Mobile payments Competition between mobile payment solutions to grow fierce in 2H as new participants make their way in Long-term opportunity in monetizing transaction data seems attractive but too early to pick out winners from losers, with little differentiation Mobile payment services flourish: On 20 August, Samsung Electronics (005930 KS, Buy, KRW1,139,000, TP KRW1,700,000) launched its new mobile wallet service Samsung Pay in Korea after a month-long beta test. Samsung is surely not the only one tapping into this market. Thanks to easing regulatory constraints (use of public key certificates is no longer mandatory as of March) and impressive growth in m-commerce in Korea, various companies telcos, hardware vendors, and platform operators are exploring opportunities to play a role in the payments supply chain (see page 4 for a list of related companies). Jena Han* The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited, Seoul Securities +822 3706 8772 jenahan@kr.hsbc.com Chi Tsang* The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited +852 2822 2590 chitsang@hsbc.com.hk View HSBC Global Research at: http://www.research.hsbc.com *Employed by a non-us affiliate of HSBC Securities (USA) Inc, and is not registered/qualified pursuant to FINRA regulations Issuer of report: The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited, Seoul Securities Branch Disclaimer & Disclosures This report must be read with the disclosures and the analyst certifications in the Disclosure appendix, and with the Disclaimer, which forms part of it Near-term fees to be limited; bigger opportunities lies in transaction big data: We expect the short-term earnings impact from launching mobile wallets to be less than market anticipates, given small transaction fees (0.5% industry average). If a company can take its mobile wallet to offline, however, opportunities could grow significantly (Korea s offline credit card payment market is worth KRW600trn vs. KRW35trn for online). But ultimately, we think the real incremental revenue opportunity is likely to come through monetizing the rich data on consumer behaviour that mobile payments are expected to generate. As more transactions take place on mobile phones, payment companies will have the opportunity to leverage captured data for mobile marketing campaigns. No clear cut winner yet: We agree the rewards from emerging as the dominant mobile payment platform could be remarkable, but the industry is quickly becoming crowded, while we see little differentiation between the numerous services available. Looking at the digital wallet services provided by the companies under coverage, we think that Naver Pay (from Naver), Kakao Pay (from Daum Kakao), and Payco (from NHN Entertainment) have yet to demonstrate our criteria for a successful payment method (see page 5). Thus, we remain cautious on these payment businesses outlook.
A fight for the wallet On 20 August, Samsung Electronics launched its new mobile wallet service Samsung Pay in Korea, after a month-long beta test. Galaxy Note 5 and S6 Edge Plus owners in Korea will be able to use the service right off the bat, while S6 and S6 Edge owners can use it after a software update. Samsung is not the only one eyeing the mobile payment market. NHNE launched its own quick payment app Payco earlier this month with plans to spend a total KRW150bn in promoting the service to users and merchants over the next 12 months. Various telcos, retailers and platform operators have also shown keen interest in the business, and thus competition will likely rise in 2H. Globally, electronic payment transactions have increased at a rapid pace, thanks to the advance of IT technology and proliferation of smartphones. The number of global mobile payments is estimated to have grown at a five-year CAGR of 58% to 29m in 2014, while the transaction value reached USD325bn in the year, growing 6-fold in the past four years. Already, many global innovators such as Apple (Apple Pay), Amazon (Amazon Payment), E-bay (Paypal), Alibaba (Alipay) have tapped into mobile payment, aiming to lead the change in industry landscape. Global mobile payment market # transactions Global mobile payment transaction volume (bn) 50 40 30 20 10 0 Bank providers Non-bank providers ($bn) 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 53 101 163 235 325 431 564 721 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015E 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015E 2016E 2017E Source: CapGemini, HSBC Source: Korea Statistics Bureau, HSBC Korea, however, has