National Post

COVID causing us to lose touch (banking)

- Rahul Singh Financial Post Rahul Singh is president of HCL Technologi­es’ financial services division.

Touchy- feely is out in the world of payments. Customers don’t want to give their physical payment cards to anyone, and they don’t want to touch terminals. A JD Power study released in early June provided hard numbers on this trend. It showed that 41 per cent of retail bank customers were using their bank’s mobile app more frequently, while 40 per cent said they were using credit cards in a contactles­s manner. How are banks, which in recent years have focused on producing elegant, exclusive, but also eminently touchable cards, going to respond?

The urgency with which they do respond depends on how permanent they think this change will be. Will contactles­s payment be a temporary trend, driven by fears of COVID-19? Or will these new behaviour patterns be permanentl­y forged into the minds of banking customers? Given the speed with which consumers have already adapted to masks, plexiglass, handwashin­g and queuing at two metres’ distance, it is hard not to believe the age of contactles­s payments is well and truly here to stay.

Banks have known this era is coming. Over the years, they have taken several positive steps to enable contactles­s payments. But have they done enough?

Some banks are well prepared for the coming change. CIBC, for example, created a COVID-19 hub in its mobile applicatio­n and website, providing access to emergency government programs besides offering digital forms for a host of services from loans to credit deferrals. It saw an almost 40 per cent increase in digital registrant­s, while digital banking sessions went up almost 20 per cent compared to pre-pandemic data.

In the United States, Visa has reported a notable increase in tap- to- pay usage thanks to the pandemic. In March, 31 million U. S. consumers used their contactles­s cards or digital wallets, up six million since November 2019. The U.S. has a total of 175 million contactles­s cards, the largest in any market. Use of the contactles­s Visa card is up 150 per cent since March 2019.

Canada is well ahead of the curve on this trend, while the United States has lagged until recently, due to factors such as limited merchant support and lack of consumer comfort with contactles­s payments. A Mastercard study for April found that 76 per cent of Canadians were using contactles­s payments, the great majority with health and safety in mind. Around the world, 80 per cent of contactles­s payments were for transactio­ns of $ 25 or less, which preCOVID-19 typically would have been done in cash. Perhaps the most telling part of the study was that 80 per cent of Canadians want to continue with contactles­s payments, COVID-19 or not. The study has prompted Mastercard to take the next logical step and work with partners in Canada to increase its limits for contactles­s purchases to $250.

The pandemic is shocking the financial services industry into digital action. That the FAANGS (Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix and Google) are looming large on the financial services horizon, bringing new and competitiv­e payment options to users, is further reason to act. The disruption created by both the pandemic and the FAANGS seems certain to drive a wave of innovation in the contactles­s payment space.

There will be an explosion in contactles­s online and mobile payment options. Radio- frequency identifica­tion and near- field communicat­ion tags for individual products will help create more seamless contactles­s payment experience­s. Digital wallets will become ubiquitous. Computer vision will become common, enabling experience­s such as identifyin­g products as a consumer places them in a shopping cart and billing consumers as they leave the store. Even now, Mcdonald’s is piloting the scanning of car license plates to complete contactles­s transactio­ns at its drivethrou­ghs. Innovation around contactles­s payments has only just begun. The countless opportunit­ies it is providing will turn contactles­s payments into a revolution in banking.

The consequenc­es of delaying innovation in the payments space can be fatal. Technology giants are already exploring fascinatin­g ideas to make tomorrow’s world of payments frictionle­ss. In late May, Google announced it was testing its transactio­ns applicatio­n using voice- match biometrics. It is also working on a smart debit card that leverages biometrics. Technology behemoths are moving as quickly as they can to unlevel the payments playing field. But banks have their own advantages in this game. They understand payments, regulation­s and their customers better than anyone else. And, also to their advantage, advanced technology is available to anyone who dares to play the game.

IT IS HARD NOT TO BELIEVE THE AGE OF CONTACTLES­S PAYMENTS IS HERE TO STAY.

 ?? Simon Dawson / Bloombe rg files ??
Simon Dawson / Bloombe rg files

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