Cashless transactions, currently accounts for 10 percent of total payments in Vietnam, are expected to increase to 50 percent in the next three years, according to Pham Thanh Duc, CEO of M-Service the operator of e-wallet MoMo.
In the next two to three years, cashless payment would be the main factor significantly shifting the Vietnamese economy, Duc said in an interaction with Deal Street Asia.
While fintech is sweeping through the traditional economy in Vietnam like everywhere else in the world, the vast majority of the local people remain unbanked or underbanked.
According to the World Bank, only 40 percent of Vietnamese adults had a bank account in 2017. MoMo is one of the local companies targeting at the other 60 percent.
Moreover, 90 percent of daily transactions are conducted in cash, while the rate goes up to 99 percent for transaction worth under VND100,000 (US$4.34), stated Dao Minh Tuan, deputy general director of state-run Vietcombank.
By the end of 2017, a survey by the World Bank revealed that the number of non-cash transactions over population in Vietnam was merely 4.9 percent, comparing to 26.1 percent in China, 59.7 percent in Thailand, and 89 percent in Malaysia.
As reported by Dealstreest Asia, the biggest challenge that MoMoone of the most popular digital wallets in Vietnam, is the current cash-based economy and not its competitors.
Founded in 2007, M-Service was the first company to build mobile money solutions and also the first to receive e-wallet license from the State Bank of Vietnam.
As of present, MoMo has received a total of $33 million funding from Goldman Sachs and Standard Chartered Private Equity before it announced another investment from Warburg Pincus earlier this year.
According to a plan on non-cash payment in Vietnam in the 20162020 period approved by the prime minister, by the end of 2020, the ratio of cash transactions will be reduced from 90 percent in 2016 to below 10 percent.
As of September 30, 2018, Vietnam has a total of 18,170 ATMs, up 4 percent against the end of 2016, and 294,500 point of sales (POS) installed nationwide, up 11.8 percent compared to the end of 2016, informed Pham Tien Dung, head of the SBV’s Payment Systems Department.
The country is on track to reach the target of having 300,000 POS by 2020, Dung added.