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05 Jul 2021

Get Ready to Ride the NCMC Wave 

Over the last decade, India’s financial regulator has taken a series of measures to modernize the country’s payments infrastructure to drive a connected digital payments economy and promote economic and social inclusion. One such recent initiative is the cashless fare system powered by National Common Mobility Card (NCMC) or ‘One Nation One Card’, which will work across all public transit systems and day-to-day retail payments systems in the country. 

Transit forms an approximate 10 per cent and 15 per cent of household monthly expenditure. Considering the recurring nature of transit transactions, modernising transit payments presents an opportunity to attract new customers to the financial services ecosystem and deepen adoption of digital payments. Currently, most transit operators deploy payment systems that are closed loop in nature. The fragmentation and the lack of interoperability in ticketing systems impedes broad acceptance by consumers. The replacement of non-standardized, closed-loop payment modes with an EMV-based open loop contactless payments system National Common Mobility Cards (NCMCs) will provide increased mobility and a seamless travel experience to customers.

The stored value on this wallet allows passengers to initiate tap and pay contactless fare payments on all bus, metro and rail services across the country using their debit prepaid or credit card or a single transit smartcard. Transit-specific purses such as monthly passes, season tickets can be activated on the card’s service feature area.

The total addressable opportunity is significant. Currently 62 state road transport undertaking units (SRTU), which have more than 1.6 million buses, transport an approximate 70 million people daily. The suburban railways of Mumbai, Kolkata and Chennai contribute to more than 50% of all railway passengers with the daily ridership of 13.5 million. Ten live metro services report a daily ridership of 4.6 million. Another 14 metro services are present at various stages of implementation. 

From an issuer’s perspective, NCMC enables issuers to move into new markets and customer segments example blue collar workers who use public transit and are heavily reliant on cash. It optimises operating costs through cost savings on managing multiple card programs. It also creates the potential to earn fee revenue on non-transit usage and locks-in cardholders by supporting a range of payments, especially prepaid cardholder segments and infrequent users of public transit. 

Beyond the benefits of offering a pervasive payment option, to capitalise on the revenue potential and differentiate offerings, financial institutions would need to rapidly layer on additional, innovative use cases early-on that create cardholder stickiness. Added value capabilities include: 

  • Establish Last Mile Connectivity – Drive the usage of smart cards by introducing complementary ride-share and micro-mobility services. As an example, enable taxi service payments for last mile travel using the same card app
  • Support New Form Factors – Satisfy customer demand for instant digital issuance and embedded payments on any device. For instance, Singapore has enabled NFC fitness trackers with transit cards to pay for public transport
  • Tap into New Payment Flows – An approximate 60 per cent of India’s population is expected to live in smart cities. With growing urban concentration, issuers need to position NCMC as a smart city card and extend use cases by enabling customer make citizen payments, taxes, use cards within gated urban communities, receive real-time information on parking spaces, improves customer engagement levels
  • Incentivise Usage  – Exploit customer transactional insights to offer geolocation and time-bound offers and incentivize cardholders to use the card for all payments, including transit and retail 
  • Build Open Services Ecosystem – Partner with third party service providers to build services ecosystem by offering allied services such as travel insurance, hotel bookings for inter-city travel
  • Support Ride Now Pay Later Services – Extend deferred payment options to cardholders based on segment and transacting patterns to keep dormancy rates in check
  • Extend Spend Management-- Provide app-based cards support for managing card accounts as well as for making payments 

At the backend, issuers need to have the right partner and a robust, efficient technology backbone to manage and issue physical and virtual transit cards. The selection criterion needs to be aligned to the future roadmap of the issuer and would span multiple dimensions including: 

  • Unified platform for launching any card variant, open-loop prepaid + transit, open-loop debit-transit, credit + transit -- reducing overall cost of ownership 
  • Flexible API-driven architecture to launch new card programs, integrate with bank internal systems as well as third party applications
  • Support for added value capabilities including spend alerts, spend controls, expense management, loyalty applications
  • Domain experience in implementing new capabilities whilst ensuring minimum modification in the existing card management system of the bank 
  • Holistic services approach in helping financial institutions build an open issuance platform, backed by technology solutions such as Big Data, cloud technology, and the Internet of Things for shaping sustainable and interconnected, networked societies of the future 

NCMC will have a transformative impact on payments and presents a significant growth to all transit ecosystem constituents -- FinTech players, financial institutions, transport operators and the government. As a global payments technology provider, FSS can provide a complete NCMC compliant solution spanning card issuance, transaction acquiring and automated fare collection management to help financial institutions capitalise on this opportunity.

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