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          Home / China / Top Stories

          Banks set to lose out in online fight

          By Meng Jing | China Daily | Updated: 2015-02-26 07:25

          Services such as digital red envelopes forecast to attract more mobile payment users

          Banks appear poised to become the biggest victims of the red-hot battle between Chinese Internet giants to lure new mobile payment users, according to analysts and insiders.

          Spring Festival saw users fully embrace mobile technology to send digital red envelopes bearing cash gifts.

          Although the popularity of these digital services cannot hurt the traditional banking industry directly, such online products can increase the growth of mobile payment users in China, according to Wang Weidong, a senior analyst at iResearch Consulting Group.

          Wang said that with people becoming used to making payments through mobile devices, banks' consumer services are expected to be lost to third-party payment service providers, including Alipay and WeChat.

          Wang cited customer services including cash transfers from one account to another and settling credit card payments.

          According to WeChat, China's most widely used chatting app owned by Internet giant Tencent Holdings, 3.27 billion red envelopes were sent and received by WeChat users between Feb 18 and 23, with 1.01 billion of them exchanged online on Feb 18, Lunar New Year's Eve.

          Chinese traditionally send red envelopes, or monetary gifts, during Spring Festival to bring good luck.

          Alipay, China's largest online payment tool under an affiliate of Alibaba Group Holding, said more than 100 million of its users sent or received digital red envelopes during Spring Festival.

          By investing billions of yuan to encourage people to send red envelopes online, Internet firms such as Alipay, WeChat and Weibo Corp have enabled users to link their debit cards with online payment accounts - viewed widely as being the most difficult factor in luring mobile payment users.

          Qian Haili, an Internet finance analyst at the China E-Commerce Research Center, said the red envelopes battle launched by Internet firms successfully educated the mobile payments market in China during Spring Festival.

          "WeChat, a social app used by friends, relatives and colleagues, had a slight edge in the competition, but ultimately no one loses the battle except the banks," she said.

          Qian said the red envelope feature enabled Alipay to increase user loyalty during Spring Festival and also helped WeChat to gain new mobile users.

          "With more people becoming aware of the convenience of mobile payments and more offline merchants allowing them to pay through mobile devices in the future, the banks' market will be reduced," she said.

          According to the People's Bank of China, the central bank, mobile payments have grown strongly, with turnover rising by 134 percent year-on-year to 22.59 trillion yuan ($3.61 trillion) last year.

          Despite the potential threat to banks, Wang from iResearch said the impact might not be that big, as consumer banking only accounts for a small part of banks' business.

          The online phenomenon during Spring Festival also affected the three Chinese telecom giants' short-messaging business.

          Sending short messages to wish friends "Happy New Year" used to be a traditional activity during Spring Festival.

          However, Xinhua News Agency said China Telecom's short-messaging business fell by 31.97 percent year-on-year on Lunar New Year's Eve, the Spring Festival peak, with people busy sending and receiving red envelopes online instead.

          mengjing@chinadaily.com.cn

           

           

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