PayU Money wallet to shut, co to focus on credit play
PayU Money wallet to shut, co to focus on credit play
Bengaluru:
The Naspersbacked payments major PayU India is shutting down its mobile
wallet — PayUMoney — and will focus on its credit-based product LazyPay
to push its consumer facing business. Having bought out Citrus Pay in
2016, PayU India ended with two e-wallet entities, after the
acquisition. Earlier, Citrus put out an advertisement about transferring
its wallet license to PayU.
The development comes at a time when the domestic payments landscape
is going through many changes and stand-alone mobile wallet players are
finding it difficult to keep their business relevant in the light of the
new guidelines introduced by the RBI. The central bank has increased
the initial net worth required by wallet firms offering prepaid payment
instruments from Rs 2 crore to Rs 5 crore and made Know Your Customer
(KYC) mandatory for existing users who keep up to Rs 10,000 in wallets.
In an email sent to users, the company
said, “We would like to inform you that the PayUMoney wallet issued by
RBL will be closing its services on January 31, 2018. Although we are
restricting loading money to PayUMoney wallet from today (January 4)
onwards, you can still shop with your saved cards on your favourite
brands.” Users of the PayUMoney wallet can transfer the amount to their
bank accounts. PayU will continue to offer its m-wallet services through
Citrus even though it may not aggressively push it from now on.
Citrus Pay co-founder and PayU India MD
Jitendra Gupta confirmed the development. “We will keep the wallet live
as long as we see steady use cases but the focus is going to be on
credit through LazyPay,” he told TOI. PayU is also slated to bring
German credit startup Kreditech to India next financial year, Gupta
said. PayU and Citrus Pay operate primarily as an online payment gateway
for merchants.
After the merger, PayU has been trying
to sharpen its consumer-focused products to tap the growing digital
payments usage. LazyPay is part of the effort to draw up a bigger
consumer play. It essentially lets a consumer pay later for goods and
services purchased online. The company has been focusing on adding new
merchants across various sectors where instant credit can be a
plug-n-play arrangement. “We are seeing higher traction in this business
and majority of our users are transacting at least twice a month,”
Gupta said. A consumer can typically make the payment after about 15
days of purchase. ‘Pay Later’ option is being made available by even
e-commerce players like Flipkart as consumer credit is being seen an
integral way of shoring up transactions.
For consumer-focused payments players,
adhering to the RBI guidelines on KYC for their users has been a pain
point because only a very small base of consumers is compliant so far.
The m-wallet firms have to invest heavily to get the KYC done for users.
In fact, Paytm has committed $500 million for KYC compliance needs.
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