UNIT V
INTRODUCTION TO
CRYPTOCURRENCI
      ES
 WHAT ARE CRYPTOCURRENCIES?
A cryptocurrency (or “crypto”) is a digital currency that
can be used to buy goods and services, but uses an online
ledger with strong cryptography to secure online
transactions
https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/what-is-a-cryptocurrency/
      FEATURES OF CRYPTOCURRENCIES
• Decentralization: Not controlled by a central authority or government.
• Security: Use cryptographic techniques to protect against fraud and hacking.
• Transparency: Most cryptocurrencies operate on a public ledger called a
  blockchain
• Anonymity: They offer a high degree of privacy and can allow users to transact
  without revealing their identity.
• Limited Supply: Cryptocurrencies are designed with a limited supply to
  maintain their value and prevent inflation.
• Global Accessibility: Cryptocurrencies can be accessed and used from anywhere
  in the world
• Low Transaction Fees: Compared to traditional banking and financial
  institutions, cryptocurrencies generally have lower transaction fees
• Programmability: They can be programmed to execute auto-debit
  ORIGIN
• Bitcoin was launched in 2009
• An individual or group known by the pseudonym “Satoshi Nakamoto”
  created Bitcoin
• Exact identity is still unknown
• To this day, Bitcoin remains the most-used, valuable and popular
• Along with Bitcoin, other alternative cryptocurrencies with varying degrees
  of functions and specifications have been created.
• Some are iterations of bitcoin while others have been created from the ground
  up
• As of March 2021, there were over 18.6 million bitcoins in circulation with a
  total market cap of around $927 billion.
OTHER POPULAR
CRYPTOCURRENCIES A.K.A
ALTCOINS
• Litecoin
• Peercoin
• Namecoin
• Ethereum
• Cardana
MECHANISM/MODUS OPERANDI
                FOR
   FOR
                             INVESTMENT
PURCHASES
                                  S
BLOCKCHAIN: PLATFORM POSES    BLOCKCHAIN: NEEDS TO BE
     CRYPTIC PUZZLES               DECRYPTED
  MINING: MINERS VALIDATE
                              HARD FORK: A PATHWAY IS
 PUZZLES USING SPECIALISED
                             DECIPHERED TO CREATECOINS
        TECHNIQUES
                              CONTINUUM: NEW PATHWAYS
 GENERATION: EVERY PUZZLE
                                FOLLOW THE FIRST AND
 UNBLCKED GENERATES COINS
                             CONTINUE TO GENERATE COINS
 USERS CAN OBTAIN THROUGH
EXCHANGES/BROKERS AND USE
                             USERS CAN OBTAIN THROUGH
   FOR RETAIL PURPOSES BY
                             EXCHANGES AND TRADE FOR
    STORING THEM IN HOT
                                      PROFITS
   (ONLINE)/SOFT (OFFLINE)
  REGULATIONS ON CRYPTO IN INDIA
• Indian crypto exchanges (WazirX, CoinDCX) will have to report
  suspicious activities to the Financial Intelligence Unit India (FIU-IND).
• This action aligns with the worldwide trend of mandating that digital asset
  platforms adhere to anti-money laundering protocols.
• Crypto assets, Web3 and other virtual assets are new and evolving sectors
  and need international collaboration in framing effective legislation.
• Budget 2022-23 introduced a 30% tax on income from cryptocurrency and
  other virtual assets
• A 1% tax deduction at source (TDS) was also introduced on transactions
  in similar assets above a threshold limit. Gifts in crypto and digital assets
  were also taxed.
https://byjus.com/free-ias-prep/crypto-trade-under-money-laundering-laws/
    ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES
    OF CRYPTOCURRENCY
Advantages
• Funds transfer between two parties will be easy without the need of third party like credit/debit cards or
  banks
• It is a cheaper alternative compared to other online transactions
• Payments are safe and secured and offer an unprecedented level of anonymity
• Modern cryptocurrency systems come with a user “wallet” or account address which is accessible only by a
  public key and pirate key. The private key is only know to the owner of the wallet
• Funds transfer are completed with minimal processing fees.
