Showing posts with label Interchange fee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interchange fee. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

6-Month Delay of Fed’s Debit-Card ‘Swipe’ Fee Rules Weighed by Senators

A Federal Reserve rule capping debit- card “swipe” fees set by Visa Inc. (V) and MasterCard Inc. (MA) would be delayed at least six months under a plan being crafted in the U.S. Senate, said two people with direct knowledge of the talks....read more at Bloomberg

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Debit Fee Compromise Offered by Senator Jon Tester

Tester Stands Up for Consumers, Offers Debit Card Compromise

Aims to Reach 60 Votes to Obtain Review of Embattled Fed Interchange Price Caps

Move comes as giant retailer shirks recent data security breach recovery onto card issuers, consumers

WASHINGTONMay 18, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- On the Senate floor today, Senator Jon Tester (D-MT) announced that he would amend his Debit Interchange Fee Study Act (S. 575) to shorten the study period of Fed interchange price caps from two years to fifteen months.  Tester noted that the move is designed to attract the 60 votes necessary to overcome a filibuster by supporters of the Durbin debit card price fixing amendment.      
"Almost every day, a new voice speaks out in support of protecting consumers, community banks and credit unions," Tester said.  "We're close to having the votes now, but some have expressed concern about the length of the review process.  The fact is, how long the study takes is not as important as how thorough it is.  Once the facts are out, I have no doubt that reasonable people will agree about how dangerous these price caps are."  
Tester's announcement came as another example highlighted the consumer protections provided by debit interchange.  Michaels stores recently announced a data security breach impacting more than 100 million customers in 20 states across the nation.  Ironically, the breach was initially announced in Senator Durbin's home state of Illinois.  In response to consumer inquiries about the loss of sensitive financial information, Michaels directed customers to "contact their bank[s] immediately" for assistance.  
Losses due to debit card fraud are paid by the issuing banks rather than by the cardholders, and the Michaels incident illustrates how the current system works for the benefit of consumers and merchants as fraud protection and data security are included in the interchange fees retailers pay to card issuers.  If the current proposed rule were in place today, financial institutions would not have the resources necessary to guard the security of the networks or to protect consumers from the extensive harm that can result from the violation of their personal information such as fraud and identity theft.
"If the current rule goes into effect, retailers will pass on the costs of fraud protection and data security to consumers," said Trish Wexler, spokeswoman for the Electronic Payments Coalition.  "If a breach does occur, retailers will get off scot free, even if they are responsible for the loss.  This is just another example of why we need to slow this rule down and get it right before it is too late."
About the Electronic Payments Coalition
The Electronic Payments Coalition (EPC) includes credit unions, banks, and payment card networks that move electronic payments quickly and securely between millions of merchants and millions of consumers across the globe. EPC's goal is to protect the value, innovation, convenience and competition in today's growing electronic payments system. EPC educates policymakers, consumers and the media on the system's role in economic growth, and the importance of protecting consumer choice and stability for the continued growth of global commerce.
SOURCE Electronic Payments Coalition
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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Durbin Response to TCF's Lawsuit Challenging Constitutionality of Interchange Law

Durbin Statement on TCF's Court Challenge of Interchange Law

WASHINGTON, D.C.—(ENEWSPF)—October 12, 2010.  Assistant Senate Majority Leader Dick Durbin (D-IL) released the following statement today after Minnesota-based TCF National Bank filed a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of a Durbin-authored law regarding interchange fees. The bipartisan language passed as part of the Wall Street reform act, requires the Federal Reserve to determine if the current interchange fee structure is both “reasonable and proportional” to the real cost of processing a debit card transaction and allows small businesses to offer discounts to consumers when they use cash, checks or debit cards.

