CoDi: Mexico’s Brilliant Idea, or Another COVID Victim

CoDi: Mexico's Brilliant Idea, or Another COVID Victim

CoDi: Mexico's Brilliant Idea, or Another COVID Victim

We’ve kept a keen eye on the Bank of Mexico’s digital play for financial inclusion since the process began, in hopes that the model can help the market shift away from cash and move towards electronic payments. As we noted in 2019, the product launched on October 1, 2019, but concerns identified in our LAC market study suggested headwinds.

A report by SP Global synchs with our estimation of weak takeup. “A year on, most Mexicans ‘Still Don’t Even Know what CoDi is.'”

Well, we do. As defined in our July 2020 review:

According to SP Global:

It is not due to banking-side capabilities.

But, perhaps the revenue dynamics have not yet settled.

But, usage remains low.

More banks are coming to accept the importance of CoDi. Banorte, Mexico’s second-largest bank, has averaged just 158 CoDi accounts per day; that’s about 5% of the average at Citibanamex, its smaller rival. However, Angelica Arana, Banorte’s architecture government director, maintained that the bank still has a “vested interest” in working toward a more banked society.

If you read The Economist, the issue ties back to low card penetration.

More to follow. As Mexico hunkers down against the global pandemic, we hope that the time can be used to propagate digital payments. But with a slow start, that may be too optimistic.

Overview provided by Brian Riley, Director, Credit Advisory Service at Mercator Advisory Group

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