Wednesday, February 26, 2014

European Retailers Score Big Victory in Swipe Fee Battle

The E.U. continues to set the pace for swipe fee reform as the economic and monetary affairs committee of the European Parliament voted last week to cap the fees at 0.2% and 0.3% for debit cards and credit cards respectively.  The new legislation, which applies to domestic and cross-border payments, was a response to the ongoing impact of the fees on both merchants and consumers as well as the lack of transparency in how such fees are set.

Right now, the average swipe fee ranges from 0.2 percent in Denmark and the Netherlands, to more than one percent in Germany, Hungary and Poland.  The reform measures aims to standardize the governing rules between countries.

The European Commission states that the reduced fees could end up saving retailers six billion euros a year, a savings that could lead to lower consumer prices.

Despite the significant progress being made in Europe, the cost for U.S. consumers to swipe their cards remains exorbitant.  In fact, the fees, which can be as much as four percent of the total cost of the purchase, are eight times higher here than in Europe and other countries.

So, the question remains: what gives?  It’s time for our federal officials to follow the E.U.’s lead.

For more about the European Parliament’s recent vote, see here and here and here.

Image source: The Travelers Blog

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

The Banking Industry’s Meal Ticket

In her recent article Credit Card Gravy Train Is Crushing Consumers, Ellen Brown provides an excellent analysis of the banking industry’s profitable swipe fee scam and the burdensome cost to both merchants and consumers.

Most consumers don’t realize that every time they use their credit card, the retailer is charged an interchange or swipe of about two percent of the total purchase. Banks are able to charge this rate because Visa and MasterCard, the two biggest credit card companies, set the fees essentially in secret and then dictate the terms to merchants, who are left with no choice but to accept them if they want to stay in business. As Brown explains, two percent:
“…may not sound like much. But consider that for balances that are paid off monthly (meaning most of them), the banks make 2% or more on a loan averaging only about 25 days (depending on when in the month the charge was made and when in the grace period it was paid). Two percent interest for 25 days works out to a 33.5% return annually, and that figure may be conservative.”
In other words, the swipe fee results in big profits for the banks but puts a big squeeze on the rest of us from the merchants who are forced to absorb the fees to the consumers who are left paying higher prices to cover that cost.
Interestingly, Brown compares this fee to a private sales tax.
“A 2% merchants’ fee is the financial equivalent of a 2% sales tax—one that now adds up to over $30 billion annually in the US. The effect on trade is worse than either a public sales tax or a financial transaction tax, since these taxes are designed to be spent back into the economy on services and infrastructure. A private merchant’s tax simply removes purchasing power from the economy.”
It’s a sneaky game the banks are playing and it leaves merchants and consumers holding the bag while sapping an already vulnerable economy of the energy it needs.

(photo source: Ripoff Report)

Monday, February 17, 2014

A Unified Front: Retailers and Banks Join Forces Against Cyber Threats

As the fallout from the massive data breaches suffered by Target and others continues to play out, retailers and banks decided last week that it was time to band together to fight the ongoing cyber threats. Fifteen trade groups including the Retail Industry Leaders Association, the American Bankers Association and the National Restaurant Association put together a working group that will, among other issues, examine the latest payment technologies to identify which would have the greatest chance of thwarting future breaches and determine opportunities for potential action from Congress.

In a recent article in The Hill, Tim Pawlenty, chief executive of the Financial Services Roundtable and former Minnesota governor, described the current situation and unlikely union:
“…you can’t really make it better or improve it unless you look at it comprehensively. That involves a whole series of stakeholders, and we need to work together constructively to improve it. And this partnership is designed to try to bring people together to focus on the things we can agree on.”
The article points to one possible starting point for consensus and that is with the way in which companies notify customers of a data breach. Currently, dozens of states have varying laws that run the gamut but there is no uniform standard defining the protocol companies should follow. With so many cooks in the proverbial kitchen, the rollout of such notification is often disorganized and ineffective.

To read The Hill’s article, Stores, Banks Team Up to Fight Hackers, see here.

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Baseball Takes a Swing at Excessive Swipe Fees

The high cost of credit card swipe fees is getting more attention these days and it’s not just from Main Street retailers. America’s favorite pastime, baseball, has now stepped up to the plate and joined the fight against these skyrocketing fees as the Minnesota Twins just levied an antitrust suit against Visa and MasterCard, accusing them of price-fixing swipe fees and monopolizing the marketplace.

