PAT surges 355% YoY to Rs 207 cr, highest in 10 quarters, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: YES Bank today reported a 355.2 per cent year-on-year rise in its net profit to Rs 207 crore for the quarter ended June, the highest quarterly profit since December 2018. Analysts had expected the lender to report a net loss.

The strong bottomline performance of the lender was aided by a 41 per cent on-year fall in provisions during the reported quarter.

The lender’s net interest income in the quarter slumped 26.5 per cent year-on-year to Rs 1,402 crore, which was below Street’s expectations.

YES Bank’s gross non-performing loans ratio rose to 15.6 per cent in the June quarter from 15.41 per cent in the previous quarter. However, net NPA ratio declined sequentially to 5.78 per cent. YES Bank’s provision coverage ratio also saw a sequential improvement to 79.3 per cent in the quarter.

Gross non-performing loans in the quarter stood at Rs 28,506 crore, which was slightly lower than the previous quarter. Cash recoveries continued to show positive momentum at Rs 602 crore in the quarter.

While the overall advances fell 1 per cent in the June quarter, the lender reported 23 per cent growth in its retail and small businesses loan book that was above its full-year guidance of 20 per cent. The current account-savings account ratio improved to 27.4 per cent and remained on-track to meet the lender’s guidance of more than 30 per cent in 2021-22.

YES Bank’s operating performance in the quarter was disappointing as operating profit sank 20 per cent on-year to Rs 920 crore, which was the highest in several quarters. The net interest margin in the quarter was at 2.1 per cent as against 3 per cent in the year-ago quarter.

Shares of YES Bank ended 0.8 per cent higher at Rs 13.1 on the National Stock Exchange.



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Yes Bank June quarter net jumps 360% on lower provisions, higher other income

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Provisioning declined 41% year on year (YoY) and 88% sequentially to Rs 644 crore. The net interest income (NII) fell 26% YoY to Rs 1,908 crore, but rose 42% sequentially.

Yes Bank on Friday reported a 360% year-on-year jump in its net profit to Rs 207 crore for the June quarter, on the back of lower provisions and higher other income. This is the the lender’s highest profit since December 2018.

Provisioning declined 41% year on year (YoY) and 88% sequentially to Rs 644 crore. The net interest income (NII) fell 26% YoY to Rs 1,908 crore, but rose 42% sequentially.

However, other income increased 70% YoY and 29% quarter on quarter to Rs 1,056 crore. The other income included retail banking fees of Rs 342 crore and recovery from written-off accounts worth Rs 249 crore.

On the second wave of Covid-19, the lender said extent to which the pandemic would continue to impact the bank’s results would depend on ongoing as well as future developments, which are highly uncertain. Highlighting the impact of Covid-19, Prashant Kumar, managing director and chief executive officer, said, “The new business generation continued for the quarter with retail disbursements of Rs 5,006 crore, SME disbursements of Rs 3,242 crore and wholesale banking disbursements of Rs 3,625 crore.”

The bank’s net interest margin (NIM) declined 90 basis points (bps) YoY to 2,1%, compared to 3% in the same quarter last year. However, NIMs improved 50 bps sequentially.

The asset quality remained a mixed bag during the June quarter. Gross non-performing assets (NPAs) ratio increased 19 basis points (bps) to 15.6%, compared to gross NPAs of 15.41% in the previous quarter. However, net NPAs ratio improved 10 bps to 5.78% from 5.88% in the March quarter.

“The corporate recoveries and resolutions during the quarter at Rs 1,643 crore outpaced the slippages of Rs 1,258 crore,” Kumar said. The bank aims to make cash recoveries of Rs 5,000 crore during the financial year (FY22).

Total advances remained flat YoY to Rs 1.63 lakh crore. The lender mentioned that retail advances have crossed Rs 50,000-crore mark during the quarter. Total deposits grew 39% YoY to Rs 1.64 lakh crore. Current account/savings account (CASA) deposits grew 48% YoY to Rs 44,790 crore.

