HSBC bets on digital growth in India as Citi, FirstRand wind up, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Amid Citibank and FirstRand Bank shutting down India operations, HSBC, one of the biggest foreign bank in India stays bullish.

The bank which posted $1 billion in profits in 12019 and 2020, has retained its growth forecasts for India despite the second wave of Covid.

While the bank rationalised its branch operations in India a few years earlier it grew business through digital channels. It sees a substantial part of its banking activities eventually moving towards digital, self-serve models.

HSBC’s number of customers has increased 37% since December 2017 to 10.5 lakh in December 2020. The bank’s pre-tax profits from India have been over $1 billion for 2019 and 2020.

Local linkage

HSBC has the advantage of having a strong presence in countries where the Indian diaspora is predominant. This includes the Middle East, Southeast Asia, Australia, Canada and the US. As a result, it has been able to target persons of Indian origin as well as Indians looking to invest in these markets or move there for studies.

It sees government measures like reduction in the corporate tax rate, production-linked incentives and the disinvestment plan pushing inward investment in India. Transaction banking, covering cash management, custody, trade and foreign exchange is the focus area for the bank. It also sees a tremendous opportunity for banks to partner with fintech in specific segments.

Despite the second wave, HSBC research has retained its growth forecast of 11.2% for FY22.

Focus on digitalisation

Recently the bank has partnered with Google Pay for tokenisation on its credit card portfolio.

The move is in line with the bank’s ongoing endeavour towards enhanced security and convenience for its card holders.

HSBC India on Thursday announced that it has collaborated with Google Pay (GPay) and VISA to enable secured tokenisation on its credit cards.

“This new feature will enable HSBC Credit Card customers to link their card to GPay and use it as a payment option to securely and digitally transact using their mobile phones – online and at merchant stores,” it said in a statement, adding that the feature is free but optional for its credit card users.

Recently, HSBC along with Tata Steel successfully execute a blockchain-enabled, paperless trade transaction – a global first for the steel industry. The live trade finance transaction involved the export of steel by Tata Steel, India to Universal Tube & Plastic Industries, UAE.

The end-to-end paperless trade transaction, executed over the Contour platform was made possible by a unique collaboration pivoted by Tata Steel across the spectrum over the Contour and essDOCS platforms. The Letter of Credit (LC) was issued by HSBC UAE for Universal Tube & Plastic Industries, UAE (importer) with HSBC India as the advising and negotiating bank for Tata Steel, India (exporter).



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The Future of Credit Cards; Will Virtual cards take over?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The credit card market is about to be disrupted and the tech companies are leading the charge.

Almost all FinTech startups these days are venturing into lending. They use non-conventional data points to extend lines of credit to people who otherwise wouldn’t have had access to them, thereby greatly expanding the pie to whom credit can be made available and grow fast.

Digital credit cards

Digital credit card or a virtual card is fundamentally different from the plastic credit card offered by banks as it doesn’t use Master-Visa Payment rails, but UPI, which has a larger acceptance for both P2P and P2M payments.

Digital credit cards can originate the customers at huge lower costs and with limits as small as Rs 15,000 – can potentially reach a market of 300-500 million Indian customers in addition to the global market.

Also, digital cards are more secure than plastic credit cards as there is no chance of physical card theft. There is no card data on the device and the mobile phone acts as an authentication device.

Even if the mobile phone is stolen the MPIN acts as a safety check while in the case of higher spending, the mobile camera is switched on for face recognition to authenticate payments.

A hacker with a cloned mobile number cannot use the credit card as the OTP and the device information is locked to the physical device.

Buy now, pay later

In the last couple of years, ‘Buy Now, Pay Later’ (BNPL) products are making a big entrance and gaining widespread popularity as an alternative payment method.

Applying for credit cards is a more lengthy process that can often take days, sometimes weeks, to get approved. Moreover, younger generations also often can’t get approved for a credit card because they don’t have a credit history in order to be eligible. Lastly, the BNPL customer user experience via intuitive apps is much better than most credit card interfaces.

The current credit cards cater only to 30 million salaried employees owing to legacy business models, underwriting methods, and expensive costs of operations. On the other hand, there are 900 million debit card users in India and over 450 million PAN card numbers with some credit history, which can be serviced through digital cards.

The business has too many costs, about Rs 4,000 per card issued needs to be paid to cold-callers, call centres need to be maintained, The companies have to deal with billing disputes and frauds, offer reward programmes to run, which makes small-ticket earnings unviable.

Will credit cards become a thing of the past?

