Hindustan Times (Delhi)

With e-wallets mushroomin­g, insurance companies move in

- Nachiket Kelkar letters@hindustant­imes.com

SOURCES SAY

THERE HAVE BEEN PRELIMINAR­Y TALKS ON INSURING DIGITAL TRANSACTIO­NS

MUMBAI: At a time when the government is pushing for cashless transactio­ns and the use of digital payment platforms, the general insurance industry is exploring products to insure such transactio­ns.

According to a top insurance industry executive, there have been preliminar­y talks on the process of insuring digital transactio­ns and whether mobile wallets could be covered.

“There have been talks on protecting the loss when something happens on digital payments, whether there can be an insurance,” said R Chandrasek­aran, secretary general of General Insurance Council, an industry associatio­n of insurance companies. “You will find more insurance products to look at the financial loss, for instance, if a payment made via a mobile wallet doesn’t go through, it’s basically a financial loss,” he added.

A few days ago, mobile wallet company Freecharge launched a wallet protection plan for its users, in tie-up with Reliance General Insurance. Under this arrangemen­t, the wallet balance of all the customers will be insured up to a limit of ₹20,000, as long as the user is transactin­g at least once a month.

“Over the course of operations, we have realised that consumer perception of wallet safety is critical to drive both adoption and retention of our customers and hence we are offering this plan to our consumers free of cost,” said Govind Rajan, chief executive officer, Freecharge.

Rival Paytm is also insuring the last transactio­n conducted by a wallet user with a ceiling of ₹20,000, which is currently being underwritt­en internally.

“The original traditiona­l lines of business like fire insurance, marine insurance, they continue to grow but their market share has gone down. The non-life insurance industry is moving from a traditiona­l insurance to personal insurance to the next level of providing coverage for financial loss,” Chandrasek­aran said.

For instance, the market share of fire insurance policies has gone down from 30% earlier to only 10% now, as other products have grown.

For the year ending March 2017, premiums in the general insurance industry are expected to touch ₹1.25 lakh crore, up 30% from ₹96,000 crore last financial year. Between April-November, premiums had already touched ₹81,000 crore.

The growth is also being driven by the government pushing schemes like the Prime Minister’s Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY), or crop protection scheme, which is expected to contribute around ₹18,000 crore in premiums this financial year, and the Indian Railways insurance scheme for passengers.

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