CASA ratio improved to 27.4%, compared to 25.8% in Q1FY21. The lender aims to reach CASA ratio of 30% by the end of FY22. The bank’s capital adequacy ratio (CAR) as per Basel III guidelines was at 17.9% as on June 30, 2021.

On the impact of RBI’s direction on Mastercard, the lender said it is tying up with Rupay and Visa for issuing new cards. “We have already signed up with Rupay and tie-up with Visa will be done in a week or so,” Kumar said. The banking regulator had barred Mastercard from adding new customers after it found that the company was non-compliant of RBI’s storage norms.

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Federal Bank, Yes Bank in talks with Visa and RuPay for onboarding new credit card users

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With the Reserve Bank of India barring Mastercard from onboarding new users, Federal Bank and Yes Bank are in discussions with Visa and RuPay to restart issuances of credit cards over the next two to three months.

Both the private sector lenders had exclusive tie-ups with Mastercard. They have stopped onboarding of new credit card customers following the embargo by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Mastercard from acquiring new customers.

Shalini Warrier, Executive Director at Federal Bank said the lender is likely to restart issuance of credit cards within two months.

“There are two other franchises – Visa and RuPay. We have started the process with both of them and we will be back in action within the next two months. We will continue with existing to bank customers and at some point move to new to bank customers,” she said.

The bank had launched credit cards for existing to bank customers in a digital format in June this year and had onboarded 20,000 cards to date.

Yes Bank’s credit card ambitions

Yes Bank Managing Director and CEO Prashant Kumar also said the process to onboard RuPay and Visa for initiating issuance has started.

“The bank has already signed an agreement with RuPay and will sign an agreement with Visa within next week,” he said, adding that they expect issuance to restart in 90 to 120 days.

Yes Bank in recent months has been fairly ambitious in its credit card business. Kumar said over the next three months, the bank would not be in a position to issue 75,000 to 1 lakh cards

“There will be no impact due to the bar on Mastercard on existing 9,87,000 credit cards in force. It will not impact profitability of the bank in the short term and we will make up on the lost acquisition momentum in the current fiscal year,” he said, adding that the news of the embargo on Mastercard came as a surprise to the bank.

Earlier, RBL Bank, which too had an exclusive tie up with Mastercard, entered into an agreement with Visa on July 14 to issue credit cards enabled on the Visa payment network.

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Yes Bank reports 355% rise in Q1FY22 net profit

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Private sector lender Yes Bank is back in the black with a 355 per cent jump in its net profit to ₹206.84 crore in the quarter-ended June 30, 2021 compared to the same period last year.

The bank had reported a net loss of ₹3,787.75 crore in the quarter-ended March 31, 2021 and a net profit of ₹45.44 crore in the first quarter of last fiscal.

“This is the highest profit since December 2018,” Yes Bank said in a statement on Friday.

However, the lender’s total net income fell 2.8 per cent to ₹2,459 crore for the first quarter of this fiscal from ₹2,529 crore a year ago.

NII and NPAs

Net interest income declined by 26.5 per cent to ₹1,402 crore in the first quarter of the fiscal from ₹1,908 crore in the corresponding period last fiscal.

Net interest margin was down at 2.1 per cent on June 30, 2021 compared to 3 per cent a year ago.

Non interest income, however, shot up by 70.3 per cent on a year on year basis to ₹1,056 crore in the April to June 2021 quarter.

Provisions fell by 40.7 per cent to ₹644 crore in the first quarter of the fiscal from ₹1,087 crore a year ago.

Prashant Kumar, Managing Director and CEO, Yes Bank said going forward the requirement of provisions will further come down.

Gross non-performing assets were ₹28,505.95 crore or 15.6 per cent of gross advances as on June 30, 2021 from 17.3 per cent a year ago. However, net NPAs rose to 5.78 per cent of net advances from 4.96 per cent as on June 30, 2020.

The bank’s total gross restructured loans across all categories, including Covid-related one, amounted to ₹4,976 crore for the first quarter this fiscal. Of this, Covid-related restructuring stood at ₹3,300 crore. The lender said it does not expect too many further requests for restructuring.

