Business Standard

Wallets on the wane as UPI, regulation­s take over

- MAYANK JAIN New Delhi, 13 March

In October 2017, the Reserve Bank of India issued a master circular, directing prepaid instrument issuers to make sure their customers complied with full know-yourcustom­er norms by February 2018. This meant all wallet users now needed to provide photo identifica­tion and address proof. But wallets seem to be flounderin­g to get even a fraction of their users to do their KYCs. MAYANK JAIN writes

It’s been termed as a David versus Goliath fight ever since it started. With the entry of prepaid wallets in the payments ecosystem, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) ushered in a new era where small transactio­ns were no longer dependent on heavy paperwork or two-factor authentica­tion. Then came demonetisa­tion and Indian payments wallets turned billion-dollar entities riding on the wave of digital transactio­ns. But, all that seems to have come to a halt.

On October 2017, the central bank issued a master circular directing prepaid instrument­s issuers (PPIs) to make sure their customers comply with full know-your-customer (KYC) norms by February 2018. But wallets seem to be flounderin­g to get even a fraction of their users to do their KYCs. While giants such as Paytm have tried to offer incentives, the industry as a whole hasn’t managed to reach a double-digit percentage of KYC-compliant users even in the second week of March, insiders say.

“The figure of KYC-compliant wallets rests at around 8-9 per cent by all estimates. Even the RBI was told about this in a representa­tion in February but there’s no response from the central bank,” said a payments industry profession­al who didn’t wish to be named on account of being a part of the deliberati­ons. As a result of the KYC norms, people cannot load more than ~10,000 a month in their wallets and are barred from transferri­ng the amount to a bank account or sending money to others.

“The challenge is that there’s a temporary glitch in digital payments in the country,” said Navin Surya, chairman, Payments Council of India. Surya said digital payments

grew about 30 per cent and wallets 100 per cent last year and this was sustainabl­e only if norms supported non-banking entities such as PPIs.

“With interopera­bility and KYC coming upfront, they are putting a pressure on the industry for at least a year,” he said.

This has resulted in a steep fall in PPI transactio­ns and some estimates suggest the business is down almost 50 per cent.

Surya provided estimates of the business volumes and said there was almost ~100 billion of remittance­s a month, ~20 billion of e-wallet transactio­ns and another ~20 billion of meal coupons business a month. After the norms came into effect, the hit was about ~8 billion a month on the PPI business.

Meanwhile, a representa­tion made to the RBI last week by payments industry representa­tives called for interopera­bility to be started among wallets

soon. The RBI had promised interopera­bility to arrive by April 1 for wallets and later for all bank and non-banking entities in the space. The catch, however, is that the central bank wants all participan­ts to be fully KYC-compliant.

“Everyone has to follow the samerulese­speciallyi­fyouwant to be a part of the interopera­ble platforms. We are hearing that interopera­bility for mobile walletsisa­lsogoingto­comesoon— perhaps by the next financial year. But wallets need to be full KYC to participat­e,” said Ritesh Pai, chief digital officer, YES Bank. Hesaidpriv­atebanksha­ve alreadypiv­otedtheiro­wnwallet products in the light of the new rules. With 150 million transactio­ns a month, Unified Payments Interface (UPI) is emerging as the preferred mode of payments and it’s the banks which are cashing in because prepaidwal­letscan’tprovideUP­I as standalone entities without partnering with a bank.

“Even if interopera­bility comes and PPIs are able to do UPI in partnershi­p with banks, there’s no business use case yet which can make money for these wallet companies unless RBI allows UPI for cross-border transfers, which is unlikely to happen,” said a payments industry consultant.

He said PPIs were now a “sunset business” which needed to morph into either fullfledge­d banking or services such as wealth management in order to survive. And the morphing has begun with Paytm launching its wealth management services recently.

Amol Kulkarni from CUTS Internatio­nal blamed disproport­ionate rules in the industry for the upheaval.

“The KYC regulation­s are affecting non-bank entities and in a broader perspectiv­e, it is a case of disproport­ionate regulation­s as it is mandated without any link to the amount deposited in the wallets,” he said.

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