Business Standard

Banks, fintech firms fear rising costs

- DEBASIS MOHAPATRA & ROMITA MAJUMDAR

Getting new clients on board will be more expensive now, feel financial technology (fintech) firms, after the Supreme Court (SC) on Wednesday struck down Section 57 of the Aadhaar Act.

This section earlier allowed them to ask for a customer’s biometric identifica­tion number for electronic-Know Your Customer (e-KYC) verificati­on. Most fintech business models revolve around acquiring a high volume of customers who mostly do low-value transactio­ns.

Without the e-KYC provision, the cost of acquiring new customers will shoot up significan­tly, in some cases six times, claim industry insiders and experts.

“Private companies can’t mandate customers to provide Aadhaar (number) for on-boarding anymore,” said Harshil Mathur, chief executive officer (CEO) and cofounder of payments firm Razorpay, adding, “The cost of eKYC verificati­on was ~15 per person. For physical KYC, the cost will jump to ~100 per person.”

The SC has not banned e-KYC; it has said this should be one of the many authentica­tion options that customers have to be offered.

“Fintech companies need to change their business models to consider other forms of identity verificati­on. This will increase cost and time needed for acquiring new customers,” said V Balakrishn­an, chairman of Exfinity Ventures and a former chief financial officer at Infosys.

Aadhaar had given a boost to the fintech space in the country, with many firms mushroomin­g. This also attracted large investment­s from private equity and venture capital (VC) firms. According to a report by EY and Indian Private Equity and Venture Capital Associatio­n, the sector got $4 billion investment in the first half of 2018. A significan­t one was by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, which pumped in about $360 million in Paytm in August this year.

With digital banking taking the lead, a lot of fintech companies, including discount brokerage firms, peer-to-peer lending platforms, and financial product aggregator­s, depend on Aadhaar-based e-KYC and e-signature for documents.

“Going back to the traditiona­l model will be costly. The on-boarding cost of new customers would certainly go up,” said Vasanth Kamath, CEO and co-founder of Bengaluru-based Smallcase. Other experts, however, feel this will not be too much of a disruption.

“Fintech firms are regulated by the Reserve Bank of India, the Securities and Exchange Board of India or the Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority of India. This (the judgment) will not create any disruption,” said Sanjay Swami, managing partner of Prime Venture Partners.

The Bengaluru-based VC firm is a leading investor in NiYO, MoneyTap, and Ezetap.

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