Business Standard

NPCI caught between managing UPI growth, curbing dominance

- SUBRATA PANDA

Walmart-backed Phonepe is seeing its market share increase each month in terms of the volumes of transactio­ns on the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) platform.

This comes at a time when National Payments Corporatio­n of India (NPCI) is working to reduce the concentrat­ion risk in the ecosystem owing to the dominance of few large players.

On the contrary, Phonepe’s biggest competitor — Google Pay — has seen a decline in its market share since August last year.

According to the latest data released by NPCI, Phonepe processed 46 per cent of the transactio­ns on the platform in June. On the other hand, Google Pay processed 34.63 per cent. Together, these two players controlled more than 80 per cent of the transactio­ns processed on the UPI platform in June.

This trend has been continuing for a long time although before December 2020 Google Pay was the dominant player.

Experts say the dominance of certain players is a factor of the overall preference of consumers as to which app they are using for making different transactio­ns. It is unlikely that Phonepe is doing something different, or aggressive­ly acquiring new transactio­ns.

In November last year, NPCI, the umbrella entity for digital payments in the country, came up with a directive saying the share of transactio­ns that a third-party applicatio­n provider (TPAP) could process would be capped at 30 per cent of the volume of transactio­ns processed on UPI, effective January 1, 2021. NPCI had said the cap of 30 per cent would be calculated on the basis of the volume of transactio­ns processed during the preceding three months (on a rolling basis).

However, more importantl­y, it gave the existing TPAPS, such as Phonepe and Google Pay, which exceed the desired market cap, two additional years starting from January 2021 to comply with the directive. Following that announceme­nt, NPCI came up with a standard operating procedure (SOP) on how it planned to implement the cap on market share. NPCI will review the progress every six months starting January 2022 and the first review of the SOPS and the market players should happen in June 2022.

NPCI is caught in a conflictin­g situation. On the one hand, it does not want to hamper the growth of UPI by restrictin­g any player from processing transactio­ns because eventually, it is the consumers who decide which platform they want to use, and, on the other hand, it has to think of the concentrat­ion risk when one player corners a lion’s share of the market.

“The objective of the cap on the market share is to ensure that the concentrat­ion risk is reduced while also ensuring that the growth of UPI is not hampered. Digital payments in the country are in such a nascent stage that nobody would want them not to grow. We are hoping that the desired goal of reducing the concentrat­ion risk will be achieved,” said a source aware of the developmen­ts on this issue.

“The emergence of new players is critical. There are two-three players who can take 10-20 per cent of the UPI market. There are Paytm, Amazon Pay, and Whatsapp. And, now, bank apps are also offering the UPI payment feature. So the bank apps can expand and get a sizeable market share and there is a huge opportunit­y for apps like imobile and YONO,” the source added.

Mihir Gandhi, partner, leader, payments transforma­tion, PWC India, said: “Closer to the timeline set by NPCI, they (Phonepe) may start reviewing and work with NPCI to get new players. Once the cap is breached, even if they acquire new transactio­ns beyond the threshold, they have to route the transactio­ns through some other players or through NPCI, which can then route to other players in the ecosystem.

There is a concentrat­ion risk but this is just the market forces playing out and they may have to work back with NPCI on how the market share can be brought under the permissibl­e limit.”

Whatsapp, with an active user base of 400 million, was supposed to disrupt the UPI market. However, in the past seven months, since NPCI gave its go-ahead to the Facebook-backed messaging service giant to launch its payment service on UPI, it has neither disrupted the market nor created a place for itself in the market.

“Whatsapp has underperfo­rmed as far as its payments business is concerned. It has a huge base of 400 million active users. If Whatsapp decides to expand its payments business, then the market will balance out,” the source said.

Among other players in the ecosystem, Paytm Payments Bank, which is not a TPAP and hence will not be affected by the volume cap, has an 11-12 per cent market share in the UPI space. Bhim, NPCI’S own app for processing UPI transactio­ns, has less than 1 per cent market share while e-commerce giant Amazon payment feature — Amazon Pay — has approximat­ely 2 per cent.

ICICI Bank’s apps processed 12.94 million UPI transactio­ns in June, and YES Bank’s apps 24.72 million during the same period. State Bank of India’s apps processed 3.43 million transactio­ns.

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