Photo Credit: Samyukta Lakshmi/Bloomberg
A bewildering array of digital payment businesses from global names like Facebook's WhatsApp to Google are in a slugfest to win Indian users.
Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway has acquired a stake in the company behind payments leader Paytm, people familiar with the matter said this week. Other big-name players are expanding in India's digital payments market including its banks, its postal service, and its richest man, Mukesh Ambani.
India saw a brief spurt in digital payments two years ago when Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government banned most of the nation's existing bank notes, although the spike petered out as new bills were printed. But over the past year, a string of new apps have made payments increasingly easy, and the discounts and cash bonuses they offer are proving irresistible to young, urban users.
Credit Suisse estimates that the Indian digital payments market will touch $1 trillion by 2023 from about $200 billion (roughly Rs. 14 lakh crores) currently. Cash still accounts for 70 percent of all Indian transactions by value, according to Credit Suisse, and neighbouring China is far more advanced with a mobile payments market worth more than $5 trillion (roughly Rs. 350 lakh crores).
But local players have a stranglehold on China's digital payments space. PM Modi's administration, meanwhile, has welcomed foreign firms in order to expand financial services across India.
"This kind of a promising market exists nowhere else," said Vivek Belgavi, a Mumbai-based partner at consultancy PwC India with an expertise in financial technology.
Still, the Indian payments market remains a chaotic field where the rules are hazy on what players can offer. And users often switch between apps. Rahul Matthan, a Bangalore-based lawyer, says he's used every one of the leading payment apps, although he now confines most of his transactions to BHIM, Paytm and WhatsApp payments.
Experts like Vinayak HV, Singapore-based senior partner at McKinsey & Co., say profitability isn't close on the horizon for the industry. While it's too early to call the game, here are a few players with a shot at winning:
Facebook's WhatsApp:
Began beta-testing its payments service on a million Indians in February this year.
Pros: WhatsApp is India's most popular messaging app, whose quarter of a billion users text family and friends all day. It doesn't need to put in cash to acquire customers and that's a massive advantage.
Cons: The service is stuck in beta mode, and its country-wide launch has been impeded by regulatory questions over areas like storage of user data. Meanwhile, the government has been upbraiding WhatsApp for not curbing fake videos that have gone viral on its messaging service and led to the lynching of over two dozen Indians. This could further delay the full-fledged launch of its payments business.
Google's Tez
Google says its payment app crossed 50 million app downloads a few weeks ago. Tez is swiftly adding users and sprinted to increase total number of transactions using the country's Unified Payments Interface, or UPI, a system that's linked to over a 100 banks and facilitates real-time digital transactions.
Pros: Google's Chief Executive Officer Sundar Pichai said Tez is central to the company's India strategy and also key to its global payments push. The payments app has localized, supporting several Indian languages, and is chasing young users with games that offer cashbacks.
Cons: Tez is lagging rival WhatsApp whose strong base of users come from its messaging service. Google has belatedly introduced a chat feature on Tez.
Flipkart's PhonePe:
PhonePe says it has 133 million app downloads.
Pros: When Walmart acquired a majority stake in PhonePe's parent Flipkart Online Services, the payments app also acquired a global backer. All signs are that PhonePe is already gaining from Walmart's financial heft with a recent infusion of about $66 million from Flipkart.
Cons: Flipkart rival Amazon has been steadily pumping capital into its own wallet, Amazon Pay, and increasing its user base.
Paytm:
Backed by China's Alibaba as well as Ant Financial Services Co., Paytm is India's largest digital payments company and says it has 150 million app downloads.
Pros: An early player, it got a boost from India's demonetization drive in 2016, when a scarcity of cash sent millions scurrying toward providers like Paytm. The company has since built a wide network of merchants and outlets with a robust system of cashbacks and discounts to keep users locked in.
Cons: Paytm's users have to go through a multi-step enrollment process since it's a licensed payments bank, unlike most of its digital wallet rivals like Tez and PhonePe. The regulator recently barred Paytm temporarily from enlisting new users for non-compliancewith procedures. The company said it has responded to the regulator's concerns.
BHIM:
Has 32 million app downloads. Designed by UPI, it's the government's own play in digital payments. The app is simple and fast, appealing to non-technologically savvy users in smaller towns and rural India.
Pros: The government has been actively pushing BHIM, using Modi's face to promote its brand, setting transaction targets for banks and state-owned utilities to boost its user base.
Cons: Despite an initial popularity burst, it hasn't been able to keep pace with rivals whose bottomless pockets have kept users hooked with sweeteners.
Next in Line:
An India Post Payments Bank, set up by the state-owned Department of Posts, is starting operations with 650 branches and thousands of trained postmen fanning out to far-flung corners to teach users how to use its app. Also, Ambani's digital payments business via his Jio mobile service, has the potential to jolt rivals.
© 2018 Bloomberg LP
Disclosure: Paytm's parent company One97 is an investor in NDTV's Gadgets 360.
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