Khaleej Times

Startups ‘paying’ off in India

- Jeanette Rodrigues

Global credit card companies are losing market share to upstarts in the world’s most innovative payments market: India.

mumbai — Global card companies like Visa and Mastercard are losing market share to upstarts in the world’s most innovative payments market: India.

Transactio­ns through India’s homegrown Unified Payments Interface — which allows mobile apps run by retailers, airlines and other firms to take payment directly from bank accounts — reached almost half the value of debit and credit cards swiped at stores last month, central bank data show.

The surge in UPI transactio­ns has taken place since 2016 when the interface was set up by an umbrella organisati­on of Indian banks. Mastercard, in contrast, has built up its business in India over three decades.

“The introducti­on of UPI in August 2016 led to the creation of a wealth of new innovative payment solutions, and the adoption rates of UPI payments are truly spectacula­r,” US-based Fidelity National Informatio­n Services said in a December 2017 report. UPI “opens up access to real-time by allowing payments to be directly integrated into external business applicatio­ns,” it said.

India’s payments system was alone among more than 40 countries tracked by Fidelity National to gain a top score of five for innovation and customer value. China’s Internet Banking Payment System scored two and Kenya’s PesaLink scored four.

Criteria included round-theclock availabili­ty, speed of settlement,

57k% surge in number of uPI transactio­ns since Nov ’16

and level of government or regulator support.

Amazon.com and Jet Airways India — the nation’s second-biggest airline by passengers — are among firms that have integrated UPI into their apps in order to take payment from customers.

Ola, a local rival to Uber Technologi­es; Big Bazaar, a chain of stores run by billionair­e Kishore Biyani; and incumbent mobile wallet leader Paytm Mobile Solutions are other users.

Facebook is piloting a payments service in India with a UPI backbone for its WhatsApp Pay, which has already drawn comparison­s with the way WeChat reshaped payments in China.

“Payment integratio­n into popular apps in India will drive the digital payments market to $1 trillion over the next five years,” Credit Suisse Group said in a report last month.

“With 800 million bank accounts now linked, the bulk is mobile-transactio­n ready.” Currently, India’s payments market is worth less than $200 billion, dwarfed by China’s $27 trillion market that’s now opening up to global players. One challenge in India is the dominance of cash, which accounts for some 70 per cent of the country’s total transactio­ns by value.

However, China transition­ed to digital on the back of rising mobile and data penetratio­n, and that process was hastened by e-commerce and social platforms, according to Credit Suisse.

The same shift may play out in India, where data usage for 300 million Indian smartphone users rose to 5-10 GB a month from 1GB last year. Advances in India’s digital payments market picked up pace after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s shock decision to invalidate 86 percent of the country’s currency in circulatio­n.

The number of UPI transactio­ns have surged almost 57,000 per cent since November 2016, while that of debit and credit cards has risen 20 per cent.

“While the effects of the demonetisa­tion event of November 2016 are now waning, it would be safe to conclude that the event has caused a permanent uplift in the share of non-cash transactio­ns in the economy,” said Credit Suisse. — Bloomberg

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 ?? Bloomberg ?? India’s payments system was alone among more than 40 countries tracked by Fidelity National to gain a top score of five for innovation and customer value. —
Bloomberg India’s payments system was alone among more than 40 countries tracked by Fidelity National to gain a top score of five for innovation and customer value. —

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