chances of fraud.”

Further expansion

“We are hopeful that the tokenisation feature will further encourage users to transact securely and safely in the current times and expand merchant transactions both online and offline. The addition of SBI and Federal debit cards, IndusInd Bank debit and credit cards and HSBC credit cards helps extend this offering to millions of card users on the Visa network. We are working closely with other banking partners to further expand the adoption of card-based payments with tokenisation in India,” added Sivanandan.

In order to enable the tap and pay feature using the smartphone phone, users will have to do a one-time set up by entering their card details and follow it by entering the OTP they get from the bank to add their card to the Google Pay app.

Once the registration is done, users can use the feature to make payments at NFC-enabled terminals. Cards can also be used to make purchases at large online merchants such as Myntra, Yatra, Dunzo and others.

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Wall Street asks if Bitcoin can ever replace fiat currencies, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Sydney Maki and Vildana Hajric

El Salvador’s bold move to accept Bitcoin as legal tender has Wall Street once again wondering whether a cryptocurrency could really ever replace the old-school dollar.

It’s a question that appeared, at least to some, to already be nearly answered after a handful of trailblazing companies — including Tesla Inc., MicroStrategy Inc. and Square Inc. — incorporated Bitcoin into their balance sheets without igniting a broader corporate revolution. Now, the focus is turning to governments.

El Salvador, which started using the U.S. dollar as its currency more than 20 years ago, last week became the first country in the world to pass legislation allowing use of Bitcoin in any transaction. President Nayib Bukele says the point is to counter the fact that relatively few citizens have bank accounts and to cut the cost of sending remittances, or money that workers ship back to their families in El Salvador from other countries.

Some observers wonder whether a bigger movement is afoot: replacing a conventional currency — the dollar, the titan of global commerce and finance — on a national scale and then beyond.

The answer, at least for Julian Sawyer, chief executive officer of Bitstamp, one of the world’s longest-running crypto exchanges, is not quite yet.

“There’s been a lot of people who have sat in the crypto world who’ve said, ‘Oh, crypto is going to take over the world and traditional banks and central banks will go away,’” he said in a telephone interview from London. “That’s not going to happen.”

While the technology itself may be used increasingly in the behind-the-scenes plumbing of financial services, such as money being sent across borders, Sawyer said Bitcoin is still too volatile to fully replace the dollar, though it may become part of the mix.

“Will there still be the dollar? Yes,” he said. “Will there still be Visa and Mastercard? Absolutely. It will just be we’ll have alternatives for using plastic, or paper, or coins or checks.”

El Salvador’s central bank president also said on state television that Bitcoin would not replace the greenback in the nation.

The dollar is stable, especially when compared with Bitcoin’s explosive price moves. And whereas the dollar usually fluctuates for mundane reasons, crypto can be swayed by tweets, memes and Elon Musk — not a great fit for a national or global currency. Bitcoin quadrupled last year, while the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index slipped 5.5% — a fairly big number for the greenback. Since mid-April, Bitcoin has lost nearly half of its value.

Bank of America Corp. research shows Bitcoin is about four times as volatile as the Brazilian real and Turkish lira — and neither of those is anyone’s model of stability.

“Bitcoin injects extra volatility,” which is counterproductive for countries looking for stability, said Marc Chandler, chief market strategist at Bannockburn Global Forex. “Why do countries peg their currency to another currency or have a currency board or have a dollarized economy? It’s because their currency has become too volatile or lost credence in the market and become out of control, very inflationary.”

Test Case
That doesn’t mean other countries won’t look to El Salvador as a test case for what can happen, especially those that benefit from remittance flows or have central banks already researching or piloting cryptocurrencies of their own.

“Countries can’t just look away from this option now,” said Valkyrie Investments CEO Leah Wald, who previously worked for the World Bank. “For the longevity and health and well-being of Bitcoin, and the Bitcoin network, this is the dawn of a new day.”

Nations from Haiti to Guatemala, South Sudan and Liberia could be next to adopt Bitcoin given their dependence on remittance inflows, high poverty and low financial inclusion, according to Rahul Shah, Tellimer Ltd.’s head of financials equity research.

Other dollarized economies — those, like El Salvador, that are based on the greenback — are also candidates to officially adopt Bitcoin and become less dependent on the Federal Reserve and U.S. policies.

“It potentially gives the ability to not be as beholden to the dollar over the long term, and be more independent of the existing financial system,” said Brad Bechtel, global head of currencies at Jefferies. “Once you see one country go that way, it wouldn’t surprise me to see more.”

Ecuador, which has been dollarized for two decades, could also consider Bitcoin, said Emily Weis, a global macro strategist at State Street Corp. Colombia and Mexico, meanwhile, would risk disrupting their local currencies, even if they have large remittances and crypto interest among the local populations, she said.

“Many EM populations already have an affinity for cryptocurrencies given capital controls, fragile local market dynamics, and volatility of local currencies,” Weis said.

There’s also the related business opportunities: El Salvador’s Bukele, for example, is using the new law as a way to stoke interest in mining Bitcoin in the coastal country. He ordered the president of the state-owned geothermal electric company to make plans to offer greener mining facilities.

“All it takes is one small domino and eventually it can create real change,” said Alex Tapscott of Ninepoint Partners LP, which has a Bitcoin ETF in Canada.



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European banks ready payments system to rival Visa, Mastercard, BigTech, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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A few large European lenders have teamed up to create a new European payment system, to compete with the US and Chinese systems and protect sovereignty in an important area of consequence.

The European Payments Initiative (EPI), previously known as the Pan-European Payments System Initiative (PEPSI), is a European Central Bank-backed payment-integration initiative aiming to create a pan-European payment system and interbank network to rival Mastercard and Visa, and eventually replace national European payment schemes such as France’s Carte Bancaire and Germany’s Girocard.

It is supported by the European Commission, and currently comprises 30 major European banks (including all the major French banks, Deutsche Bank and Commerzbank in Germany, Santander Bank in Spain and Intesa Sanpaolo and UniCredit in Italy.

It is tasked with creating a pan-European payments service that can be used to pay online as well as in stores, to settle bills between individual consumers and to withdraw cash at ATMs.

The rationale

EPI is born out of the need to protect the sovereignty and break a US-dominated “oligopoly” on payments.

In July 2020, a group of 16 major European banks from five euro countries announced the launch of the EPI with the aim to create a unified payment solution for consumers and merchants across Europe.

The realisation that a US president on any given day could decree Mastercard or Visa should no longer do business with a certain part of the population has prompted the initiative.

Europe’s banks are considering their own interests, aware that if they do not act now they could be challenged by tech companies such as Apple and Google, which are increasingly preying on their turf.

Today, four in five transactions in Europe are handled by Mastercard and Visa, according to EuroCommerce, a lobby group of European retailers.

While on the other side of the table, the banks and acquirers driving EPI process more than half of all EU payments.

The critical mass of business brought by banks such as Deutsche, BNP Paribas, ING, UniCredit and Santander give the EPI weight. The Brussels-based entity has until September to draw up a blueprint. If the banks behind EPI then give the green light, the first real-world applications could be launched in early 2022.

The hurdles

For a system to work, merchants should be ready to accept payments and users ready to make payments. . Having both in place at the same time is not an easy task, particularly since the full rollout could take years, and a bad start could kill EPI’s chances of success.

EPI’s backers have forked out €30 million to fund the initial development of a blueprint, but short of the “billions of euros” that are necessary. . One way to defray the costs could be to tap EU funds.



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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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