World War I was supposed to be the war that ended all wars. It didn’t, of course. And the settlement announced last July that was supposed to end lawsuits over bank card interchange and related network rules not only is failing to end litigation between merchants and the card …
Read More »Search Results for: interchange
Acquiring: Fighting Back
Lauri Giesen The early battles in the debit-network war triggered by the Durbin Amendment took a big toll on Visa’s Interlink brand, but now Visa has converted an obscure program into a powerful weapon. How are the EFT networks responding? Before April 2012, making a decision about which network over …
Read More »Picture Clouded on Durbin’s Results for Retailers And Consumers, Study Says
One full year after complete implementation of the controversial Durbin Amendment’s debit card regulations, the impact on both merchants and consumers—the law’s putative beneficiaries—remains mixed, according to a study released by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. While Durbin drastically reduced interchange for the country’s largest banks while …
Read More »Smaller Debit Issuers, Exempt from Durbin Caps, Still Feel Pricing Impact, Expert Says
The provisions of the Durbin Amendment to the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act are starting to hurt smaller issuers’ debit card income even though these financial institutions are explicitly exempted from the law’s cap on interchange rates, according to a debit expert. “This phenomenon is happening as we speak,” said Tony …
Read More »Trends & Tactics: The Fed Lets Its Durbin Regs Stand
As they began their work, some Federal Reserve Board governors expressed uneasiness with the task Congress assigned them in 2010 through the Dodd-Frank Act: implement the debit card regulations called for in the sweeping law’s Durbin Amendment. In March, however, the Fed expressed enough satisfaction with its handiwork to declare …
Read More »Acquiring: Capped Off
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 …
Read More »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 »Cover Story:The Rise of Merchant Aggregators
Often regarded as operating in a gray area, merchant aggregators let small businesses piggyback on their merchant accounts. But aggregators are moving to the forefront of payments innovation and winning new supporters. By Peter Lucas Complex, confounding, risky, upstart. These are some of the adjectives used to describe merchant aggregators …
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 »Endpoint: The Virtues of Virtual Cards
Some billers have dismissed virtual cards because they assume the added interchange fees will increase their overall costs. Not true. Billers looking for a way to take payments through a multitude of channels while also controlling costs need look no further than the existing card infrastructure, argues Blair Jeffery. Blair …
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