been a late adapter in this phase, as mobile transactions have often been disrupted by Active X software and key public certificates. But things have begun to change. Thanks to easing regulatory constraints (use of public key certificates is no longer mandatory as of Mar) and impressive growth in mobile commerce, various companies are exploring opportunities to play a role in the payments supply chain. According to the Korea Statistics Bureau, e-commerce transactions grew 27% y-o-y to KRW4.4trn in June, showing the fastest growth in more than three years. While some of this may have been spurred by the MERS outbreak (people choosing to stay indoors rather than shopping in department stores or supermarkets), we think the rollout of new quick payment apps/services also played a role mobile shopping transactions grew 3 times as fast, up 80% y-o-y to KRW2.0trn. While m-commerce is still a fraction (6.7%) of total retail sales in Korea, we think the exponential growth is worth noting. 2
Korea s m-commerce growing rapidly e-commerce as a % of total retail sales, by country (Wtrn) 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 2007 2008 2009 2010 e-commerce (LHS) m-commerce (LHS) % mobile (RHS) 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015E 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% Brazil Russia 2008 2012 2016E France Germany China Global Australia Japan UK US Korea Source: Korea Online Shopping Association, HSBC Source: ComScore, Euromonitor, iresearch, U.S Census Bureau, HSBC What are the stakes? Fees from simple payment service to remain limited Because penetration of electronic payments is relatively high in Korea, we expect mobile payments to primarily replace traditional forms of electronic payments, i.e. mobile/online credit card transactions. Even if a single quick payment service provider monopolizes the mobile payment market, however, its net revenues is unlikely to exceed KRW80bn annually, based on the fact payment gateway (PG) operators usually collect 0.5% of payments as fees. A more reasonable assumption of its market share hitting 20-30% would equate with annual sales of KRW15-25bn. According to Bank of Korea, Korea s online credit card payment market is just KRW35trn, but the offline one is an enormous KRW600trn, and if easy payment apps provide offline services, it could lift related earnings by almost 20-fold. Customers can make offline payments with bar code scans or with near-field communication (NFC), but none have been successful thus far. Many Korean consumers find such service more complicated than credit card payments, and that few stores accept them along with a general lack of benefits. As for merchants, installing NFC readers costs around KRW200,000 and incurs sizeable fees along with a lack of popularity with customers. Consequently, Korea s mobile payment infrastructure remains nascent, which discourages consumer use. To improve this situation, industry leaders with sufficient capital and large customer bases will need to establish the needed infrastructure and offer promotions appealing enough to change consumer payment habits. We think NHNE may play an important role here, with its strategic focus more on the offline opportunity vs. mostly online for other Internet/software companies. Examining the payment service opportunity, using Kakao Pay as an example Mobile credit card Online credit card Offline credit card Offline credit +cash Market transaction value Wtrn 15 35 600 850 Kakao Pay market share 20% 20% 5% 5% Kakao Pay transaction value Wbn 3,000 7,000 30,000 42,500 Commission received 0.5% 0.5% 0.5% 0.5% Net commission revenue Wbn 15 35 150 213 Source: HSBC estimates 3
but ultimately, we see bigger value in utilising the transaction data Apart from transaction fees, we think the real incremental revenue opportunity is likely to come through monetizing the rich data on consumer behaviour that mobile payments are expected to generate. As more transactions take place on mobile phones, payment companies will have the opportunity to leverage such data for marketing campaigns. For instance, accumulated big data can be used to offer additional value/benefits to consumers (or merchants even) in order to drive a shift in their preferences. Many believe this value could come in the form of enhanced loyalty/rewards programs for consumers and targeted marketing solutions for retailers. The key players Various companies have taken notice of the opportunity at hand and are making significant investments to avoid being left behind. LG U Plus has been among