It may be a long time for credit cards to vanish. First of all, credit cards do have the advantage of having a significantly higher card acceptance at merchants globally. A BNPL customer is currently unable to pay at places like Woolworths or Coles for their everyday grocery shopping, or secure a rental car overseas. Visa and Mastercard have created a truly global point of sales and online payment ecosystem and their cards are accepted by more than 40 million merchants globally. BNPL providers have contracts with merchants in place that are a fraction of those. In addition, cross border payments with BNPL are not a reality yet.

Also when BNPL customers pay their instalments, the transactions are done via payment rails of existing schemes (VISA, Mastercard) or via a bank account. This means the schemes are not completely taken out of a BNPL transaction.

Also, the payment and unsecured credit providers in the ecosystem will benefit from forming partnerships to leverage each other’s strengths.



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Will Ethereum steal the spotlight from Bitcoin?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The cryptocurrency market capitalization hit an all-time peak of $2 trillion on Monday, led by gains in Bitcoins, but other crypto assets are catching up fast.

Ethereum, the second-biggest cryptocurrency has gained nearly 190 percent, as against 100 per cent against for Bitcoin.

“We’re now really breaking higher and that will very likely attract buying activity. Ether is gaining in relative strength versus bitcoin,” said Julius de Kempenaer, senior analyst at StockCharts.com.

The digital token for the Ethereum network gained as much as 2.3% to $2,014.

The Ethereum promise

March has a major month for Ethereum, as it reached an all-time high at $46.1 billion in total value locked (TVL) in mid-March.

Visa embraced crypto settlement and chose Ethereum blockchain to conduct them on. Lastly, Ethereum continues to slowly implement changes that will eventually result in its transformation into Ethereum 2.0 — a better, faster, more scalable blockchain, with much cheaper transactions and greater functionalities.

”Momentum and interest have begun to expand beyond bitcoin and ethereum,” said Paolo Ardoino, chief technology officer at crypto exchange Bitfinex. “As the industry continues to mature, we expect more blockchain-based applications to be introduced to the world, and coinciding with that, a surge of interest around other alternative assets… as they become more market-ready,” he added.

Yearly performance

Ethereum has gained a whopping 1,272% during financial year 2020-21. From the $130 level, the digital asset has risen to over $1,828, as on March 31. On the other hand, bitcoin delivered a return of over 800%. From the $6,641 level on 1 April 2020, the price of the digital currency zoomed to an all-time high of $61,711.87 during the year.

Historically speaking, crypto industry often performs very well in April and May, so the next two months have an excellent chance of bringing great price performance.

Both Bitcoin and Ethereum have massively outperformed traditional asset classes, bolstered by the entry of mainstream companies and large investors into the cryptocurrency world, including Tesla Inc and BNY Mellon.

Bitcoin surge

Bitcoin remains strong as it hit its own milestone by holding at a USD 1 trillion market cap for one week. Bitcoin was last up 1.4 percent at USD 59,045. Since hitting a lifetime peak of more than USD 61,000 in mid-March, bitcoin has traded in a relatively narrow range.

Analysts said as long as bitcoin stays above $53,000, it will be able to maintain its $1 trillion market cap. Ethereum, the second-largest cryptocurrency in terms of market cap, was up 1.3 percent at $2,103. Its market cap was $ 244 billion on Monday. It hit a record high of $2,144.99 last Friday.

Blockchain data provider Glassnode, in a research report, said the fact that bitcoin has held the $1 trillion market cap for one week is a ”strong vote of confidence for bitcoin and the cryptocurrency asset class as a whole.”

It added that on-chain activity continues to reinforce bitcoin’s robust position, with a volume equivalent to over 10 percent of circulating supply transacting above the $1 trillion threshold.

Also on Monday, Grayscale Bitcoin Trust, a $35 billion publicly listed investment vehicle that holds bitcoin, said it remains committed to converting to an exchange-traded fund. In a blog post, Grayscale said the timing of its transition would depend on the regulatory environment.



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Make new arrangements for recurring credit, debit card transactions as new norms kick in from April 1

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Starting April 1, customers will have to make alternative arrangements for recurring transactions for utilities and bill payments such as registering the biller on internet or mobile banking.

This is because most banks and payment companies have been unable to meet RBI norms to process e-mandate on cards for recurring transactions.

However, UPI and Rupay AutoPay facilities are unlikely to be disrupted. Sources said that most banks are live on it but it is unclear as to how many merchants are live on it.

Most large banks and payment players have already been informing customers that they would have to make alternative arrangements for auto debit through debit and credit cards.

Apart from payments for utilities like phone and electricity bills, even recurring payments to service providers such as Amazon Prime and Netflix will have to be made directly.

According to bankers, while they have made arrangements to comply with RBI norms, many merchants are yet to adhere to them.

