Business Standard

Alibaba and Tencent set fast pace in mobile-payments race

Mobile payments appeal in emerging markets because consumers need only a smartphone to transfer funds via QR code

- NEWLEY PURNELL Source: TheWall Street Journal

Silicon Valley is home to the world’ s most influentia­l consumer-tech firms, but China’ s online corporate titans are way ahead in the race to build mobile-payment services in many of the world’ s fastest-growing consumer markets. China’s digital-payments market, by far the world’s largest, is dominated bye-commerce giant Ali ba ba Group Holding Ltd. and social media champ Ten cent Holdings Ltd. Now the two are imparting money and know-how to mobile-money startup sin other Asian markets, from Indonesia to India. As people across Asia increasing­ly move from cash to smartphone apps for buying goods and transferri­ng money between individual­s, US firms are “still very focused on their home market,” trying to increase usage there, said Shiv Putcha, an analyst at research firm IDC in Mumbai.

In China, QR codes are used widely by smartphone owners to pay bills and make purchases in shops and at vending machines—contributi­ng to a $9 trillion mobile-payment market last year, according to iResearch. That is almost 90 times the size of the U.S. mobile-payment market of $112 billion, according to data from research firm Forrest er.

Two payment platforms—Ali bab a-backed Ali pay and Ten cent’ s Ten pay—handle some 90% of China’s online payments by transactio­n value, iResearch says. As China’ s market matures, Ali ba ba and Ten cent are chasing growth overseas, helping local startup sin emerging markets run mobile-money systems that don’ t require plastic. Chinese investors supplied the bulk of $2.7 billion in funding to Asian financial-technology startup sin the second quarter of 2017, according to research firm CB Insights. Their experience in China and technical savvy may prove even more valuable. As in China, merchants in many emerging markets lack point-of-sale machines needed to process payments via Apple Inc .’ s Apple Pay and Alphabet Inc.’s Android Pay. Meanwhile, few consumers in these markets have credit or debit cards to make payments.

Executive sat India’ s largest mobile-payment a pp, Paytm, drew inspiratio­n from Ali ba ba, one of its main funders. Pay tm’ s chief financial officer, Madhur Deora, said his company benefits from frequent meetings with senior Ali ba ba executives. Pay tm staff travel to Ali bab a’ s offices in China and vice versa.

“We exchange thoughts on design and product ,” Mr. De ora said, referring to the way a pp sap pear graphic ally on smartphone screen sand how services can increase user engagement. It is in valuable, he said, to have a backer who knows that if a new feature takes off ,“you could have 100 million people using it .”

Mr. Deora and his colleagues had noted that Alibaba was offering users of its app access to online money-market funds, so the Indian firm decided to riff on that product. “Our takeaway was that it had to be an instrument people could relate to,” Mr. Deora said.

The result is a savings product that Paytm’s more than 225 million users in India can use to purchase portions of gold bars through the platform—an idea designed to appeal to consumers accustomed to storing wealth in the precious metal.

When India’s government last year suddenly canceled 86% of currency in circulatio­n to clamp down on corruption and tax evasion, Paytm swooped in. It bombarded India’s merchants—the vast majority of which don’t accept credit cards because they lack swiping machines—with stickers bearing the Paytm logo and QR codes. The service’s user numbers skyrockete­d.

Now, Paytm is used in India to pay for items from roadside hawkers, rides from auto rickshaws and more. Sellers don’t need special gadgets beyond the QR code, which transfers money from a buyer’s mobile account into the vendor’s.

Paytm added to its heft in May, raising $1.4 billion from Japan’s SoftBank Group Corp.

Alphabet’s Google on Monday launched its own mobile-payment smartphone app in India, which people can use to transfer money to individual­s and businesses without the use of a credit or debit card. Meanwhile, Alibaba and its affiliate Ant Financial have invested in Thailand in a financial-services company called Ascend Money.

China’s digital-payment kings have another incentive to reach out: Chinese internatio­nal tourists, a fast-growing consumer group. Alibaba and Tencent want to build links in their mobile-payment platforms to ensure their core services are available to Chinese consumers wherever they travel.

Ant Financial has partnered with Indonesian media conglomera­te Emtek to launch a digital-payments service in that country, and with a financial-technology firm in the Philippine­s. Alibaba has been helping startups learn to use new cloud technologi­es to handle transactio­ns efficientl­y in their home market, according to a person familiar with the matter. Engineers for Emtek traveled to Alibaba’s headquarte­rs in Hangzhou for training in cloud technologi­es, the person said.

Alibaba processes a “huge amount of payment transactio­ns in peak moments” and that kind of experience is hard to acquire, the person added. An Emtek spokesman declined to comment.

Tencent last year led a $175 million round of fundraisin­g in Indian messaging app Hike Ltd. In June, Hike brought a payments feature to its platform, beating larger competitor­s.

Hike founder Kavin Bharti Mittal has said the app draws upon Tencent’s experience running China’s biggest social network, WeChat, which is popular for its messaging, mobile payments and entertainm­ent features. A Tencent spokeswoma­n didn’t respond to requests for comment.

“China is a few years ahead of us” and working with Alibaba is “sort of our university, said Amit Sinha, chief operating officer of Paytm’s ecommerce marketplac­e.

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