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    Innovation Village | Technology, Product Reviews, Business
    You are at:Home»Acquisitions»Google to Acquire Japan Payments Firm Pring

    Google to Acquire Japan Payments Firm Pring

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    By Tapiwa Matthew Mutisi on July 13, 2021 Acquisitions, Business, Financial Services, Fintech, Google, Payments

    Alphabet’s Google has agreed to buy payments business Pring from backers including fintech firm Metaps Inc as the U.S. tech giant pushes into Japan’s rapidly growing market for cashless services. The startup’s three top shareholders – Metaps, software company Miroku Jyoho Service Co Ltd, and Nippon Gas Co – announced on Tuesday they would sell their combined 87% holding in Pring to Google.

    Metaps said it is selling its 45% stake for 4.9 billion yen ($44 million).

    Once the deal is completed, Google will offer FinTech services, including payments and transfers, across Japan by next year, mirroring similar offerings in the U.S. and India, according to the report. Google’s entry into Japan marks an important shift for the country, which has been largely resistant to cashless payments, the report stated. Users of the pring app can make payments, cash transfers, and withdrawals on their mobile devices and laptops.

    Google has operated its smartphone payments business – now called Google Pay – in Japan since 2016. Tech companies such as SoftBank Group Corp and Rakuten Group Inc as well as financial firms are encouraging Japanese consumers to move away from a deep-seated preference for cash. Japan was home to one of the world’s first mobile commerce innovations with the DotCoMo mobile wallet all the way back in 2004, but the country remains a heavily cash-based economy, Darren Abrahamson, managing director of Bain Capital Tech Opportunities told PYMNTS in August.

    “It’s just a very different cultural market,” Abrahamson said.

    He said Japanese consumers have a well-established preference for managing transactions in cash, but Bain sees that coming to an “inflection point” where things could soon change for three reasons. First, Japan’s younger generation is becoming a larger part of the consumer economy and demanding a change to digital to match their tech-friendly habits. Second, massive political efforts have started to “bend the curve a little bit on this” by giving consumers rewards and cash rebates backed by the government for making cashless payments.

    Abrahamson said the government is also giving merchants incentives to buy contactless terminals. He said some of those efforts stemmed from the Tokyo Olympics, “where they just wanted to have the ability to accept all forms of payments from all the tourists that were expected. And even though that has been shifted out a year, much of the push has been to catch up, frankly, with the rest of the developed world and certainly the other Asian economies in particular.”

    The third main driver for Japan’s potential move to electronic payments has been the pandemic and the resulting loss of consumer appetite worldwide for handling cash.

    Related

    Acquisition Alphabet Inc. Financial Inclusion FinTech startup Google Japan Metaps Inc Pring Startups
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    Tapiwa Matthew Mutisi
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    Tapiwa Matthew Mutisi has been covering blockchain technology, intelligent technologies, cryptocurrency, cybersecurity, telecommunications technology, sustainability, autonomous vehicles, and other topics for Innovation Village since 2017. In the years since, he has published over 4,000 articles — a mix of breaking news, reviews, helpful how-tos, industry analysis, and more. | Open DM on Twitter @TapiwaMutisi

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