Advertisment

Indian eCommerce sees a drastic 30% decline during Janata Curfew

Online shopping fell by a whopping 30% on March 22, the day of Janata Curfew. week, Indian consumers returned online, with a significant change in behaviour

author-image
CIOL Bureau
New Update
digital economy

Wibmo Inc., released insights into consumer shopping behavior for card transactions as the nation doubles down on protecting its citizens.

Advertisment

Online shopping fell by a whopping 30% on March 22, the day of Janata Curfew. In the coming week, Indian consumers returned online, however with a significant change in behavior.

RuPay spend slowly climbed back to about 98% of normal volumes but continued to fluctuate between 87% to 98% reflecting both caution and apprehension during uncertain times.

On the other hand, Visa and Mastercard purchases were back up to only 86% of their normal volumes and swung between 70-86%.  This in part may be attributed to reduction in discretionary spend.

Advertisment

As the week progressed, RuPay saw a further rise of 10%, as opposed to Visa and Mastercard purchases.  During this same time, average ticket size dropped by 25% as consumers focused on necessities.

“We process over 2.2 billion transactions annually giving us unique insight into consumer behavior and spend patterns. The shift in online purchases was inevitable as our consumers stay at home during this tough period,” said company CEO Govind Setlur. “This phase in our history will bring a significant shift toward online shopping with new products and services and as consumers start preferring the convenience.  We at Wibmo, continue our operations as usual, since now, more than ever our services are critical to meeting our consumers’ daily needs,” he added.

Spend patterns understood

spend pattern

Shift in consumer spend can be better understood from the figure below.  Consumers leaned into online bill payments with over 70% transactions in that category.  Overall online purchases continue to see a dip of 16% as many services such as travel come to a standstill. During lockdown, while online bill payments increased, food and beverage delivery apps and financial services took the most hit. Categories such as gaming and entertainment stayed steady for the most part. Online shopping witnessed consistency primarily driven by grocery and daily essentials.