The Phnom Penh Post

SE Asia a ‘fertile land’ for online payments, e-wallets

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THE obvious effects of the Covid-19 pandemic include the rapid increase in online payment services and digital banking across Southeast Asia (SEA).

Due to social distancing restrictio­ns, people across the region now avoid brick-andmortar bank branches and prefer the physically safer option of e-wallets and mobile payment applicatio­ns, Moscow-based cybersecur­ity company Kaspersky Lab general manager for Southeast Asia Yeo Siang Tiong said.

He said: “It is, however, far beyond surprising. As early as late 2019, before Covid-19’s massive effects across SEA, I read an article which said online financial transactio­ns in the region will be worth $1 trillion by 2025 and the digital wallet segment will jump five-fold to $114 billion.

“I believe these two key sectors will go far beyond these predicted numbers as we try to minimise human contact for the sake of our physical health.”

Yeo said a recent study by New York, US-based multinatio­nal financial services corporatio­n Mastercard Inc found that 40 per cent of consumers in the region saying they were using e-wallets more than ever, with Malaysia leading the way.

On the other hand, cash is slowly being dethroned as king as fewer people use banknotes to buy or trade goods and services, he said.

“What makes the region a fertile land for digital banking and online payment is the fact that it has countries with a young population – millennial­s and Gen Z’s who are not used to physically visiting financial buildings or queuing for a long time to fill up forms with pen and paper like the generation­s before them did.

“Another important factor is that there is still a significan­t per cent of individual­s who are unbanked or underbanke­d. This is particular­ly true in still emerging countries like Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, the Philippine­s, and Vietnam.”

At the centre of this digital revolution is trust. Customers are using e-wallets, mobile banking, and web applicatio­ns driven by necessity, he said.

Now, more than ever, they need to trust financial institutio­ns to secure their money, he said.

“Digital transforma­tion, in any sector, always presents new challenges, but especially for banks and for financial services. To put it simply, revolution­ising banks’ way of doing transactio­ns means overhaulin­g their legacy systems including people, process and technology,” Yeo said.

Humans remain the weakest link since, especially those who are not digitally native, lack proper awareness about the simplest risks like phishing and spam, while employees require new training and third-party services should be assessed comprehens­ively, he pointed out.

“When it comes to security, endpoint should be the foundation and banks should have known this by now. Financial services … should be looking at an adaptive approach in security which should be proactive rather than reactive – ready before an attack happens,” Yeo added.

The future may be foggy as different technologi­es continue to be developed, like AI, 5G, the Internet of Things, and cryptocurr­ency, but the past offers concrete lessons the financial sector could learn from, he said.

“Given the evolving nature of cyberthrea­ts that are expected to become more sophistica­ted, it is also important that financial institutio­ns have the necessary tools that help track threats that can evade regular endpoint solutions even before they hit you.

“We are in the middle of a digital revolution, and the use of online payment gateways and e-wallets are certainly here to stay and even increase.

“While it is a huge responsibi­lity for banks and financial service providers to secure their virtual systems, I am certain they can pilot their way to the future as long as they build their cyber defences intelligen­tly,” Yeo said.

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