Disadvantages
• The almost hidden nature of cryptocurrency transactions makes them easy to be the focus of illegal
  activities such as money laundering, tax-evasion and possibly even terror-financing
• Payments are not irreversible
• Cryptocurrencies are not accepted everywhere and have limited value elsewhere
• There is concern that cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin are not rooted in any material goods. Some research,
  however, has identified that the cost of producing a Bitcoin, which requires an increasingly large amount of
  energy, is directly related to its market price.
  FINTECH
• Fintech, or Financial Technology, refers to the technological innovation
  in the design and delivery of financial services and products.
• Technology in finance continues to evolve; advancements include the
  use of Big Data, artificial intelligence (AI), and machine learning
• All these innovations aim to evaluate investment opportunities, optimize
  portfolios, and mitigate risks.
https://
www.researchgate.net/publication/374418984_pptFintech_trends_and_ch
allenges
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN FINANCIAL
TECHNOLOGY
                                FINTECH IN INDIA
• Regulatory FRAMEWORK:
    •   Ministry of Finance
    •   RBI
    •   International Financial Services Centre Authority Act, 2019
    •   India Stack: Aadhar, UPI, Bharat Bill Payments, GSTN
    •   Inter-Ministerial Steering Committee on FinTech
    •   Account Aggregator Framework (AA)
• Infrastructure:
    •   $50 Bn – 2021, $150 Bn in 2025
    •   2000+ FinTech companies
    •   3rd Largest FinTech economy in the world
    •   46% of FinTech transactions globally-2022
• Benefits
    •   Financial Inclusion
    •   Major Economic driver
    •   Seamless customer journeys
    •   Cybersecurity
    •   Skilled workforce
NPCI
• NPCI is an umbrella organisation for all retail
  payment systems in India. It was set up in 2008
  with the support & guidance from Reserve Bank
  of India (RBI) & Indian Banks Association
  (IBA), in accordance with the provisions of the
  Payment and Settlement Systems Act, (2007). A
  registered company under Section 8 of the
  Companies Act, 2013.
 Products & Services offered by NPCI
• Unified Payments Interface (UPI) Unique payment solution which empowers a recipient
  to initiate the payment request from a smartphone.
• Immediate Payment Service (IMPS) A 24X7, real time, cost effective, independent
  channel, retail payment service
• RuPay Robust card scheme designed to offer payment products with superior features &
  processes specifically designed to cater to diverse consumer needs.
• *99# USSD based mobile banking platform that makes banking services accessible to all the
  bank account holders on their mobile phones.
• National Automated Clearing House Centralised payment system developed to
  consolidate multiple ECS systems
• Aadhaar Enabled Payment System Bank led model which allows online financial
  inclusion transactions at micro-ATMs
• e-KYC Electronic way of conducting authentic & real time KYC of a customer using
  Aadhaar authentication.
• National Financial Switch Facilitates routing of ATM transactions through inter-
UPI
• UPI is a payment system developed by the National
  Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) that allows users to
  make instant bank-to-bank transfers using a mobile device. It
  is a digital payment system that enables users to transfer
  money between bank accounts without the need for
  traditional banking infrastructure such as cards, point of sale
  (PoS) machines or ATM's. It facilitates 'virtual payment
  address' as a payment identifier for sending & collecting
  money & works on single click 2 factor authentication.
PAYMENT BANKS
• Payments bank is a new form of bank-created under the
  purview of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). Payments banks
  can accept a limited deposit of ₹100,000 per customer and
  may be increased further. These banks cannot lend loans
  and issue credit cards but they can offer services such as net
  banking, ATM cards, debit banks and Mobile Banking.
ORIGIN OF PAYMENT BANKS
• 2013 - The Committee on Comprehensive Financial Services for Small Business and Low-Income
  Households
• 2015 – Grant of licenses under Banking Regulation Act, 1949
ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS FOR PAYMENT
BANKS
•   Minimum capital requirement is 100 crore
•   For the first five years, the stake of the promoter should remain at least 40%
•   25% of its branches must be in the unbanked rural area
•   Eligible entities to function as payment banks are:
     • Non-banking prepaid instrument issuers
     • Mobile telecom companies
     • Non-Banking Finance Companies (NBFC)
     • Corporate business correspondents
     • Co-operatives and
     • Supermarket chains
E-WALLETS
• A E-Wallet/mobile wallet is a way to carry cash in digital format
• Credit card or debit card information can be linked in mobile device to
  mobile wallet application or money can be transferred online to
  mobile wallet.
