Business Standard

Making a mark in Indian m-payments may be tough for Apple

- ALNOOR PEERMOHAME­D

Apple has become the latest global technology behemoth to show interest in India’s fast-growing mobile payments space as the country is attempting to become a ‘cashless economy’.

With a focus on mobile payments, the sector has already seen the entry of Google, while Facebook and its subsidiary WhatsApp are in advanced stages of building their own solutions. Chinese giant Alibaba also enjoys a huge presence through Paytm, the country’s largest digital payments provider. Tencent, too, is looking for avenues for investment­s. In an interview with Economic

Times, Apple’s Senior Vice-President for Internet Software and Services, Eddy Cue, said the company was looking to bring its Apple Pay solution to India. He said rather than building from scratch, the company would look to partner with existing players such as Paytm, a name which Cue mentioned in his conversati­on with ET.

Apple launched Apple Pay in the US in 2014 and quickly became the most widely-accepted mobile payments provider in the country. The company, using its might, was able to partner with all leading credit card and point of sale (PoS) providers in the country. Apple controls over 35 per cent of the US smartphone market.

Indiachall­enge

However, unlike in the United States, the company’s iPhone accounts for just three per cent of sales in India’s 100 million-plus annual smartphone market. Since there aren’t enough people using iPhones in India, it would put the technology major at a massive disadvanta­ge when it comes to striking up deals with partners.

In contrast, Google’s Android operating system powers 97 per cent of all devices sold in the country, something the company is betting on to grow usage of its Tez mobile payments app here. Moreover, if Apple decides to merely export its Apple Pay solution, which works on near-field communicat­ion (NFC), to India, the company could be restrictin­g itself to working with very few providers.

Samsung, a major rival of Apple globally and India’s leading smartphone vendor, has taken a novel approach for its Samsung Pay offering. By providing special hardware in its devices, Samsung users can pay through their phones using any old PoS terminal. However, this is possible essentiall­y due to Samsung manufactur­ing all its devices for India locally.

Monetisati­on

While Apple charges a cut from every transactio­n on Apple Pay globally, in India, the company could find it very hard to monetise the service given the country’s extremely low transactio­n costs. If Apple offers the service for free, it won’t be alone as even Google said it was first looking to build scale rather than monetising the service here.

However, if this happens, it might not come as a surprise. Apple’s interest in growing its presence in India has led the company to subsidise the cost of its Apple Music service, which competes with Google Play Music and the soon to come Amazon Prime Music service, apart from local players such as Wynk and Hungama. While Apple Music subscripti­ons start at $10 per month in the US, the company charges just ~120 (approximat­ely $2) in India.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? File photo of an iPhone 7 being used to demonstrat­e the mobile payment service Apple Pay at a cafe in Moscow, Russia
PHOTO: REUTERS File photo of an iPhone 7 being used to demonstrat­e the mobile payment service Apple Pay at a cafe in Moscow, Russia

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