Business Standard

E-PAYMENTS DISRUPTED, PHONEPE HIT HARDEST

- NEHA ALAWADHI & PEERZADA ABRAR New Delhi/bengaluru, 6 March Samreen Ahmad contribute­d to this story

With the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) placing YES Bank under moratorium, digital payments associated with the bank have been affected. And Phonepe, the Walmart-owned payments platform, seems to have been hit hardest.

On Friday, Sahil Kini, cofounder of applicatio­n program interface (API) infrastruc­ture company Setu, tweeted that digital payments such as National Electronic Funds Transfer (NEFT), RealTime Gross Settlement (RTGS), Immediate Payment Service (IMPS) and Unified Payments Interface (UPI) that depend on YES Bank at the backend were not going through.

The ease of UPI, which was developed by National Payments Council of India (NPCI), comes from the fact that it lets account holders of banks send or receive money from their smartphone­s without going through net banking. Thirdparty apps partner with banks to enable the money transfers.

“YES Bank’s infrastruc­ture was the most battle-tested. But now all access to it has been shut down. So people are unable to transact money, their money is stuck, or they can’t settle money with the bank due to payment facilitati­on problems,” said Nikhil Kumar, another co-founder at Setu.

Phonepe’s problem

Since YES Bank is Phonepe’s exclusive UPI partner, the latter’s users have been affected the most. “Phonepe is actively looking for new partners and the service is expected to be up and running in the next couple of hours,” a source said on Friday.

“The moratorium caught the company by surprise. Phonepe had partnered with YES Bank, because it had a more progressiv­e infrastruc­ture. Phonepe is closely working with NPCI and RBI to solve the issue. It affects the overall UPI ecosystem. The number of overall UPI transactio­ns are down by at least 50 per cent,” the source added.

Sameer Nigam, Phonepe’s chief executive officer and founder, tweeted, “The entire team has been working all night to get the services back up as soon as possible. We hope to be live in a few hours.”

The Bengaluru-based payments platform and Google Pay account for about 70 per cent of the UPI app market, according to industry sources. However, G oogle Pay, which has at least four banks as its partners, has been largely unaffected by the YES Bank moratorium.

With 200 million registered users and 20 million daily active users, Phonepe sees as many as 500 million monthly transactio­ns.

“The NPCI had anticipate­d such a situation. No thirdparty app provider should have more than 33 per cent of the market share — something it was considerin­g, but there was an implementa­tion delay,” said Narendra Yadav, senior vice-president, Paytm Payments Bank.

The proposal to limit a third party app’s market share to 33 per cent was being considered by NPCI last year, but was put on the back-burner. According to sources, the NPCI has not yet found a way to resolve the electronic payments issues related to the YES Bank moratorium.

“The RBI’S objective seems to be to ensure too many withdrawal­s don’t happen. Payments are a tiny part of that. RBI should have allowed it,” said Setu’s Kumar.

Fintech impact

Other fintech operators which rely on YES Bank to settle their transactio­ns have also been experienci­ng issues. “The i mpact on Flipkart and Myntra is limited to Phonepe (which are also owned by Walmart). These firms have multiple payment partners and have already set up contingenc­y plans,” said an e-commerce industry executive, who did not wish to be quoted. Razorpay, another big player in the UPI payments space, said its payment gateway was unaffected. “While our auxiliary services are facing some minor disruption­s, we are working with other banks and authoritie­s to resolve the issues at the earliest,” said Harshil Mathur, CEO and cofounder of Razorpay.

“We will temporaril­y withhold payouts to merchants with YES Bank accounts. This is to ensure that no merchant’s funds get blocked. We have provided our merchants the option to change their registered bank from YES Bank to another account,” said Sampad Swain, CEO and Co-founder of payments gateway Instamojo.

Food delivery firm Swiggy, which also partners with YES Bank, did not see any impact on its services as most of its transactio­ns take place through multiple payment partners such as Google Pay, Amazon Pay and Paytm. It also uses payment instrument­s such as credit and debit cards and food cards.

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