the first movers the company launched Paynow in end-2013. According to LG, it has contracts with 100,000 merchants and had over 3m registered users as of end-july. During its 2Q15 results call, management shared its plans to expand this user base to 5m by year-end. Additionally, the company has broadened its reach from online to offline by introducing Paynow Touch in July. Apart from LG U Plus, e-bay Korea (Smile Pay), YAP (Yap), Daum Kakao (Kakao Pay) also launched their own payment solutions in 2014, followed by SK Planet (Syrup Pay), Naver (Naver Pay), Shinsegae (SSG Pay) and NHN Entertainment (Payco) this year. Retailers such as Lotte Group and Hyundai Department Store Group have also expressed interest in the business and plans to launch their own payment solutions by year-end. Quick payment solutions in Korea Company Name of service Time of launch LG U Plus Paynow Nov 2013 e-bay Korea Smile Pay Apr 2014 YAP Yap Jun 2014 Daum Kakao Kakao Pay Sep 2014 SK Planet Syrup Pay Apr 2015 Naver Naver Pay Jun 2015 LG U Plus Paynow Touch Jul 2015 Shinsegae SSG Pay Jul 2015 NHN Entertainment Payco Aug 2015 Samsung Electronics Samsung Pay Aug 2015 LG Electronics (planned) Android Pay Oct 2015 Lotte Group (planned) - 2015 HDS Group (planned) - 2015 Source: Company data, HSBC 4
Implications That said, we would suggest investors refrain from getting overly excited on a single player s prospects in the business as 1) most payment services are still less than a year into launch (it is still quite early to judge their long-term potential on their track record to date); 2) there appears to be very little differentiation between the many options available (users are unlikely to be sticky); and 3) most have quite aggressive marketing plans laid out for the next few quarters. Collectively, we think at the individual company level, user acquisition costs should rise significantly, while the potential income will be very small, and thus negatively impact overall earnings. While bulls may point to longer-term prospects, we think it is quite early to find a clear cut winner at this juncture subscription for individual apps will likely rise as companies give out aggressive incentives to customers/merchants, but whether these users will stick around will be a different story. We think several points will need to be addressed beforehand a successful new payment method needs to offer basic attributes that make it attractive to the stakeholders in the payments ecosystem. We focus on consumers and merchants as the most important stakeholders, as we believe they will ultimately drive adoption of any new payment methods. Ease of use: We think the key to mobile payments is ease of use (according to BI Intelligence, 68% of online shoppers on PC-based websites and 86% of those on their mobile apps abandon their online shopping carts when they get to the payment stage). So, the less the customer has to think about it, the better. Most quick payment apps make the mobile payment process simpler and easier by storing credit card information and eliminating the personal identification process. Ubiquity: For consumers to adopt a new payment method, it must be accepted widely at merchants where a consumer makes the majority of his/her purchases. Otherwise, customers will likely switch back to old habits of using credit cards, which is more widely accepted. For merchants to adopt a new payment method, it must be widely available to consumers. Without enough users, it will be hard for retailers to justify the investments that need to be made to be compatible with the new payment technology. Various entities thus far, including smartphone OEMs, mobile network operators and banks and credit card companies, have failed to gain meaningful traction as they are only available to a closed group of customers. Security: Many users pick concerns on security as the number one reason for not using quick payment solutions. Thus, consumer protection issues related to unauthorized or fraudulent use of a consumer s payment credentials are of primary importance to these services. We believe there is an expectation that any new payment method should provide adequate liability protection to consumers at a level that is at least on par with, if not better than, what is offered by existing credit card schemes. Looking at the digital wallet services provided by the companies under coverage, we come to a conclusion that all three Naver Pay from Naver (035420 KS, Buy, CP KRW521,000, TP KRW590,000), Kakao Pay from Daum Kakao (035720 KS, Reduce, CP KRW125,200, TP KRW120,000), and Payco from NHN Entertainment (181710 KS, Hold, CP KRW52,800, TP KRW55,000) have yet to demonstrate our criteria for a successful payment method. Thus, we remain cautious on these payment businesses outlook at this time. 5
