Karen Epper Hoffman It’s been 18 months since the Durbin Amendment’s debit card interchange cap took effect. Who is benefitting the most from the first government intervention into card-acceptance pricing? A year-and-a-half after the Durbin Amendment’s debit card interchange cap took effect, the radical legislation that created the cap remains …
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Components: Retail ATM Deployers Look to the Future
Lauri Giesen Declining interchange revenues are squeezing non-bank ATM owners and managers, but new revenue sources and technology could ease the pain. It’s a challenging time for many deployers of ATMs in off-premise locations. With higher costs caused by changing government and network regulations and declining interchange revenue, many independent …
Read More »Strategies: The Merchants’ Impossible Dream?
Jim Daly Could Congress be convinced to impose Durbin-style price caps on credit card interchange, the way it did with debit cards? Many regard such a scenario as a near impossibility, but hope springs eternal. Unless they’re public-sector contractors, retailers and other business people usually say they want government out …
Read More »EFT Networks and Discover Strike a Deal That Could Resolve a Chip Card Controversy
With help from Discover Financial Services, regional electronic funds transfer networks this week took a major step toward ending a dilemma over how merchants can route PIN-debit transactions made on chip cards through EFT networks and still meet the Durbin Amendment’s transaction-routing requirements. Previously, the main routes available for …
Read More »New Data Show Consumers Once Again Are Willing To Pull Out Their Credit Cards
Credit cards began staging a somewhat wobbly post-recession recovery in 2010 and 2011. But new figures from First Data Corp. and Visa Inc. indicate credit card charge volume is back to just about full health. In a mid-March investor presentation, Visa reported that U.S. credit card payment volume increased 11% …
Read More »The Gimlet Eye: The Higher Law
When in 2010 our solons in Congress enacted the Dodd-Frank Act with its Durbin Amendment controlling various aspects of the debit card business, many who opposed this mischievous amendment (including us) did so on principles of free-market economics. We pointed out, for example, that the very merchants who were lobbying …
Read More »Visa Seeks Reconciliation With Merchants As Its Debit Losses Narrow
New Visa Inc. chief executive Charles W. Scharf used his first earnings conference call with analysts Wednesday to offer an olive branch to U.S. merchants. Scharf’s comments came on the heels of an earnings and operational report for fiscal 2013’s first quarter that show strong U.S. Visa credit card growth …
Read More »The Gimlet Eye: A Big Flap over Small Issuers
Now that the debit card interchange controls mandated by the Durbin Amendment have been in place for nearly a year-and-a-half, observers have decided to check in on the small financial institutions exempted by Durbin to see whether their fears about the law have been proven by experience. You may recall …
Read More »Acquiring: Far From the Tipping Point
Peter Lucas The card networks’ gambit to rapidly accelerate EMV terminal rollout by waiving PCI compliance reporting for merchants is falling short. Sometimes what looks to be a great deal is not all it’s cracked up to be. Offers by the payment card networks to accelerate the U.S. deployment of …
Read More »E-Commerce: A Tangled Web for PIN Debit
Lauri Giesen Will PIN debit for online transactions ever take off? Some backers are hopeful for this year, but others argue the Durbin Amendment and alternative technologies—like mobile payments—could make PIN debit irrelevant for e-commerce.Time was, the case for online retailers to accept debit card transactions secured with a PIN …
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