Millennium Post

‘Mobile app-based payments rise 163% to $287 bn in 2019’

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NEW DELHI: Mobile payments initiated by apps, comprising account-to-account transfers and payments made from stored-value accounts, rose 163 per cent to $287 billion in 2019, a report by S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce said on Tuesday.

The 'India Mobile Payments Market Report' noted that point-of-sale transactio­ns completed using debit and credit cards, including online and in apps, rose 24 per cent to $204 billion.

"While a large number of transactio­ns handled by payment apps include peer-to-peer transactio­ns, mobile phone account recharges and utility bills, mobile payments are increasing­ly becoming a popular payment choice for retail transactio­ns at the point of sale and online," it added. Interestin­gly, ATM withdrawal­s -- for the first time -came in lower than card and mobile payments based on value in 2019. And, for each ATM withdrawal, Indians made more than two transactio­ns using either cards or mobile phones, it said.

High growth rates in cashless payments seen in recent years are unlikely to repeat amid an economic slowdown due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce Fintech Analyst Sampath Sharma Nariyanuri said.

"However, we expect mobile payments to be more resilient and will gain a bigger lead over card payments, as their uptake will accelerate due to ongoing social distancing measures and concerns over usage of cash and plastic," he added.

The report noted that India's push toward cashless payments accelerate­d in 2019, as card and mobile payments as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) rose to 20 per cent in the quarter ended December 31, 2019, from 13 per cent in the same quarter of 2018.

S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce estimates that card and mobile payments represente­d only 21 per cent of $781 billion in retail purchases at brick-andmortar stores in 2019.

"While a contractio­n in economic activity amid lockdowns due to the coronaviru­s outbreak will adversely impact cashless payments, mobile payments should be relatively resilient. Their uptake will accelerate due to concerns over usage of cash and plastic that interacts with potentiall­y virus-infected surfaces," it said.

Popular mobile payments services in India are overlaid on Unified Payments Interface (UPI), a banking industry-sponsored protocol that lets people link their bank accounts with their phone numbers through payment apps.

The report said UPI processed nearly 11 billion transactio­ns in 2019 and based on a monthly rate of $31 billion in February, UPI payments are already clocking more than $373 billion in annualised payment value in 2020.

It added that Google Pay and Phonepe-led UPI payment apps handled over 7 billion transactio­ns in total, representi­ng more than two-thirds of UPI transactio­ns in 2019. "Consumer apps provided by Google and Walmart-owned Phonepe have tightened their grip on UPI payments, but Alibaba-backed Paytm made greater progress in building a bank-like platform.

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