Alternative payments dominate APAC e-commerce market

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Zhongshan,China-December 26, 2017:Chinese man checking the Alipay QR code on the mobile.QR code for payment and money transfering becomes very common and popular in China,fast and safe.

Alternative payment methods such as mobile and digital wallets are steadily displacing traditional payment methods such as cards, bank transfers and cash/cheques in the Asia-Pacific (APAC) e-commerce market, finds leading data and analytics company GlobalData.

The company forecasts the APAC e-commerce market to grow from $1.6 trillion in 2018 to $2.3 trillion in 2022. According to the latest Consumer Payments Insight Survey by GlobalData, alternative payments grew from 49 per cent in Q1 2017 to account for 51 per cent of the total e-commerce transaction value in APAC in Q1 2018. At the same time, payment cards, bank transfers, and cash/cheques accounted for 28 per cent, 15 per cent, and 6 per cent respectively.

Ravi Sharma, Senior Payments Analyst at GlobalData, commented, “Adoption of alternative payments in the APAC region has occurred well ahead of that in the West. Asia’s card infrastructure and payment behavior are not well entrenched and therefore alternative payment tools offer a welcome substitute to cash. Rising smartphone penetration coupled with a large unbanked population has also turned the region into a potential growth market for alternative payments.”

The alternative payments market in APAC is mainly driven by China, where alternative payment solutions accounted for 53 per centof the total e-commerce transaction value in Q1 2018. Alipay remains the most popular tool overall with a 41 per cent share, followed by WeChat Pay with 7.1 per cent. Similarly, alternative payment tools account for nearly one third of the total e-commerce transaction value in Australia in Q1 2018, with PayPal being the preferred solution with a share of 15.9 per cent.

In India, the major push towards electronic payments came from the government with the demonetization initiative implemented in November 2016 displacing cash to a large extent in favor of alternative payments in 2017. The share of alternative solutions, however, declined in 2018 partially as a result of the cash supply restoring to normalcy and the central bank’s regulation regarding stricter KYC procedures for digital wallet users.

“With Asian consumers keen to embrace digital payments, rising smartphone penetration and launch of new digital payment solutions are expected to further propel the growth of alternative payments in the region’s e-commerce market,” concludes Sharma.