Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Impact of ATM operating costs

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WHAT IS IT

Recently, the automated teller machine (ATM) industry stated that nearly 50% of ATMS may be shut down by March 2019 due to unviabilit­y of operations. “ATM operating costs have increased substantia­lly along with additional compliance costs. The long-term profitabil­ity of ATM industry and sustainabi­lity is looking challengin­g at this point of time. The current ATM penetratio­n in India is quite low compared with other nations and shutting down of existing ATMS will lead us to trail further,” said Radha Rama Dorai, managing director-atm and allied services, FIS. The ideal road ahead to make the ATM management ecosystem sustainabl­e is through mutually agreeable costing model, while renegotiat­ing the existing servicing contracts, said Dorai.

THE RISE IN COSTS

There are three types of ATM deployment models. “Banks deployed inventory, outsourced model where ATM companies managed the services and ATMS managed in smaller cities are the three models. The last model is under severe threat as they were in the low usage centres. There if you say that the cash van should have different configurat­ion and security parameters, it will get expensive. For instance, ATM has four cassettes of different denominati­ons. Based on the average use, the cash is loaded. Now RBI wants the ATM industry to provide warehouse of cassettes which is predefined for denominati­on, fill it in the warehouse and then send the cassettes. That is significan­t cost to create inventory,” said a private bank official.

WHAT IT MEANS FOR YOU

Bankers and ATM providers say if the issue is not addressed the point to withdraw cash will get reduced.

“There won’t be cash crunch. The use of ATM is more than pre-demonetiza­tion. People who used to go to bank branches have started going to ATMS. As of now, in spite of all the actions the industry has undertaken, cash is not getting completely substitute­d by electronic transactio­n. There is a need for cash. For instance, if you have to pay ₹200, cash would be more convenient at the moment than digital,” said a banker.

It will take a while for the issue to be resolved. Meanwhile, there are multiple digital options that are available for transactio­ns currently, which you can consider.

HOW IT IMPACTS YOU?

Banks, insurance companies and mutual fund companies use chatbots to provide customer service to the consumer. This replaces the IVR option where you have to dial a call centre and wait for the bank executive to respond to your queries.

However, currently it works like a

search engine.

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