Make no mistake about it, this insidious fee impacts businesses of all shapes and sizes. Any purchase paid for by plastic is subject to a swipe fee of two to four percent of the price of the transaction whether you are buying a ticket to a baseball game or picking up a gallon of milk from the corner grocer.

Take, for instance, the cost of a Super Bowl ticket from earlier this month. The face value of tickets ranged anywhere from $500 to $2,600. Two percent of $2,600 is $50. If that ticket is sold at the average $4,300 resale price through a ticket dealer, the bank will take in another $86. That’s nearly $150 in swipe fees on a single ticket and with 83,300 seats in the MetLife Stadium, the banks and credit card companies brought in millions of dollars for transactions that could have been done profitably for mere pennies. Given this, it’s no small wonder that families in the United States pay an estimated average of almost $500 a year in swipe fees.

For more on the Minnesota Twins’ lawsuit against Visa and MasterCard, see here.

Monday, February 10, 2014

Chip and Pin: Not a Simple Quick Fix

In her article, 'Debit or Credit' Becomes A Point-of-Fail, Kelly Jackson Higgins discusses how recent data breaches have spurred retailers, lawmakers and the banking industry to seriously rethink security options for card payment systems. She includes the following third-party observation:
"Banks have gone out of their way to make us [consumers] feel comfortable. They're just charging the retailers for this, but it's going to hurt the retail industry," says Avivah Litan, distinguished analyst with Gartner. "Maybe banks will now move on chip and PIN" sooner, she says.
While it is true that retailers pay a disproportionate share of fraud costs and the reality of recent data breaches will goad banks and retailers both to make changes, we must be sure that they are the right kind of changes. The move to a computerized chip embedded in the card is not the complete solution to fraud in the United States.

First, merely adopting the chip cards without the requirement of PIN numbers, as the credit card companies had proposed, is a half-measure that will not make customer data and card transactions wholly secure. Yes, the chip is extremely difficult to counterfeit but without the second layer of cardholder authentication offered by the PIN, it does not solve for lost or stolen card fraud or Internet fraud.

Secondly, it’s important to note that the standard called EMV that the major card brands, Visa and MasterCard, are pushing for is actually their proprietary technology and opens the door for them to extend their already-powerful duopoly. Merchants are concerned that adopting EMV will allow the credit card companies to maintain their dominance in this technological arena and as a result prevent a competitive market from forming, perhaps one that moves beyond cards to customers using their mobile devices to make purchases.

No good can come from this kind of non-competitive market. We’ve seen proof of that with the credit-card companies’ exorbitant swipe fees. If the duopoly of MasterCard and Visa stymie competition in technology, too, in the long run it only ends up hurting both consumers and merchants.

Monday, February 3, 2014

Card Fraud More Common in United States than Europe

As more information about the recent rash of data thefts comes to light and additional breaches are discovered, it is becoming ever more apparent that the credit/debit payment system in the United States is broken. New statistics only bolster that reality.

Take for instance a recent Nilson Report, which showed that while the U.S. accounts for only 27% of the credit card transactions worldwide, it is in fact responsible for 47% of card fraud. Or a report from Aite Group and ACI Worldwide, which surveyed more than 5,000 consumers in 17 countries and found that the United States, along with Mexico, is more susceptible to fraud with 42% of respondents saying they have been victims of such fraud.

Why are these data breaches happening at a greater rate in the U.S. than say in Europe?

Simply put, it is because the United States continues to rely on an outdated magstripe payment card whose required signature authorization can be easily plagiarized and used to create a host of fraudulent cards. Most European countries, on the other hand, follow the EMV standard, which uses a microchip technology that offers consumers, merchants and banks much greater security.

But it will take several years for the EMV standard to be put into practice in the United States, as it requires banks to update their card systems. This promises to be a costly investment and banks no have motivation to make that investment because merchants bear the lion’s share of the consumer fraud costs.

In the meantime, American consumers remain sitting ducks as our credit and debit cards remain acutely vulnerable to criminals.

To read more about the Aite Group/ACI Worldwide survey, see the Forbes article here.