Study Predicts Two Billion Consumers to Use Mobile Wallet to Make a Payment in 2019PayPal Heads Mobile Wallet Rankings as Users Forecast to Pass 2 Billion Next YearQR Code Payments Soar in China but Face Challenges ElsewhereA new study from Juniper Research
has found that nearly 2.1 billion consumers worldwide will use a mobile
wallet to make a payment or send money in 2019, up by nearly 30% on the
1.6 billion recorded at the end of 2017. The study claimed that while contactless card payments were far more
prevalent than NFC mobile payments in many markets, leading wallets were
seeking to redress the balance by enabling both online and offline
options. Meanwhile, a number of wallets, including Orange in
France, have augmented payments offerings with banking services in a bid
to deliver a holistic financial portfolio for consumers.
PayPal, Alipay Top Juniper Leaderboard
The report, Mobile Wallets: Service Provider Analysis, Market Opportunities & Forecasts 2018-2022, also assessed the capabilities of, and prospects for, nearly 20 leading mobile wallets. It concluded that PayPal,
which has begun offering contactless payments instore in the US, had
the greatest opportunities to develop a converged wallet on a worldwide
basis, closely followed by China’s Alipay.
Leading Global Mobile Wallet Providers, Juniper Leaderboard, 2018
Security Issues Likely to Restrict QR Code Opportunities
The report also argued that while QR code-based instore payments had
seen quite astonishing levels of adoption in China, successful use cases
in Europe and North America were likely to be limited to ‘closed loop’
wallets such as those deployed by Starbucks and Walmart. According to the research, the greater security offered by NFC-based wallets, which include tokenised credentials and, increasingly, biometric authentication, make them more attractive to both consumers and merchants. As research author Dr. Windsor Holden observed, “QR code-based payments are likely to have significant growth in markets such as India and sub-Saharan Africa, due to the negligible implementation costs. However, their greater susceptibility to alteration to include viruses and phishing scams is likely to act as a major deterrent elsewhere”. Source: Juniper Research media announcement |