The first ATM in India was set up in 1987 by
HSBC in Mumbai. In the following ten years, about 1500 ATMs were set up in India. In 1997, the
Indian Banks' Association (IBA) set up
Swadhan, the first network of shared ATMs in India. It was managed by
India Switch Company (ISC) for five years, and allowed cardholders to withdraw cash from any ATM in the network, for a fee if they did not have an account with the bank that owned the ATM. In 2002, the network connected over 1000 ATMs of the 53 member banks of the association. The network was capable of handling 250,000 transactions per day, but only 5000 transactions, worth about 100,000, took place each day. In contrast,
ICICI Bank's network of about 640 ATMs handled transactions worth about 20,000,000 each day. After the contract with ISC expired, IBA failed to find a bidder to manage the operationally uneconomical network, and shut it down on 31 December 2003. After the collapse of Swadhan,
Bank of India,
Union Bank of India,
Indian Bank,
United Bank of India and
Syndicate Bank formed an ATM-sharing network called
CashTree.
Citibank, the
Industrial Development Bank of India,
Standard Chartered Bank and
Axis Bank formed a similar network called
Cashnet.
Punjab National Bank and
Canara Bank also created such networks. In August 2003, the
IDRBT announced that it would be creating the National Financial Switch (NFS) to link together the country's ATMs in a single network. The IDRBT collaborated with
Euronet Worldwide and
Opus Software to build a platform to allow banks to connect their own switches to the NFS. The NFS consisted of an inter-ATM switch and a e-commerce
payment gateway. == History ==