HomeNewsBusinessLevel 1, Level 2, Level 3: How NPCI plans to cap market share of apps like PhonePe and Google Pay

Level 1, Level 2, Level 3: How NPCI plans to cap market share of apps like PhonePe and Google Pay

The move is aimed at providing an opportunity for multiple players and mitigate systemic risks that could arise out of a few dominating the space.

March 27, 2021 / 08:15 IST
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The National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI), which operates digital payment rails such as UPI, IMPS, and BBPS, has shared details of how it plans to cap market share volumes of payment apps at 30 percent, a move aimed at providing an opportunity for multiple players and mitigate systemic risks that could arise out of a few dominating the space.

The volume cap for a Third-Party Application Provider or TPAP (payment apps like PhonePe, Google Pay, Amazon Pay etc) will be effective from January 1st, 2021. Existing TPAPs who exceed the volume cap as on 31st December 2020, will have a period of 2 years from the effective date to comply with the provisions. On the other hand, banks apps (Paytm, Axis etc) are exempted.

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A Paytm spokesperson said, "NPCI has taken a welcome decision that would help in the healthy growth of the whole ecosystem. This guideline ensures that UPI will not be dependent on any single player. Paytm has been the largest digital payments platform processing over 1.2 billion monthly transactions providing all digital payments method including wallet, UPI, cards and banking services."

The last year has given a huge fillip to digital payments in India, with the UPI platform clocking over two billion transactions a month. UPI payments are currently dominated by Walmart-owned PhonePe, which has a market share of over 40 percent and Google Pay which has 37-38 percent. The other key players include Paytm, Amazon Pay and WhatsApp Pay, which launched a few months ago. These norms in effect mean that PhonePe and Google Pay will have to bring down their market share over the next two years to comply with the 30 percent cap, even if this means turning away new users. The guidelines from NPCI come months after it announced the move to cap volumes, in November 2020.