Airtel's proposed tie-up with Kotak Mahindra Bank is the first formal partnership announced by an existing lender and a non-bank entity aspiring to get into the space. Kotak Mahindra Bank will have a 19.9 per cent stake in the venture.
Payments banks are aimed at encouraging savings and help with remittances, although RBI has put a cap on the stake which can be held by commercial banks in such entities.
"We can look at payment bank as an asset origination opportunity," Kotak Mahindra Bank (KMB) Joint Managing Director Dipak Gupta told PTI.
Payments bank is a "low value-high volume" business and the Kotak is looking at it as a new "product market opportunity".
More From This Section
Gupta said KMB is the second shareholder after Airtel in the venture. The bank is open to stake sale to investors like private equity funds, he added.
Airtel Money has been in the market as a prepaid payment instrument for a long time now. Gupta said that side of the business will continue independently, even if the venture gets payment bank licence.
Asked if the private sector lender will be comfortable lending to this segment, considering the small ticket size of loans, he said there is an opportunity in payment banks.
According to reports, mobile telephony companies like state-run BSNL, Vodafone and Telenor are looking to enter the fray, after the RBI came out with the final guidelines on establishing payment banks and small finance banks late last year.