Net advances fell 0.5 per cent on a year on year basis to ₹1,63,654 crore as on June 30, 2021 while total deposits grew 39.1 per cent to ₹1,63,295 crore.

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YES Bank Q1 net profit jumps over two-fold to ₹206.84 cr

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Private sector lender Yes Bank is back in the black with a 355 per cent jump in its net profit to ₹206.84 crore in the quarter ended June 30, 2021.

The bank had reported a net loss of ₹3,787.75 crore in the quarter ended March 31, 2021 and a net profit of ₹45.44 crore in the first quarter of last fiscal.

YES Bank receives board approval to raise ₹10,000 crore through debt securities

However, the lender’s total net income fell 2.8 per cent to ₹2,459 crore for the first quarter of this fiscal from ₹2,529 crore a year ago.

Net interest income declined by 26.5 per cent to ₹1,402 crore in the first quarter of the fiscal from ₹1,908 crore in the corresponding period last fiscal.

Net interest margin was down at 2.1 per cent on June 30, 2021 compared to 3 per cent a year ago.

Non-interest income, however, shot up by 70.3 per cent on a year-on-year basis to ₹1,056 crore in the April to June 2021 quarter.

Provisions fell by 40.7 per cent to ₹644 crore in the first quarter of the fiscal from ₹1,087 crore a year ago.

Gross non-performing assets eased to 15.6 per cent of gross advances as on June 30, 2021 from 17.3 per cent a year ago. However net NPAs rose to 5.78 per cent of net advances from 4.96 per cent as of June 30, 2020.

YES Bank implements TransUnion’s onboarding solution

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RBI’s ban on Mastercard likely to create monopoly in India’s credit card market, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) ban on Mastercard is likely to create a near monopoly in India’s credit card market, with the US-based card network Visa likely cornering a significant chunk of the new business that earlier went to its global rival.

While homegrown platforms are expected to gain modestly, Visa’s superior reward offerings to merchants and the government’s zero Merchant Discount Rate (MDR) rule on National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) is likely to put Visa in an advantageous position.

Private lender HDFC Bank, which is currently facing its own ban on onboarding new card customers, already has plans to roll out debit cards under Visa and RuPay.

Mastercard is a significant franchise partner for the bank, but the good part is like in most of our businesses, we patronise on open architecture,” said Sashidhar Jagdishan, MD, HDFC Bank. “Whether it’s for cards, insurance, mutual funds, we distribute a lot of company products. Even in cards, we have a lot of franchisees – Visa, Mastercard or Rupay. So, until the ban on Mastercard is lifted and when our ban is lifted, the new cards could be on either of the platforms.”

According to a source, several leading co-branded partnerships such as those of Flipkart and Axis Bank and Indigo and Kotak Mahindra Bank were on Mastercard as well. These contracts are now expected to go to Visa.

Another area where Visa can prosper is the up and coming commercial credit card space where Mastercard and Visa currently have cornered the entire market. “These are typically cards issued for corporate purchases and spending on these cards go up to Rs 500 crore a month for large sized companies,” said a payments executive. “RuPay doesn’t have any exposure in this space; therefore, almost all new contracts on this piece are expected to be landed by Visa.”

Visa is also likely to have an upper hand in getting new debit card issuance contracts as well. The central government’s zero MDR rule on RuPay debit cards means that private sector banks that were tying up with Mastercard will almost exclusively move to Visa.

“Banks cannot make money through RuPay debit transactions. Unless there is a mandate as with public sector banks, most others won’t be compelled to shift their card issuance network to RuPay as it won’t make them any money. This puts Visa in a seriously advantageous position in the Indian market,” said an industry official.

On the debit card, most leading banks have multiple tie-ups with all three major card networks and internally switching the issuance infrastructure would not be a major challenge. However, for certain banks such as RBL Bank and Yes Bank which had exclusive tie up with Mastercard, RBI’s new diktat could affect their plans.

RBI doesn’t disclose the share of Mastercard and Visa in the overall payments system. Most banks have both Mastercard and Visa and in some cases RuPay as their payment platform for cards.