• An individual's account is required to be linked to the digital wallet to
  load money in it.
• Most banks have their e-wallets and some private companies.
  e.g. Paytm, Freecharge, Mobikwik, Oxigen, mRuppee, Airtel Money,
  Jio Money, SBI Buddy, itz Cash, Citrus Pay, Vodafone M-Pesa, Axis
  Bank Lime, ICICI Pockets, SpeedPay etc.
Services Offered
• Balance Enquiry                       Funds Transfer limit:
• Passbook/ Transaction history         For Users
• Add money                                No KYC - Rs 20,000/ month
   • Bank A/c                              (revised from Rs 10,000 to current
   • All Cards                             till 30th Dec. 2016)
                                           Full KYC – Rs 1,00,000/- month
   • Cash-In
                                        For Merchants
• Accept Money                             Self-Declared - Rs 50,000/ month
• Pay money                                With KYC – Rs 1,00,000/- month
   • Another wallet (mobile no.) with
     same provider
   • Pay merchant
   • Bar Code reader
• Manage Profile
• Notifications
PAYMENT GATEWAYS
• A payment gateway is a digital service that facilitates
  secure and encrypted transactions between a merchant
  and their bank and/or processor after a purchase is
  made. In other words, it’s the bridge that enables the
  transfer of funds from the customer's preferred
  payment method to the merchant.
• Eg: Razor Pay, JusPay
PROCESS OF PAYMENTS VIA
       FINTECH
   DIFFERENCES BETWEEN PAYMENT
  GATEWAY AND PAYMENT PROCESSOR
 Basis of
                        Payment Gateway                               Payment Processor
Distinction
              Collects, encrypts and verifies an online   Communicates between the merchant, issuing
 Meaning
                customer's credit card information         bank and acquiring bank to transfer funds
                Acts as an online point-of-sale (POS)       Acts as an in-person point-of-sale (POS)
Touch point
               terminal to make sure the card is valid       terminal to make sure the card is valid
                 Intermediary between business and         Intermediary between business, customer's
 Channel
                             customer                              bank and merchant's bank
                 Must be used in conjunction with a
 Function                                                     Can be used as a stand-alone service
                        payment processor
              Best for: e-commerce or card-not-present
Suitability                                                   Best for: POS, in-person transactions
                             transactions
                           A COMPARISON
Payment Service        Payment          Payment            Payment         Payment Banks
   Provider            Gateway          Processor          Network
    Stores card       Verifies and        Verifies         Stores and      Banking services
 information and        passes on     transactions at    processes card    except loans and
    acts as link     information to  POS and approves     information        credit cards
between user and   payment processor     payments
  bank. (Gpay).     at POS. Verifies
   Also acts as      and processes
     Payment          payments in
   Processor for         online
    merchants.        transactions.
  BHIM, Gpay,     RazorPay, JusPay,   PayPal, Stripe    Visa, MasterCard   India Post, Bharti
    PayTM,           CCAvenue                                                    Airtel
PhonePay, PayPal,
     Stripe
MICROFINANCE
• Microfinance is a banking service provided to low-income
  individuals or groups who otherwise would have no other
  access to financial services.
• Microfinance allows people to take on reasonable small
  business loans safely, in a manner that is consistent with
  ethical lending practices.
ORIGIN OF MICROFINANCE
• 18th Century-Jonathan Swift-Irish Loan Fund System
• Popularity in 1970s
• Bangladesh-1983-Grameen Bank-Mohammed Yunus-
  Inspired Regional Rural Banks (RRBs)
        Micro Finance Institutions (MFIs)
• MFIs are financial companies that provide small loans to people
  who do not have any access to banking facilities.
• In India, all loans that are below Rs.1 lakh can be considered as
  microloans.
• Different types of MFIs: NGOs, SHGs, Banks etc.
• Non Banking Finance Company (NBFC)-MFIs in India are
  regulated by The Non-Banking Financial Company-Micro
  Finance Institutions (Reserve Bank) Directions, 2011 of
  the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).
        Aspect                                        Banks                                                       NBFCs
                            Regulated by the RBI under the Banking Regulations Act,
    Regulatory Act                                                                         Regulated by the RBI under the Companies Act, 1956
                                                    1949
       Functions                     Offer a wide range of banking services.                    Engage in lending and investment activities.
