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UK retailers calling for lowered processing charges on contactless payments

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Retailers in the UK are lobbying for emerging payment technology, viz. contactless payment, to be cheaper to process than current debit and credit cards, which are running them hundreds of millions of pounds in processing fees a year, according to The Register.

According to the British Retail Consortium (BRC), each cash transaction costs retailers an average of 2.1p to process ($.03), while debit card transactions cost 8.9p ($.13) - nearly doubled from five years ago - and credit card transactions cost a whopping 33p ($.50).


A 2009 survey from the BRC also found that 44% of purchases in the UK were made with debit cards, with cash lagging behind at 32%.

Retailers are concerned that contactless debit, credit and mobile payment will end of digging them an even deeper hole, especially considering that contactless payments are geared towards the purchase of small value items.

Stephen Robertson, director of the BRC, says the processing fee trend should be going down and not up due to improved technology and efficiency: “‘Contactless’ systems can bring benefits, but banks are currently levying charges on card payments well beyond what it actually costs them to process those transactions. They can’t expect to maintain those excessive charges as numbers of non-cash payments grow.”

Yet many retailers are dealing with just that. According to a BRC statement, some banks are even rolling out new “premium” or “World cards” that require additional interchange fees of between 0.7% and 0.9% on top of the average 0.75% of the transaction value that the retailer previously paid.

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Superdrug, one of Britain’s largest beauty and health retailers, has introduced contactless payment for its in-store customers, according to Retail Gazette.

Created by Streamline and Visa Europe, the contactless system will enable customers to make payments of up to £15 (approx. USD $23) by simply waving their contactless bank card at the more than 50 participating Superdrug stores in London and Liverpool.

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CoVantage Credit Union (CVCU) announced the availability of Tyfone’s mobile wallet services throughout its branches in Wisconsin and Michigan.

Some 64,000 CVCU members can now use Tyfone’s mobile banking services, which include balance checking, account history review, fund transfers, branch and ATM location look-up, as well as several new features:

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Visa, in partnership with Monitise, has launched a suite of new mobile financial services on its revamped Debit Processing Service platform, enabling mobile phone users to check their account history and balances, transfer funds between accounts, and receive real-time transaction alerts.

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The European Payments Council (EPC) has published the second edition of its “White Paper on Mobile Payments.”

According to EPC, the white paper focuses on the usage of the mobile payments in the Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA) and explores how m-payment services can be delivered through cooperation between service providers in the payment industry and players within the mobile ecosystem.

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A new survey from Euro Kartensysteme shows that Germans are starting to embrace the idea of contactless and NFC payments.

Out of 1,040 Germans aged 18-59, 43% responded that they would like to make contactless payments if given the opportunity, of which 58% percent would make their payments with a debit card card, 41% with a credit card and 50% with an NFC phone.

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PayPal has announced that it will launch its first-ever pilot of NFC retail payments in Sweden for the holidays, according to Mobile Payments Today.

The company has partnered with Swedish mobile banking and payments provider Accumulate to deliver PayPal Instore, a new mobile payments app for Apple and Android smart phones.

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