“We have already taken note of the situation and will soon be moving to the Visa platform for most of our debit and credit card requirements,” said another private lender that had co-branded with Mastercard. “But we believe that the onboarding to a new platform could take about two months.”



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Inside BharatPe-Centrum proposed JV to acquire troubled PMC Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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BharatPe’s proposed joint venture with non-banking financial company Centrum Finance to set up a Small Finance Bank (SFB) that will acquire troubled Punjab and Maharashtra Co-operative (PMC) Bank is a landmark event for fintech players harbouring banking ambitions.

The deal, however, has not been easy to stitch up.

The story of how a startup has within three years partnered a 44-year-old NBFC led by veteran banker Jaspal Bindra to acquire a banking licence has more to it than meets the eye.

The idea behind this SFB is anything but conventional – considering BharatPe’s leadership dynamics to the Reserve Bank of India’s approach towards reviving a dying bank.

“As far as resolution plans go (for PMC Bank), this is a highly unusual one,” a senior banker at a private sector lender said. “While there is no set resolution framework to revive a dying bank, it is definitely a measure RBI has taken out of desperation rather than choice.”

Over the last two weeks, ET spoke to more than a dozen sources to make sense of the Centrum-BharatPe SFB.

We asked them what the central bank’s thinking was, how soon PMC Bank’s depositors could access their hard-earned deposits and what were the conditions that RBI had conveyed to stakeholders in private before giving approval to set up the SFB.

Special Exemption
The alleged Rs 6,500-crore fraud at PMC Bank is one where several regulatory and audit checks had been given the go-by over the last two decades.

The bank’s board had for many years allegedly concealed loan defaults by real estate firm Housing Development and Infrastructure Ltd (HDIL) of the Wadhawan Group.

Ultimately, the RBI had to step in to freeze depositors’ accounts last year. In light of this, the resolution plan has to be completed at the earliest since retail depositors’ withdrawal limits have been capped at Rs 50,000.

Even as the Centrum-BharatPe bid received its nod, the banking regulator has been at the forefront of drafting the resolution plan, which includes repaying depositors’ principal along with interest.

“The sense is that while a significant portion, or 45% of deposits less than Rs 5 lakh, will be returned as soon as the Deposit Insurance Scheme kicks in, the rest – amounting to deposits of nearly Rs 5,000 crore – will be converted into a low-yielding debt instrument, likely a 10-year bond,” a source privy to the plan told ET.

RBI has yet to finalise these though.

Ashneer Grover, the cofounder of BharatPe, said operationalisation of the SFB was still “3-4 months away.”

There are other deal riders not yet in the public domain.

These include the future structuring and listing propositions for the SFB, sources close to the company said.

The as-yet unnamed SFB will be a 50-50% partnership between BharatPe’s parent Resilient Innovations and Centrum Finance.

A typical NBFC converted to an SFB is given three years’ time after achieving a net worth of Rs 500 crore before its mandatory Initial Public Offering (IPO). The proposed JV has been provided a special exemption to go in for an IPO in six years.

Second, Centrum and BharatPe must also reduce their combined shareholding to less than 50% from the current 100%.

RBI has sought that the process be completed in eight years.

While Centrum can hold 40% stake, Resilient Innovations has been told to cut its stake to a maximum of 10%.

This effectively means that BharatPe will lose majority ownership of the banking venture by 2030.

The SFB will also not be allowed to offer housing loans or microcredit until Centrum Group is able to hive off its own housing finance and microfinance arms.

Both the owners had agreed to these conditions before RBI gave the in-principle approval.

A merchant-focussed bank
According to sources, the bank will be positioned as “India’s first merchant-focused bank.”“BharatPe is planning on building a lot of its offerings around merchant-focused credit and savings products,” a person directly aware of the matter said.

According to sources, the SFB is likely to offer loans to small and medium enterprises as well as unsecured retail loans lower than Rs 50,000.

BharatPe is likely to take the lead in acquiring merchants and providing technology support to the banking entity, while Centrum will handle financials and compliances.

BharatPe will not transfer its existing merchant base of around six million small vendors to the new SFB as most are with its existing banking partners, ICICI Bank and Yes Bank. These merchants could, however, be a base for cross selling its loan products.

