According to an Ernst & Young report, the value of financial transactions carried out through mobile phones will touch $245 billion globally by 2014.

Also, the number of users carrying out transactions using mobile money is expected to cross 340 million by 2014, equivalent to 5 per cent of existing mobile subscribers across the globe, the report said.

“The acceleration of mobile remittance services alongside new mobile payment scenarios highlights the range of opportunities for the mobile phone to redefine the movement of money by lowering costs, increasing convenience and reducing fraud,” the report said.

Further, the increasing use of the mobile payment concept by consumers across the globe, especially in heavily populous countries in the Asia-Pacific region, may inflate the market for mobile payments in the coming years.

The report said that mobile money is being seen as the key for many operators in Asia to provide value-added services to customers and operators in emerging markets, such as the Philippines and Bangladesh, as well as a catalyst for bringing banking services to the large unbanked population of these countries.

It further said that operators in developed markets are targeting e-wallets at smartphone users. In terms of the mobile payment technologies being used, SMS mobile payments are the most prevalent worldwide mobile, while Near Field Communications (NFC) and internet transactions over mobiles are among the other fast-growing technologies.