“TCF’s complaint not only fundamentally misunderstands the law regarding interchange fees, but it also ignores the facts,” Durbin said. “The law in no way addresses the fees TCF, or any other bank, can charge and it does not set interchange rates. Our language simply ensures that debit interchange fees charged to retailers by the card networks – not the banks -- are ‘reasonable and proportional’ to the cost of processing transactions and provides competition in an area of the market where there’s none.
Congress approved this language by a wide bipartisan margin in reaction to the frustrations of millions of merchants and consumers who were getting nickled and dimed by the anticompetitive interchange system set up by big banks and credit card companies – including TCF. I look forward to this provision’s day in court and am confident that our language will be found to be fair and Constitutional.”
The Durbin amendment was passed by the Senate 64-33 in May of this year during the Senate’s consideration of the Wall Street reform bill. The amendment was agreed to after Congress held six hearings on the issue of interchange fees and their effect on consumers. A modified version of the Durbin amendment was later agreed to by House and Senate negotiators and included in the final bill.
Last week, the Department of Justice (DOJ) concluded a multiple year investigation into the issuance of interchange fees by credit card giants Visa and MasterCard and concluded that the rules surrounding interchange fees exclude competition and are unfair to consumers and merchants alike. DOJ, Visa and MasterCard reached a settlement that would require the two companies to allow merchants to offer discounts, incentives, and information to consumers to encourage the use of payment methods that are less costly. Durbin’s statement on the settlement can be found here: http://durbin.senate.gov/showRelease.cfm?releaseId=328137
Interchange fees are supposedly charged by Visa and MasterCard in order to cover the cost of processing a credit or debit card transaction. These fees continue to rise even though processing costs have decreased.  Nearly $50 billion in interchange fees were charged by credit and debit card networks in 2008 – coming out of the bottom lines of small businesses, charities and government balance sheets. Of these fees, 80 percent went to just ten large banks.
A summary of the Durbin interchange law is below:
Summary of the Durbin Interchange Amendment to the Wall Street Reform Act
·         The Durbin amendment would bring reasonable regulation to the $20 billion per year debit interchange fee system.  Interchange fees are received by the card-issuing bank in a debit card transaction.  However, Visa and MasterCard, which control 80% of the debit market, set the debit interchange fee rates that apply to all banks within their networks.  Every bank gets the same interchange fee rate, regardless of how efficiently a bank conducts debit transactions.  Visa and MasterCard do not allow banks to compete with one another or negotiate with merchants over interchange rates, and there is no constraint on Visa and MasterCard’s ability to fix the rates at unreasonable levels.  This system is effectively an unregulated $20 billion per year transfer of wealth from merchants and their customers to card-issuing banks.
·         The amendment will require that for transactions involving debit cards issued by banks with assets over $10 billion, any interchange fee charged on the transaction must be reasonable and proportional to the cost incurred in processing the transaction. Visa and MasterCard currently charge debit interchange fees of around 1-2% of the transaction amount.  These fees are far higher than the actual cost of processing debit transactions, and they mean that small businesses and merchants always get shortchanged when they accept a debit card for a sale.
·         The amendment will permit card-issuing banks to receive debit interchange fee adjustments to cover reasonably necessary fraud prevention costs.  However, as opposed to the current interchange system where banks receive a guaranteed level of interchange revenue no matter how effectively they deal with fraud, the amendment will require banks to demonstrate that they have met fraud-prevention standards and taken effective steps to reduce fraud in order to receive an issuer-specific interchange adjustment that will cover their necessary costs.
·         The amendment exempts government-administered debit cards and reloadable prepaid cards from debit interchange regulation so long as abusive cardholder fees are not charged.  The amendment would rescind this exemption for government-administered cards and reloadable prepaid cards if consumers using these cards are charged overdraft fees or fees for their first monthly ATM withdrawal by the card-issuing banks.
·         The amendment allows merchants to offer customers discounts for use of cash, checks and debit cards, and to set a $10 minimum for credit card transactions, without penalty from card networks.   These provisions will enable small businesses to bring their interchange costs under control and to pass savings on to consumers in the form of discounts.
·         The amendment prevents card networks from requiring that their debit cards be transacted exclusively on one debit network.  There are a number of PIN debit networks that merchants can use to conduct PIN debit transactions, and until recently most PIN debit cards were able to be used on multiple PIN networks.  This fostered price competition between the PIN networks.  Recently, however, price competition has diminished and PIN debit fees have gone up because large networks like Visa have increasingly required banks to sign exclusive agreements under which they become the sole PIN network whose logo appears on the banks’ cards.   The amendment would enhance competition by directing the Fed to issue regulations providing that a card network cannot limit a debit card to only be allowed to run on one exclusive network.
·         Nothing in the amendment would enable discrimination against debit or credit cards on the basis of the bank that issued the card.