The firm is also expected to retain its autonomous identity as a payment-focused fintech.

The SFB could also leverage BharatPe’s digital payment capabilities while building out new products, just like the operational structure currently followed by fintech unicorn Paytm and its Payments Bank entity.

“We will continue to operate as an independent entity,” Grover told ET. “For its payments business, BharatPe works with multiple banks (ICICI, Yes Bank) and will continue to do so. There are no plans to transition the existing base to the new SFB. We will work with the new SFB in areas where it adds value to our existing and to-be-acquired merchant base.”

Centrum Finance did not respond to ET’s queries.

The promoters of Centrum and BharatPe are expected to commit Rs 1,800 crore to the SFB, of which Rs 900 crore will be infused in the first year, Grover said. The remaining will be infused “when needed,” he added.

Next leg of growth?
Centrum Finance’s Bindra, a veteran banker and formerly head of Standard Chartered’s Asia unit, has reportedly been influential in getting RBI’s approval in the JV’s favour.

The banking foray by BharatPe – which has been working with Centrum Finance for the last three years – is expected to boost its next leg of growth for several reasons.

While there is an obvious opportunity to increase margins on loans through lowered cost of acquiring funds, there could be a greater purpose, sources said.

Payments companies no longer command the same valuation premiums as they did a few years back.

Competition from players such as Walmart, Google and Amazon mean that a company looking to build a profitable payment business will need to compete effectively with these tech giants – an endeavour where Paytm has also failed.

The differentiator is, therefore, in having a banking licence, which is not easy to get for companies outside India’s legacy banking ecosystem.

This not only increases the entry barrier to compete at the same scale but allows the company to expand its product portfolio significantly.

“What is happening here is BharatPe wants to emulate Paytm, but on steroids,” said an industry expert.

“As a banking entity where the entry barriers are high, BharatPe will bypass the competitive challenges it was set for several years before making a meaningful dent. It will now be a banking entity and have access to cheaper funds and the margins will be much higher. As a bank, you are destined to be profitable, and that for an Indian fintech is invaluable,” the expert said.

BharatPe is on the verge of closing a $350 million funding round led by Tiger Global, which will likely make it a unicorn, valuing it at around $2.8 billion, a person directly aware of the matter said.

Leadership changes
BharatPe has made at least six senior management hires in the last year. It expects to do the same this year as well.

Suhail Sameer was brought in last year as group president and has emerged as an influential voice within the company. He is expected to assume the role of ‘founder’. Sameer is also now positioned as the only other public face of the startup besides Grover.

Bhavik Koladiya and Shashvat Nakrani are the other cofounders of BharatPe.

Koladiya has largely been under the radar but sources aware of BharatPe’s origin said he has been hands-on as a founder from the beginning. In fact, Grover met Koladiya and firmed up plans to set up BharatPe and soon Nakrani joined as well, a person aware of the matter said.

Earlier this year, Guatam Kaushik joined BharatPe as group president, the second executive at this level after Sameer.

Kaushik was CEO of loyalty platform Payback India, which was acquired by BharatPe in June.

Sameer has been virtually leading all the funding talks and been a core part of strategic decision making at BharatPe.

“He has been actively involved in all the fundraising discussions with investors — for both equity and debt rounds. As the company moves to the next stage of its journey -especially with banking aspirations – it’s important to have senior experienced executives at the helm and that’s why Sameer has become critical to BharatPe’s strategic decision making,” a person aware of the thinking of the company and its investors said.

BharatPe also hired Parth Joshi as chief marketing officer in June.

While senior executives like Sameer and others strengthen its leadership team, sources said some of BharatPe’s investors have not been comfortable with Grover’s mercurial style of leadership.

Grover said this was not true.

“We have a strong leadership team of 14 people, including the founders. All of us are well established professionals in our respective domains and bring enormous credibility and expertise to BharatPe. We all have our role to play for the success of BharatPe. Suhail is a critical member of this leadership team, like others,” he said.