Disclosure appendix Certification The following analyst(s), economist(s), and/or strategist(s) who is(are) primarily responsible for this report, certifies(y) that the opinion(s) on the subject security(ies) or issuer(s) and/or any other views or forecasts expressed herein accurately reflect their personal view(s) and that no part of their compensation was, is or will be directly or indirectly related to the specific recommendation(s) or views contained in this research report: Jena Han and Chi Tsang Important disclosures Equities: Stock ratings and basis for financial analysis HSBC believes an investor's decision to buy or sell a stock should depend on individual circumstances such as the investor's existing holdings, risk tolerance and other considerations and that investors utilise various disciplines and investment horizons when making investment decisions. Ratings should not be used or relied on in isolation as investment advice. Different securities firms use a variety of ratings terms as well as different rating systems to describe their recommendations and therefore investors should carefully read the definitions of the ratings used in each research report. Further, investors should carefully read the entire research report and not infer its contents from the rating because research reports contain more complete information concerning the analysts' views and the basis for the rating. From 23rd March 2015 HSBC has assigned ratings on the following basis: The target price is based on the analyst s assessment of the stock s actual current value, although we expect it to take six to 12 months for the market price to reflect this. When the target price is more than 20% above the current share price, the stock will be classified as a Buy; when it is between 5% and 20% above the current share price, the stock may be classified as a Buy or a Hold; when it is between 5% below and 5% above the current share price, the stock will be classified as a Hold; when it is between 5% and 20% below the current share price, the stock may be classified as a Hold or a Reduce; and when it is more than 20% below the current share price, the stock will be classified as a Reduce. Our ratings are re-calibrated against these bands at the time of any 'material change' (initiation or resumption of coverage, change in target price or estimates). Upside/Downside is the percentage difference between the target price and the share price. Prior to this date, HSBC s rating structure was applied on the following basis: For each stock we set a required rate of return calculated from the cost of equity for that stock s domestic or, as appropriate, regional market established by our strategy team. The target price for a stock represented the value the analyst expected the stock to reach over our performance horizon. The performance horizon was 12 months. For a stock to be classified as Overweight, the potential return, which equals the percentage difference between the current share price and the target price, including the forecast dividend yield when indicated, had to exceed the required return by at least 5 percentage points over the succeeding 12 months (or 10 percentage points for a stock classified as Volatile*). For a stock to be classified as Underweight, the stock was expected to underperform its required return by at least 5 percentage points over the succeeding 12 months (or 10 percentage points for a stock classified as Volatile*). Stocks between these bands were classified as Neutral. *A stock was classified as volatile if its historical volatility had exceeded 40%, if the stock had been listed for less than 12 months (unless it was in an industry or sector where volatility is low) or if the analyst expected significant volatility. However, stocks which we did not consider volatile may in fact also have behaved in such a way. Historical volatility was defined as the past month's average of the daily 365-day moving average volatilities. In order to avoid misleadingly frequent changes in rating, however, volatility had to move 2.5 percentage points past the 40% benchmark in either direction for a stock's status to change. 6