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Thursday, July 1, 2010

Introducing ANYwhere Commerce: Card Present Transactions in a Card Not Present World

POSTED BY JOHN B. FRANK THURSDAY, JULY 1, 2010 
For the first time, mobile merchants have the power to LOWER their own Interchange Fees. Our Rover puts YOU in control of your processing costs. (The old-fashioned way...without government interference)


Perfect for Lawyers, Chiropractors, Dentists, Taxis, Plumbers, Electricians, Flea markets, Health Clinics, Farmers Markets, Direct sellers, Mobile kiosks, Food/Pizza Delivery, Insurance, Door to door, Realty, Limousine Service, Pest Control, Lawn-care, Field services, HVAC, General retail, Charities, Marine, Trade shows, Pet Groomers...more


When using one of our two Card Readers with built-in PCI Certified PIN Entry Devices you can securely accept credit, signature debit, PIN Debit and EBT/WIC transactions at "Card Present" rates. While others may offer a card reader, only HomeATM offers a PCI Certified PIN Pad...enabling your business to qualify for TRUE PIN Debit Rates.







Better than the Durbin Amendment!



Works with the following devices:




 





















Read more: http://pindebit.blogspot.com/2010/07/homeatm-introduces-anywherecommercecom.html#ixzz0sS83MrzE


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Friday, June 25, 2010

Interchange Limits to Cost Issuers at Least $5 Billion

American Banker  |  Friday, June 25, 2010


With Congress expected to approve the regulatory reform bill next week, including the much-debated interchange amendment, banks are bracing for a significant hit to their debit card revenue. While the ink is barely dry on what is now known as the Dodd-Frank Act and it's far from clear exactly how the Federal Reserve will adjust debit interchange fees, but bankers and analysts agree that the fees are all but certain to come down — and probably by a lot.  By some estimates, the interchange regulations cut vaporize more than $5 billion of banks' annual debit fee revenue just for banks that issue Visa Inc. and MasterCard Inc. cards.  "Revenue is going to drop like a brick," said Gary Jewell, an executive vice president of Carrollton Bank.


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Monday, June 21, 2010

Electronic Payments Coalition Responds to So-Called Compromise to Interchange Amendment

POSTED BY JOHN B. FRANK MONDAY, JUNE 21, 2010  - 6:18 PST

WASHINGTONJune 21 /PRNewswire/ -- The Electronic Payments Coalition issued the following statement in response to the proposed changes to Senator Dick Durbin's debit interchange amendment to financial reform:

"Senator Durbin has underscored his commitment to big box retailers and their bottom lines through his so-called compromise. The fact that he has to carve anyone out to provide 'protection' from his amendment gives some indication as to the damage this amendment will cause. Consumers will pay higher fees, lose rewards programs, and have limited choices for debit cards due to the disruption this amendment will bring to the economics of the debit card market. We will continue to fight to ensure that retailers do not succeed in their decade-long lobbying campaign to shift the cost of what they pay to accept cards onto the backs of consumers."
About Electronic Payments Coalition
The Electronic Payments Coalition is dedicated to protecting consumer value, choice, and competition in electronic payments systems. The coalition is a broad-based group of payment card networks, financial services companies, and financial services trade associations whose primary goal is to educate policy-makers, consumers, and the media about the value of electronic payments systems — including economic growth, convenience, speed, reliability, and security — and to ensure the continued growth of global commerce by promoting consumer choice and the stability of the vast payment networks that connect millions of consumers with millions of retailers each and every day.