Grover’s public remarks on disputes with rivals like PhonePe have not helped in addressing these concerns, the sources added.

“Our investors are extremely supportive of BharatPe and what we have built in such a short span of time. Leadership hiring is done in sync with the business requirements,” Grover said.

One of the sources said: “Look, every founder has his way of doing things and not everyone will like it. Some have had concerns but that doesn’t dilute Grover’s position as a cofounder.”

BharatPe is also on the lookout for senior management roles in compliance, finance and legal departments to strengthen its entry into the world of banking.

“The other younger members of the founding team have done well but the need for more experienced hands was felt and thus they continue to beef up the senior positions,” one person said.



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Chairman, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The country’s largest lender State Bank of India is working towards launching the next version of its digital lending platform – Yono (You Only Need One App), chairman Dinesh Khara said. Speaking at a banking event organised by industry body IMC, Khara said when the bank initially started Yono, it was thought of as a distribution platform for the retail segment products.

“During the course of the journey, SBI could realise Yono’s potential for international operations, particularly where we have the retail operations. We could visualise its relevance for Yono business also, and now we have started leveraging it for our agriculture segment,” he said.

“Now what we are thinking of is as to how to integrate all these fragmented pieces of Yono and think in terms of something like Yono 2, which is the next version of it. It is something which we are working on and will come out with it and products soon,” Khara said.

As of March 31, 2021, Yono has over 7.96 crore downloads and about 3.71 crore registrations, according to the bank’s annual report for 2020-2021.

The bank has onboarded 40,000 overseas customers on the Yono platform as of end-March 2021, it said. The lender is on course to launch Yono in Singapore, Bahrain, South Africa, and the USA by the end of the financial year 2021-22.

Khara further said that SBI looks at technology from the point of view of having oversight on its operations.

The bank has started leveraging analytics for profiling the customers and to reach out to customers. It is also leveraging analytics for management and mitigation of risks.

Speaking at the event, Yes Bank‘s Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Prashant Kumar said this is a time where banks need alliances and relationships with technology. It is a time to ride on the core competence of partners to create solutions and collaborations, he said.



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RBL, Yes Bank, Bajaj Finserv most impacted by RBI curbs on Mastercard, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, After the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) restricted Mastercard from on-boarding new customers, among the credit card issuers, including co-brand partners, RBL Bank, Yes Bank and Bajaj Finserv are the most impacted as their entire card schemes are allied with Mastercard.

Japanese brokerage Nomura said in a note that these three entities are the most impacted by the RBI move.

HDFC Bank has 60 per cent of its card schemes tied to Mastercard, Amex and Diners, while for Axis Bank and ICICI Bank, this is about 35-36 per cent.

“That said, we don’t know the individual card schemes’ contribution to the overall profitability of the issuers to assess the potential impact,” it added.

HDFC Bank is already restricted from issuing new cards, and hence is not incrementally impacted. On the other hand, Kotak’s card portfolio is entirely allied to Visa and hence it won’t face any issues.

The managements of both Axis Bank and ICICI Bank have in the recent past talked about their cobranded cards with Flipkart and Amazon, respectively, to be the fastest-growing card schemes. These card schemes are 14 per cent and 15 per cent of outstanding cards for Axis and ICICI, respectively.

While the Amazon ICICI card is allied to Visa, the Flipkart Axis card is allied to Mastercard, and hence is a potential medium-term risk, should the current status-quo continue, Nomura said.

The RBI on Wednesday restricted Mastercard Asia/Pacific Pte Ltd from onboarding new customers across all its card products (debit, credit and prepaid) from July 22, 2021.

The RBI had earlier put similar restrictions on both American Express Bank (Amex) and Diners Club International (Discover Financial Services).

“This leaves only Visa Inc and homegrown NPCI’s RuPay as payment providers under no restrictions currently. We don’t know if Visa has fulfilled all the requirements of data localisation as envisaged in the Storage of Payment System Data circular of the RBI,” Nomura said.

“In the near term, we don’t foresee any material impact on card issuers (especially credit card issuers), but there could be a medium-term impact if this situation persists,” it added.



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