Paytm, which expects to touch Rs 10,000 crore in deposits in the next three years, wants to launch India’s first payments bank by the end of this financial year.
The company is counting on its mobile wallet experience to give it a clear advantage over established business houses such as Reliance Industries,
Paytm, the youngest licensee,
"We have sorted payment on wallet and we want to leverage that. We will drive and scale up payments business even today, while others have to build payments business," co-founder
Paytm has over 104 million mobile wallets and expects that to touch 150 million by March 2016. "We have an edge on timeline. The next year or a year and half, when these companies get started, we will still be playing the business," Sharma added.
The above mentioned entities will take deposits, convey remittances and dispense payments to recipients, making them ideal for migrant workers who need to send money home. They can't lend to their customers, though. The business potential from serving millions of unbanked Indians to further the financial inclusion initiative of the government and the Reserve Bank had attracted most of the top business houses. Sharma said telcos such as Vodafone, Airtel and Idea, which have experience in mobile remittances businesses, will start on a near-equal footing.
"We don't do remittances, but our capability is in merchant transactions and personto- person payments," he said. He was confident that Paytm will be the first off the lock with its payments bank. "We want to be the first payments bank in the country. We have technology on our side, simple organisational structure to create, we have people recruitment on, which is critical, as we speak."
Paytm, which officially got the licence last Monday, is scouting for a CEO with financial services and consulting background. Sharma is ooking for someone with a fresh outlook rather than someone with a banking background who is likely to bring in a traditional approach. The company is hiring 100 staff a month to kick-start its new business.
By the end of March, Alibaba Group-backed One97 Communications, he holding company of Paytm's businesses, will have streamlined its operations into payments bank and wallets, commerce and marketing, Sharma said. For its mobile commerce business, which is an online marketplace, Paytm expects to touch a gross merchandising value (GMV) of 1 lakh crore by 2020 from 12,000 crore currently. GMV is a measure of the maximum price of goods and services sold on a company’s platform and are higher than actual revenue.
Sharma is now focused on the payments bank. He holds 51% in Paytm Payment Bank, One97 Communications owns 39% and 10% is held by a subsidiary of One97 and Sharma. After another round of expected fund infusion of about $400 million by
Sharma said the payments bank doesn't need an equity relationship with a financial services firm. Rather, it needs banks as partners because customers would like to feed into a main bank due to restrictions on what payments banks can offer.
(Image: Indiatimes)