Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Half of ATMs may be shut by March: industry body

- Komal Gupta komal.g@livemint.com ■

NEW DELHI: Nearly half of the automated teller machines (ATMs) in India will be rendered commercial­ly unviable because of onerous regulatory requiremen­ts, forcing a shutdown, and potentiall­y leading to cash shortage and long queues, similar to the days following demonetiza­tion in 2016.

Recent regulatory guidelines for ATM hardware and software upgrades, cash management standards and cash loading methods will render almost 113,000 ATMs unviable, the Confederat­ion of ATM Industry (CATMI) said on Wednesday in a statement.

“A large number of ATMs in non-urban locations may be shut down due to unviabilit­y of operations. If this happens, the financial inclusion programme would be severely impacted as millions of beneficiar­ies under the government’s Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY) scheme, who withdraw subsidies in the form of cash through ATMs, may find their neighbourh­ood ATM shut,” the CATMI added.

In April, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had mandated a minimum net worth of ₹100 crore for service providers and their sub-contractor­s handling cash management logistics on behalf of banks.

It also directed cash vans transporti­ng money to have CCTVs, GPS connectivi­ty, tubeless tyres, hooters and wireless communicat­ion systems. Approximat­ely 100,000 off-site ATMs, and over 15,000 non-bank ATMs could shut down.

According to RBI data, India had 221,492 ATMs as of September-end.

“The situation has further deteriorat­ed now due to the additional compliance require-

AN ESTIMATED OUTLAY OF ABOUT ₹3,500 CR IS NEEDED TO COMPLY WITH THE NEW CASH LOGISTICS, CASSETTE SWAP METHOD

ments that call for a huge cost outlay. The service providers do not have the financial means to meet such massive costs and may be forced to shut down these ATMs, unless banks step in to bear the load of the additional cost of compliance,” the CATMI said in the statement.

According to CATMI, an estimated outlay of about ₹3,500 crore is needed to comply with the new cash logistics and cassette swap method.

“These requiremen­ts were never anticipate­d by the industry participan­ts at the time of signing contracts with the banks. Many of these agreements were inked four to five years ago,” it said.

CATMI said its members, including ATM managed service providers (MSPs), brownlabel ATM deployers (BLAs) and white label ATM operators (WLAOs), are still suffering from huge losses, as cash supply was disrupted for months during demonetiza­tion.

The ATM industry in India has reached a “tipping point”, and unless ATM deployers are compensate­d by banks for making these investment­s, there is likely to be a scenario where contracts are surrendere­d, leading to large-scale closure of ATMs, the statement said.

The move may result in long queues outside ATM kiosks and chaos similar to what the country witnessed when ATMs were not dispensing cash, post demonetiza­tion in November 2016.

 ?? MINT ?? ■ According to Reserve Bank of India data, India had 221,492 ATMs as of Septembere­nd
MINT ■ According to Reserve Bank of India data, India had 221,492 ATMs as of Septembere­nd

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