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NRF Radio Ads Ask Congress to Keep Swipe Fee Amendment in Financial Reform Bill

First 4 digits of a credit cardImage via Wikipedia


WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The National Retail Federation today launched a radio campaign urging the House and Senate to keep an amendment seeking reasonable swipe fees for debit card transactions in financial services reform legislation expected to be finalized next week.
“But big banks and credit card CEOs are doing everything they can to keep collecting their swipe fees.”
“With big banks and the credit card industry pushing hard to strip this important consumer protection out of the financial services reform bill, we want to make sure that members of Congress realize how angry small businesses and their customers are about these fees,” NRF Senior Vice President for Government Relations Steve Pfister said. “These fees are driving up costs for consumers at a time when our economy is still recovering. Taxpayers have already paid for one bailout of the banking industry. Consumers shouldn’t be asked to bail out the banks and the card industry again, but that’s what would happen if this amendment is killed.”
The 60-second spots are running in the home districts of key members of the House-Senate conference committee currently negotiating a final version of the Restoring American Financial Stability Act. The panel is expected to complete its work next week, followed by final votes in the House and Senate the following week in order to get the bill on President Obama’s desk by July 4.
The ads open with a husband and wife reading a newspaper article about another bailout of the banking industry, noting that swipe fees cost consumers more than $400 a year.
Husband: “A swipe fee for using my bank debit card? I thought it was like using a check or cash.” Wife: “Using a debit card costs 43 times more than using a check.” Husband: “They’re taking billions. And nobody is doing a thing about it.”
“Congress is trying to do something about unfair hidden swipe fees,” an announcer says. “But big banks and credit card CEOs are doing everything they can to keep collecting their swipe fees.”
The commercial urges listeners to contact their members of Congress and urge them to “fix the debit card swipe fee” and “stop the bailout.”
Swipe fees – officially known as interchange fees – are a percentage of the transaction charged by card company banks each time a card is swiped to pay for a transaction. The fees average between 1 and 2 percent for debit cards and 2 percent or more for credit cards. Overall swipe fees charged to retailers and other business by Visa and MasterCard banks totaled $48 billion in 2008 and resulted in higher prices estimated at $427 for the average household. Debit swipe fees alone amount to about $20 billion of the annual total.
The Senate version of the financial services reform bill includes an amendment sponsored by Majority Whip Richard Durbin, D-Ill., that would require the Federal Reserve to set regulations that would result in “reasonable and proportional” swipe fees for debit cards that take into account banks’ actual costs for processing the transactions and the fact that paper checks drawn on the came accounts are paid at face value. The amendment would also make it easier for merchants to offer discounts or other benefits for customers who don’t use credit cards, and to set minimum purchase amounts for credit cards.
As the world's largest retail trade association and the voice of retail worldwide, NRF's global membership includes retailers of all sizes, formats and channels of distribution as well as chain restaurants and industry partners from the United States and more than 45 countries abroad. In the United States, NRF represents the breadth and diversity of an industry with more than 1.6 million American companies that employ nearly 25 million workers and generated 2009 sales of $2.3 trillion. www.nrf.com

Contacts

National Retail Federation

J. Craig Shearman, 202-626-8134

shearmanc@nrf.com
Permalink: http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20100618005884/en/NRF-Radio-Ads-Congress-Swipe-Fee-Amendment


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Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Hearing Shows Credit and Debit Swipe Fees Cost Federal Government and Taxpayers $116 Million

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The National Retail Federation said a Senate hearing today on the $116 million in credit and debit card swipe fees paid annually by the federal government is further evidence of the need to bring card fees under control.

