WhatsApp takes on Google, Alibaba in India’s phone payment battle
WhatsApp takes on Google, Alibaba in India’s
phone payment battle
WhatsApp on Friday entered an increasingly tense battle
between multinational giants such as Google and Alibaba for a chunk of India’s
fast growing digital payments market.
The Facebook-owned firm said it was launching Whatsapp Pay just hours after it
was given permission by the country’s payments regulator. India is the
messenger firm’s biggest market with some 400 million users. Whatsapp Pay —
which allows people to send and receive money through the messaging platform
–was launched in Brazil in June but was quickly suspended because of
competition objections raised by the central bank. Authorities have since
indicated that it will be allowed there. Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg said in
a video statement accompanying the India launch that the move would boost
“innovation” in payments. Zuckerberg also hailed India’s Unified Payments
Interface (UPI) which is used in the country of 1.3 billion people to manage
payment apps, with more than 140 Indian banks part of the network.
UPI is also used by Alphabet Inc’s
Google Pay, Walmart’s PhonePe and Alibaba-backed Paytm, which dominate India’s
digital payments market. “India is the first country to do anything like this,”
said Zuckerberg of the network. India’s UPI processed more than two billion
transactions in October and 1.8 billion the previous month. The stakes are high
for all the competitors as the digital payments market was worth about $75
billion in 2019 and is expected to rise past $500 billion by 2025.
WhatsApp has linked up with five
Indian lenders including State Bank of India, the largest public sector
institution, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Axis Bank and Jio Payments Bank to roll out
the service. The National Payments Corporation of India has put a cap of 20
million users of the Whatsapp service in the first phase. All must have a debit
card and a bank account. The American firm has been waiting for two years to
launch its service, testing pilot payments for about a million customers.
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