  Deposit Acceptance                     Accept deposits from the public.                  Do not accept demand deposits from the general public.
   Issue of Cheques                         Issue and accept cheques.                                 Cannot issue or accept cheques.
   Banking License                    Require a banking license to operate.                     Do not require a banking license to operate.
                            Have the power to create credit through fractional reserve
    Credit Creation                                                                                   Cannot create credit like banks.
                                                    banking.
    Clearing House
                                       Are members of the clearing house.                             No clearing house membership.
     Membership
Government Guarantee        Government insurance schemes may guarantee deposits.                   No government guarantee on deposits.
                              Access to various facilities the RBI provides, such as
Access to RBI Facilities                                                                                No access to such facilities.
                               borrowing money and access to payment systems.
                           Mandated to allocate a certain percentage of their lending to
Priority Sector Lending                                                                    Not mandated to follow priority sector lending norms.
                                priority sectors as per regulatory requirements.
                         REGULATIONS
A MFI in India is registered as one of the following –
• NGOs comprising of Societies and Trusts
• Cooperatives
• Section 8 Companies
• For profit NBFCs
• NBFC MFIs
• In case a company wishes to register itself as an NBFC-MFI, certain
  specifications by the RBI must be met. A minimum of 75% of the NBFC-
  MFI’s loan portfolio must have been originated for the purpose of activities
  that generate income. In addition to this, 85% of total assets must be
  qualifying assets.
MUDRA (Micro Units Development & Refinance
                Agency)
• Pradhan Mantri MUDRA Yojana (PMMY) is a scheme launched by the
  Hon’ble Prime Minister on April 8, 2015 for providing loans up to 10
  lakh to the non-corporate, non-farm small/micro enterprises.
• These loans are classified as MUDRA loans under PMMY.
• These loans are given by Commercial Banks, RRBs, Small Finance
  Banks, MFIs and NBFCs.
 Crowdfunding
• Crowdfunding is the practice of funding a project or venture by
  raising small amounts of money from a large number of people,
  typically via the Internet. Crowdfunding is a form of crowdsourcing
  and alternative finance.
Origins:
                                                                      2012:
 1700s:                                                   2006:
            1852:       1976:       1997:      2001:                   US-
  Irish                                                  Michael
            Credit     Gramee      Marillio   ArtistSh               Crowdfu
  Loan                                                   Sullivan-
            Unions     n Banks     n Band       are                   nding
 Fund                                                     coined
                                                                       Bill
    Features
•   Goals: Profit/For-profit
•   Fairness: Return of funds in case of non-accomplishment
•   Community Engagement
•   Due Diligence: Regulations of websites in concern
•   No collateral
•   Processing Fees
•   No Guarantee
Types
Notes: https://www.businessnewsdaily.com/4134-what-is-crowdfunding.html
Regulations in India
• Equity Crowdfunding is illegal in India
• All other types such as donations, P2P are legal
• Private crowdfunding of businesses must not extend to more than 200
  people
• Advertisements of private crowdfundings are forbidden
Investment Banking
• Investment Banking focuses on the creation of wealth
  for the entities such as Corporates, and State & Central
  Governments. These entities identify the risks of
  projects and reduce the time and expenses involved to
  optimize fund utilization and improve operational
  efficiency.
    Features
• Underwriting services
• M&A advisory
• Fee-based advisory services
• Trading platforms for trading
• Research services
• Back-end services for corporates
• Capital restructuring
Notes:
https://www.equiruswealth.com/blog/all-you-need-to-know-about-merchant-banking-and-investment-banking
 Regulations in India
• RBI
• SEBI
• NBFCs under Companies Act
• Banking Regulations Act, 1949
• AIBI (Association of Investment Bankers in India):
   • created to ensure members were in compliance with banking regulations and that
     their activities were kept in check.
   • to ensure members institutions follow its ethical and legal practices
   • to promote the industry of investment banking in India and the business interests
     of its members.
Resources
• https://corporatefinanceinstitute.com/resources/career/investment-b
  anking-india
  /
• https://www.mbaknol.com/international-finance/investment-banking
  -in-india
  /
• https://
  www.scribd.com/document/441018236/Regulatory-Framework-for-In
  vestment-Banking-in-India