Business Standard

Payments banks offer more options

While a wallet is convenient, payments bank offers interest on deposits and ATM facility

- TINESH BHASIN

Bipin Preet Singh, founder of MobiKwik, no longer feels his company should become a payments bank. He believes the key offerings between the two are now similar, after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) came up with new guidelines for mobile wallets.

In future, wallet users will be allowed to transfer money from one wallet to another, making these interopera­ble, like a bank. The maximum amount a person can hold in a wallet is also the same as in a payments bank — ~1 lakh. Wallet players will also need to do a KYC (Know Your Customer) that’s mandatory for all banks. “The guidelines put wallets at par with a bank account,” says Singh. If a user is only looking at payments, wallets are convenient. Payments banks go beyond this. That’s why companies such as Paytm and FINO PayTech have ventured into the payments bank space, despite having had a mobile wallet for many years. “A payments bank's offerings are much wider, while wallets are restrictiv­e,” says Shailesh Pandey, executive vice-president and head-strategy and marketing, Fino Payments Bank.

If you are only looking at quick and convenient payments, wallets fare better. All that an individual needs to do is download the app, sign up and start using the wallet by transferri­ng money from either a bank account or a credit card. Many users also prefer wallets for online transactio­ns to avoid exposing their bank and card details on the internet. If you want wallet-like functional­ity but more features such as interest income on idle money, fund transfers and withdrawal of money at an ATM via card, payments banks are more suitable. Most payments banks are becoming like virtual banks, as they use technology extensivel­y and target more transactio­ns on mobile.

The offerings from a wallet depends on the category it belongs to. RBI has three categories — open loop, closed loop and semi-closed. Closed-loop wallets work with a single merchant and are used more often for reward points and loyalty. Popular wallets are semi- closed, wherein a person can pay at various merchants and also transfer funds to another wallet or bank account. Open-loop wallets belong to banks and users can also withdraw money at ATMs. But idle money doesn’t earn interest.

The wallet an individual uses can be a forced choice, too, as a merchant may offer the benefits of only his wallet. Also, if a user doesn’t opt for a “low” KYC, he cannot transfer money to another wallet or bank account, and the monthly limit drops to ~10,000 for payments. In future, the wallet player will also need to implement twofactor authentica­tion: Validate the transactio­n by sending a one-time password.

Payments bank are also trying to give users an on-boarding experience similar to a mobile wallet. Fino Payments Bank, for example, allows instant opening of account on submission of PAN card and Aadhaar. The average time taken to get an account opened is four minutes. Customers get a debit card and PIN immediatel­y after opening the account.

According to an RBI report, if a customer visits a bank branch three times to open an account (first for inquiry and later for submitting the forms and collecting documents) it costs him almost ~139. The total time spent in the entire process is around seven hours and 28 minutes. Companies in the payments bank space are, therefore, targeting accounthol­ders of public sector and co-operative banks and also techsavvy youth that don’t have a bank account yet.

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