“These numbers show that not even the federal government is immune from the credit card industry’s power to skim profits off the top of every transaction that takes place on plastic”
“These numbers show that not even the federal government is immune from the credit card industry’s power to skim profits off the top of every transaction that takes place on plastic,” NRF Senior Vice President and General Counsel Mallory Duncan said. “The swipe fees that the card industry imposes on private industry retailers and their customers are bad enough. But swipe fees charged to the government are ultimately paid by taxpayers, even those who don’t hold a credit card. That means swipe fees are not only driving up prices for consumers but driving up taxes as well.”
“There’s a clear parallel here where the card industry sees retailers and their customers as well as the government and taxpayers as huge sources of revenue,” Duncan said. “Congress needs to bring these fees under control for both groups.”
Senate Majority Whip Richard Durbin, D-Ill., is scheduled to hold a hearing on swipe fees charged to the government this afternoon in his role as chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee’s Subcommittee on Financial Services and Government. Witnesses are expected to include officials from the Treasury Department, Government Accountability Office, Amtrak and Visa. Also testifying will be a convenience store owner and consumer group representative emphasizing the need to address private sector interchange fees.
The hearing is expected to focus on a Treasury report released Monday showing that while the federal government accepts few card payments relative to its size, agencies nonetheless received more than 80 million credit and debit card payments for goods, services, fees and fines totaling $8.6 billion last year. The government paid more than $116 million in swipe fees, making plastic its single most-expensive form of collecting payment. The figures do not include the millions of credit and debit card payments accepted by the U.S. Postal Service.
Swipe fees – officially known as interchange fees – are a percentage of the transaction charged by card company banks each time a card is swiped to pay for a transaction. The fees average between 1 and 2 percent for debit cards and 2 percent or more for credit cards. Overall swipe fees charged to retailers and other business by Visa and MasterCard banks totaled $48 billion in 2008 and resulted in higher prices estimated at $427 for the average household.
Like retailers, the government is subject to a wide and complicated range of interchange rates depending on the type of transaction (sale of goods, loan repayments or fines, for example), the level of rewards points provided to the cardholder, and whether the card is present or not present (as in Internet transactions).
The Treasury report proposes that the government negotiate with card companies for a single percentage to be charged for all credit card transactions, and for a flat fee to be charged for all debit card transactions. The report also proposed a $10,000 limit on the size of transactions that could be accepted via cards, saying checks or other forms of electronic transactions would be cheaper for big-ticket transactions. Officials also want to bar the card industry from unilaterally raising fees or establishing new fees. Treasury estimated that the changes could reduce interchange costs between $35 million and $42 million, or about one third.
While today’s hearing is focused on federal costs, state and local governments across the country are also concerned about rising swipe fees. The City of Chicago alone, for, example, recently reported that it paid $7.5 million last year.
The hearing comes as a House-Senate conference committee is negotiating the final version of financial services industry reform legislation. The Senate version of the bill includes an amendment sponsored by Durbin that would require the Federal Reserve to set regulations that would result in “reasonable and proportional” swipe fees for debit cards that take into account banks’ actual costs for processing the transactions and the fact that paper checks drawn on the came accounts are paid at face value. The amendment would also make it easier for merchants to offer discounts or other benefits for customers who don’t use credit cards, and to set minimum purchase amounts for credit cards.
As the world's largest retail trade association and the voice of retail worldwide, NRF's global membership includes retailers of all sizes, formats and channels of distribution as well as chain restaurants and industry partners from the United States and more than 45 countries abroad. In the United States, NRF represents the breadth and diversity of an industry with more than 1.6 million American companies that employ nearly 25 million workers and generated 2009 sales of $2.3 trillion. www.nrf.com

Contacts

National Retail Federation (NRF)

J. Craig Shearman, 202-626-8134

shearmanc@nrf.com
Permalink: http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20100616006476/en/Hearing-Shows-Credit-Debit-Swipe-Fees-Cost


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