“We are currently building a solution in adherence to the regulatory requirements. Therefore, effective April 1, 2021 any standing instruction for recurring transactions on your Card account will not be approved by American Express,” American Express said in a communication to customers, adding that to avoid any disruption in delivery of goods and services, starting April 1, 2021 customers should make payments directly to the service providers for bills as and when they become due.

Visa declined to comment on the issue when approached by BusinessLine.

“..as per regulatory guidelines, recurring merchant transactions based on Standing Instructions on your ICICI Bank Cards will be disabled effective April 1, 2021. To continue making payments against your regular utility bills, kindly register your biller through iMobile Pay or Internet Banking. For other standing instruction transactions, you may re-register or initiate transactions at regular intervals,” ICICI Bank said in a similar message to customers.

Recently, the Internet And Mobile Association of India (IAMAI) had also warned that millions of e-mandates set up by customers could fail from April 1, 2021.

The RBI had issued two circulars (August 2019 and December 2021) to banks, ‘non-bank prepaid payment instrument issuers’, and ‘authorised card payment networks’ for processing of e-mandates. The deadline to comply with it is March 31, 2021.

Under the new norms, banks will be required to inform customers in advance about recurring payment due and it would be carried following nod from the customer. For recurring payments above ₹5,000, banks are required to send a one-time password to the customer as per the new guidelines.

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Visa moves to allow payment settlements using cryptocurrency

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Visa has said it will allow the use of the cryptocurrency USD Coin to settle transactions on its payment network, the latest sign of growing acceptance of digital currencies by the mainstream financial industry.

The company told Reuters it had launched the pilot programme with payment and crypto platform Crypto.com and plans to offer the option to more partners later this year.

Bitcoin, the most popular crypto coin, jumped to a one-week high on the news on Monday, rising as much as 4.5 per cent to $58,300 and heading back toward a record-high above $61,000 hit earlier this month.

Visa subsequently confirmed the news in a statement.

The USD Coin (USDC) is a stable coin cryptocurrency whose value is pegged directly to the US dollar.

Visa’s move comes as finance firms including BNY Mellon, BlackRock and Mastercard take steps to make more use of cryptocurrencies for investment and payment purposes.

Tesla boss Elon Musk, a major proponent of cryptocurrencies, said last week that customers can buy its electric vehicles with bitcoin, hoping to encourage more day-to-day use of the digital currency.

“We see increasing demand from consumers across the world to be able to access, hold and use digital currencies and we’re seeing demand from our clients to be able to build products that provide that access for consumers,” said Cuy Sheffield, head of crypto at Visa.

Traditionally, if a customer chooses to use a Crypto.com Visa card to pay for a coffee, the digital currency held in a cryptocurrency wallet needs to be converted into traditional money.

The cryptocurrency wallet will deposit traditional fiat currency in a bank account, to be wired to Visa at the end of the day to settle any transactions, adding cost and complexity for businesses.

Visa’s latest step, which will use the ethereum blockchain, strips out the need to convert digital coin into traditional money in order for the transaction to be settled.

Visa said it has partnered with digital asset bank Anchorage and completed the first transaction this month — with Crypto.com sending USDC to Visa’s Ethereum address at Anchorage.

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European banks plan ‘home grown’ rival to Visa and Mastercard by 2025, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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A pan-European payments network can be in place by 2025 to make the continent a “master of its own destiny” in a sector dominated by American duo Visa and Mastercard, the project’s top official said on Wednesday.

The European Payments Initiative (EPI) was launched last July and became an interim company in December with 22 banks as shareholders.

The banks have until December to commit to implementing over the following three years the new network for a physical payment card and digital counterpart.

European Union and European Central Bank policymakers have long wanted a “home grown” payments scheme which they could regulate directly and build “autonomy” in core financial services.

“We can bring choice to consumers but also to merchants in the future,” EPI Chief Executive Martina Weimert told an online event.

European consumers have traditionally preferred using cash but a trend towards digital and contactless payments has grown, fuelled by lockdowns to fight the coronavirus pandemic.

“This will give us and for the whole European economy more sovereignty, more independence, becoming masters of our own destiny here,” Weimert said.

Priority will be given to European players in building the new network, she added.

Deutsche Bank, UniCredit, BNP Paribas , ING, Societe Generale and Sabadell are among the 22 banks from seven EU countries, including France, Germany and Spain who are backing the venture, with another seven national markets in discussion over joining.

It would be normal for EPI to take time to build up trust among consumers, just as PayPal and Apple Pay did, she said.

“We think that we can nevertheless have a very nice market positioning at the European scale because of the size of the European market, and 50% of all transactions in the euro as still cash transactions,” Weimert said.

“I am not saying we want to have cash disappearing but at least reducing part of it.”



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