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Half Of India’s ATMs May Shut Down In Five Months, Warns Industry Body

Closure of ATMs will impact thousands of jobs and the financial inclusion efforts, says the industry body.

Customers use a Union Bank of India automated teller machine, as security guards talk in front of a Bank of Baroda ATM in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Adeel Halim/Bloomberg)
Customers use a Union Bank of India automated teller machine, as security guards talk in front of a Bank of Baroda ATM in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Adeel Halim/Bloomberg)

Regulatory changes are making it unviable to operate ATMs and may lead to the closure of half of the 2.38 lakh machines in the next five months, the Confederation of ATM Industry warned.

“Service providers may be forced to close down almost 1.13 lakh ATMs across the country by March 2019. These numbers include approximately one lakh off-site ATMs and a little over 15,000 white label ATMs,” Catmi said in a statement today. The industry has reached a “tipping point”.

Closure of the ATMs will impact thousands of jobs and also the financial inclusion efforts of the government, it said. A majority of the ATMs which can be shut down will be in the non-urban areas, it said, underlining that this can impact the financial inclusion efforts as beneficiaries use the machines to withdraw government subsidies.

The industry body said that recent regulatory changes, including those on hardware and software upgrades, coupled with mandates on cash management standards and the cassette swap method of loading cash, will make ATM operations unviable, resulting in the closure.

The new cash logistics and cassette swap method will alone result in costs of Rs 3,000 crore for the industry, it estimated. Catmi added the ATM industry, including managed service providers, brown-label ATM deployers and white-label ATM operators, is still reeling under the shock of demonetisation.

“The situation has further deteriorated now due to the additional compliance requirements that call for a huge cost outlay. The service providers do not have the financial means to meet such massive costs and may be forced to shut down these ATMs,” it said.

The only way to salvage the situation for the industry, according to the body, is if banks "step in to bear the load of the additional cost of compliances". "Unless ATM deployers are compensated by banks for making these investments, there is likely to be a scenario where contracts are surrendered, leading to large scale closure of ATMs," it said.

Revenues for providing ATMs as a service are not growing at all due to very low ATM interchange charges and ever-increasing costs, it said, adding that such changes in the landscape were not anticipated while signing contracts with the banks.

The white-label ATM operators have accumulated losses and the compliance costs can result in over 15,000 machines run by them shutting down, the industry body added.

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