Endpoint What gives? The global payment card networks are attempting to gain closed-model benefits while remaining open. Vertical integration and emerging players are redrawing the traditional boundaries between networks and other payments players. It can be confusing, but it will ultimately add value to the business, says Eric Grover. Eric …
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Buried by Letters, the Fed Delays Issuing Its Debit Card Rules
Overwhelmed by the volume of comments it received, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben S. Bernanke on Tuesday said in letters to Congress the Fed would miss Congress’s April 21 deadline to have issued final debit card interchange and network regulations. Bernanke, however, said the Fed still plans to meet the …
Read More »Relax, Banks. Google Just Wants NFC for Its Advertising Potential, Experts Say
A mobile-payments system from Google Inc. may strengthen the search giant’s hand in marketing but will pose little threat to established payments networks, according to experts contacted by Digital Transactions News. The Google venture, more news of which emerged this week, has surprised some observers because it includes MasterCard Inc. …
Read More »How Prepaid Cards Could Help Issuers Recover Some Income Lost to Durbin
As debit card issuers move to impose new fees or trim back rewards in response to looming federal restrictions on interchange income, they may be ignoring an opportunity to recover as much as half of that interchange without levying a single new fee. That’s according to research released this week …
Read More »Consumers Are Skeptical of Durbin Benefits, According to Survey
Consumers have few expectations that they’ll benefit from pending debit card interchange price regulations, according to new survey findings from Javelin Strategy and Research. And, with consumers used to free checking and debit cards, banks will need to move carefully if they want to impose new fees to make up …
Read More »Durbin Hits a Snag As a Delay Proposal Emerges in the Senate
The Durbin Amendment, which passed into law within weeks of its introduction in Congress last summer and seemed poised to go into effect in July, hit a stumbling block on Tuesday with the introduction of a bill in the U.S. Senate to delay rulemaking by two years. The legislation, called …
Read More »TCF Tells Court Durbin Could Force It To Lay off Thousands
Big debit card issuer TCF Financial Corp. might need to lay off more than 2,000 employees to offset potential revenue losses if the Federal Reserve Board’s most draconian debit interchange price-control proposal takes effect, TCF said in recent court filings. Wayzata, Minn.-based TCF also said that its annual revenue loss …
Read More »Durbin Will Hurt, But It’s No Apocalypse for Debit, McKinsey Expert Says
There may be some good news for large banks and card networks fretting over the looming effective date for the Durbin Amendment and its restrictions on debit card income. While the amendment, part of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform legislation signed into law last summer, will severely compress debit card …
Read More »Merchants Move To Counter Growing Opposition to Debit Regulation
With opposition to looming debit card interchange regulations growing, merchant groups that would benefit from regulation by way of lower payment card acceptance costs are making a case to prevent the Federal Reserve Board’s planned rules from being delayed or scuttled. Much of the questioning about the Dodd-Frank financial-reform law’s …
Read More »The Gimlet Eye
Does EMV Make Sense in the United States? We pose the question above not because we are wondering about the answer, and still less because we doubt the benefits of chip-and-PIN security, but because a recent decision by Visa Inc. leaves us wondering what kind of future the world’s largest …
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