Rating distribution for long-term investment opportunities As of 20 August 2015, the distribution of all ratings published is as follows: Buy 42% (30% of these provided with Investment Banking Services) Hold 43% (28% of these provided with Investment Banking Services) Sell 15% (19% of these provided with Investment Banking Services) For the purposes of the distribution above the following mapping structure is used during the transition from the previous to current rating models: under our previous model, Overweight = Buy, Neutral = Hold and Underweight = Sell; under our current model Buy = Buy, Hold = Hold and Reduce = Sell. For rating definitions under both models, please see Stock ratings and basis for financial analysis above. HSBC and its affiliates will from time to time sell to and buy from customers the securities/instruments (including derivatives) of companies covered in HSBC Research on a principal or agency basis. s, economists, and strategists are paid in part by reference to the profitability of HSBC which includes investment banking revenues. Whether, or in what time frame, an update of this analysis will be published is not determined in advance. For disclosures in respect of any company mentioned in this report, please see the most recently published report on that company available at www.hsbcnet.com/research. Additional disclosures 1 This report is dated as at. 2 All market data included in this report are dated as at close 19 August 2015, unless otherwise indicated in the report. 3 HSBC has procedures in place to identify and manage any potential conflicts of interest that arise in connection with its Research business. HSBC's analysts and its other staff who are involved in the preparation and dissemination of Research operate and have a management reporting line independent of HSBC's Investment Banking business. Information Barrier procedures are in place between the Investment Banking and Research businesses to ensure that any confidential and/or price sensitive information is handled in an appropriate manner. 7
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Global Telecoms, Media & Technology Research Team Global Stephen Howard, Global Sector Head +44 20 7991 6820 stephen.howard@hsbcib.com Europe Nicolas Cote-Colisson +44 20 7991 6826 nicolas.cote-colisson@hsbcib.com Antonin Baudry +33 1 56 52 43 25 antonin.baudry@hsbc.com Christopher Johnen +49 211 910 2852 christopher.johnen@hsbc.de Dominik Klarmann, CFA +49 211 910 2769 dominik.klarmann@hsbc.de Sebastian Grabert +49 211 910 1096 sebastian.grabert@hsbc.de Luigi Minerva +44 20 7991 6928 luigi.minerva@hsbcib.com Olivier Moral +33 1 5652 4322 olivier.moral@hsbc.com Adam Fox-Rumley +44 20 7991 6819 adam.fox-rumley@hsbcib.com Dhiraj Saraf, CFA +91 80 3001 3773 dhirajsaraf@hsbc.co.in Americas Christopher A Recouso +1 212 525 2279 christopher.a.recouso@us.hsbc.com Sunil Rajgopal +1 212 525 0267 sunilrajgopal@us.hsbc.com Global Emerging Markets (GEMs) Hervé Drouet +44 20 7991 6827 herve.drouet@hsbcib.com Emerging Europe, Middle East & Africa (EMEA) Franca Di Silvestro Head of Research, SA +27 11 676 4223 franca.disilvestro@za.hsbc.com Bülent Yurdagül +90 212 376 46 12 bulentyurdagul@hsbc.com.tr Asia Yogesh Aggarwal +91 22 2268 1246 yogeshaggarwal@hsbc.co.in Vivek Gedda +91 22 6164 0693 vivekgedda@hsbc.co.in Neale Anderson +852 2996 6716 neale.anderson@hsbc.com.hk Joyce Chen +8862 6631 2862 joycechchen@hsbc.com.tw Luis Hilado +65 6658 0607 luishilado@hsbc.com.sg Jenny Lai Head of Research, Taiwan +8862 6631 2860 jennylai@hsbc.com.tw Lionel Lin +65 6658 0624 lionelylin@hsbc.com.sg Carrie Liu +8862 6631 2864 carriecfliu@hsbc.com.tw Steven C Pelayo +852 2822 4391 stevenpelayo@hsbc.com.hk Ricky Seo +822 37068777 rickyjuilseo@kr.hsbc.com Rajiv Sharma +91 22 2268 1239 rajivsharma@hsbc.co.in Puneet Garg +91 22 6164 0685 puneetgarg@hsbc.co.in Jerry Tsai +8862 6631 2863 jerrycytsai@hsbc.com.tw Chi Tsang +852 2822 2590 chitsang@hsbc.com.hk Rajesh Raman +65 6658 0608 rajeshraman@hsbc.com.sg Yolanda Wang +8862 6631 2867 yolandayywang@hsbc.com.tw Tse-yong Yao +8862 6631 2861 tse-yongyao@hsbc.com.tw Jena Han +822 3706 8772 jenahan@kr.hsbc.com Will Cho +822 3706 8765 will.cho@kr.hsbc.com John Liu +852 2822 4392 john.q.liu@hsbc.com.hk Alice Cai Associate +852 2996 6584 alice.y.cai@hsbc.com.hk Louis Pang Associate +852 2914 9934 louis.w.h.pang@hsbc.com.hk Kenneth Shim Associate +822 3706 8779 kennyshim@kr.hsbc.com David Huang Associate +886 2 66312865 david.s.huang@hsbc.com.tw Specialist Sales Gareth Hollis +44 20 7991 5124 gareth.hollis@hsbcib.com Tarun Viswanathan +44 20 7991 7843 tarun.viswanathan@hsbc.com Kubilay Yalcin +49 211 9104880 kubilay.yalcin@hsbc.de Myles McMahon +852 2822 4676 mylesmacmahon@hsbc.com.hk