Rising credit card spend indicates economic activity

Rising credit card spend indicates economic activity
x

Rising credit card spend indicates economic activity

Highlights

Credit card spend rises to `1.13 lakh cr in May from `1.05 lakh cr in Apr: RBI data

Mumbai: Credit card spending has crossed Rs1.13 lakh crore in May compared to Rs1.05 lakh crore in the previous month according to official data.

The month-on-month rise in spending through cards indicates a pick-up in economic activity. The latest data from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) showed that 7.68 crore credit card holders spent about Rs71,429 crore for buying online, while the amount was spent through swipes at Point of Sale (PoS) machines stood at Rs 42,266 crore in May. In terms of the number of transactions, credit card payments were marginally lower online at 11.5 crore against 12.2 crore offline or at PoS machines. The trend also indicates that cardholders are making higher value transactions online on an average than through offline means.

Credit card holders spent Rs65,652 crore for buying online, while the amount spent through Point of Sale (PoS) machines was Rs39,806 crore in April. As far as the debit card is concerned, the spending through PoS and online together was Rs 65,957 crore during the month. The spending through PoS was Rs 44,305 crore against e-commerce spending of Rs 21,104 crore through the debit card in May. During the month, there has been an addition of about 20 lakh credit cards. The number of the card was 7.51 crore in April.

HDFC Bank had the highest number of credit cards at 1.72 crore in May as the RBI lifted the ban on the issuance of new credit cards in March. In terms of credit cards, HDFC Bank was followed by the State Bank of India (1.41 crore) and ICICI Bank (1.33 crore) at the end of May 2022. The RBI had imposed a ban on HDFC Bank in December 2020, asking the lender to stop all launches of its upcoming digital business-generating activities and sourcing of new credit card customers after repeated outages at its data centre, which impacted operations.

Show Full Article
Print Article
Next Story
More Stories
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENTS