Posts tagged mastercard
On the Call: MasterCard CEO on mobile payments
by Associated Press

PURCHASE, N.Y. (AP) — Electronics payment processors like MasterCard Inc. and Visa Inc. are trying to adapt to new technologies for making purchases. That includes the use of mobile devices, including smartphones that enable “contactless” payments just by flashing a phone at an electronic scanner.
One obstacle to adoption of the technologies is the small number of electronic terminals that retailers have installed to accept such payments
After announcing the company’s first-quarter earnings on Tuesday, MasterCard President and CEO Ajay Banga was asked by Wells Fargo analyst Timothy Willi about his expectations for mobile payments technology. Banga said several obstacles remain before the technology can become widely used, especially in the world’s developing economies.
QUESTION: “How rapidly do you expect merchants in emerging markets will install terminals?”
ANSWER: “There are two angles to this. One angle is in the emerging markets, given the current absence of terminals that would accept something to do with a mobile phone, I’m not sure that the mobile payment ecosystem in those markets will develop the same way as it might in a somewhat more advantaged country that has better terminalization in place.
“Mind you, having said that, contact terminalization is still relatively small, even in the United States and in developed countries.
“But, you know, whether mobile payments develop … as a contact-based system, or an SMS-based money movement system, or as a true mobile commerce-enabled system, with the rapid deployment of smartphones in the world, I think some version of all three will begin to develop. What we’re trying to do is to place bets in all three, and to be partners with institutions — banks and phone companies and merchants — in all three spaces.”
But Banga said many obstacles are preventing widespread adoption:
“The cost of those terminals needs to become somewhat cheaper. The fact that if you could find intelligent ways to make that terminal more easy for a small merchant to adapt to, that would help us as well. There’s a lot of work to be done in this ecosystem yet.”
He closed by saying he expects “a lot of energy” will be devoted to these technologies. Be he was cautious about how fast it will play out: “I don’t know that it will happen in six months or one year compared to two years or three years. I don’t know the answer to that yet.”
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
NFC – Operators will probably pay banks and credit card companies to get their credit cards embedded in mobile phones
Strand-Consult Press Releases
A number of people in the business are talking about which role mobile operators will play when mobile phones start supporting NFC, making it possible to embed bank cards, credit cards and other types of payment cards in mobile phones. When we read articles about this subject in the media, it is very obvious to us that a great many people have an extremely unrealistic view about this new area of the mobile industry.
Let us start by making one thing very clear – the new mobile phones that support NFC and that will launch early in 2011 do not support the single wire protocol, which means they do not have the necessary security functionality that will enable them to be used for carrying and handling bank and credit card data.
Later in the year there will be mobile phones that support the single wire protocol, but the big questions are which role mobile operators will then play on this market, how much they can earn by selling mobile phones that support NFC to their customers and what future business models will look like in this area?
Strand Consult has been closely monitoring NFC and we have published a number of reports that describe this area and its current standards. We have examined the ambitions that the GSMA has on behalf of the industry and made good use of our many years of experience from the financial sector to deduct what we believe will happen in this area in the short and medium term.
Our conclusion is very clear and it is clear to us that many operators around the world currently have a totally unrealistic view about this business area and how it is developing. Quite simply one could say that the various market players in the mobile value chain have little or no understanding about the companies doing business in the credit card and payments sector.
There are mobile operators in a number of countries that are currently dreaming about using the combination of NFC and SIM cards to create a new position for themselves on the traditional credit card payment value chain and thereby ensure that they receive a share of the revenue being generated by credit cards today.
Our research concludes that while operators may have large ambitions about the payment market, they are completely overlooking two factors that will have a great deal of influence on their business case; the cost effectiveness of the traditional payment value chain and the ability of operators to simplify or add value to that value chain by making it even more cost efficient. In our opinion, operators have very little chance of improving the current cost effectiveness of the traditional payment value chain.
The companies that issue credit cards (Visa, MasterCard and banks) are sitting very heavily on this market and are having difficulty seeing the advantage of moving a plastic card onto a mobile phone. The largest single added value factor of moving a credit card onto a mobile phone is the convenience for the end user.
But we believe when people examine or describe this market and the possibility of NFC-based payment cards that reside on a mobile phone, they are overlooking a number of important factors:
1. When you move credit card information from a piece of plastic over to a mobile phone, you are not making the plastic card obsolete. It will take a long time before all point of sales have NFC terminals, which will mean that mobile phones will not replace plastic credit cards in the near future.
2. For security reasons NFC payments will primarily be used for smaller payments, for example payments up to a limit of probably around 50 euro.
3. The logistical savings of having credit card information on mobile phones will therefore be marginal, as customers will still need their plastic cards as a supplement for larger payments or when there is no NFC terminal.
4. Banks and credit card companies are currently unlikely to share revenue from transactions with mobile operators, as they are having difficulty seeing where the mobile operators are actually adding value to their business.
5. It is unlikely that retailers will want to pay more per transaction than they are already doing, as they are also having difficulty in seeing how mobile operators are adding value to their business.
6. It is unlikely that customers will be willing to pay any significant amount per transaction just for having their bank card or credit card residing on their mobile phone.
This leaves us with a number of operators that believe they are entitled to a central role in this area, but where we are having difficulty seeing how they intend to add value that the various parties involved would be willing to pay for?
One very interesting question is whether mobile operators might be willing to actually pay banks and credit card companies to embed their credit cards on mobile phones, to thereby create a business area for the mobile operators? We believe the answer to that question is a big YES!
It is a fact that mobile operators are primarily battling two high cost areas; high churn (customers cancelling subscriptions) and customers with multiple SIM cards, who switch SIM cards in their mobile phone depending on who they are calling and which network they are calling to.
It is difficult for ordinary people to understand the size of these two cost areas and that even slight improvements in these areas can very quickly significantly improve a mobile operator’s margins and earnings.
We believe that some of the above costs can be minimised by merging the SIM card and bank/credit card and furthermore that the savings will be so substantial, that many mobile operators will find it financially attractive to offer banks and credit card companies to handle NFC payments on their mobile phones at no charge – or even pay their financial partners to have NFC payments on their mobile phones.
Google Partners with Citigroup and MasterCard for Android NFC Payments

According to a report from the Wall Street Journal, Google has entered into an arrangement with Citigroup and MasterCard to enable mobile payments on Android phones. The technology, which is currently being tested, would make use of wireless near-field communication (NFC). Customers would be able to wave their device over a reader to pay for items.
Security concerns aside, this would certainly be convenient for users of the system. But it’s not just about neat technology for us, it is also about data. The NFC system would give retailers considerably more data on their customers. Surprisingly, Google is not expected to take a cut of sales.
Sources indicate that the NFC payments will require a special app to be installed and registered on a device to work. Not all phones have the NFC hardware to support the system. In fact, the only phone currently available to take advantage of it is the Nexus S. More phones are expected to come out in the next few months with NFC chips. Would you use an NFC payment system from Google?