Archive for the ‘Richard Angulo’ Category

New RAA Group Home Page Video

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

New IBC video on Credit Card Interchange Experts OFFER to AHLA Members; this value expertise is available to SMB

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

New IBC video on Credit Card Interchange Experts OFFER to AHLA Members; this value expertise is available to SMB

Card Game – Series – The New York Times

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

The Card Game Navigator

A list of resources from around the Web on the consumer credit industry, as selected by the personal finance columnist Ron Lieber.

Debit Cards

STOP merchant service providers from padding their margins with your money. Call me today at 800 590 1296 x52 for FREE consultation and analysis or visit http://www.rangulo.kvmgt.com/rate-lock-program.html to learn more!

Card Game – Series – The New York Times

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010
How Visa, Using Card Fees, Dominates a Market
By ANDREW MARTIN

When you sign for a debit card at a retailer, the store pays your bank more than twice as much as when you enter a PIN – a strategy Visa hatched decades ago.

January 4, 2010 Your MoneyNews

Card Game – Series – The New York Times

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010
Card Fees Pit Retailers Against Banks

Card Fees Pit Retailers Against Banks
By ANDREW MARTIN

As the use of credit and debit cards has grown over the last decade, merchants argue that the attendant fees have sharply lifted the cost of doing business.

July 16, 2009businessNews

STOP merchant service providers from padding their margins with your money. Call me today at 800 590 1296 x52 for FREE consultation and analysis or visit http://www.rangulo.kvmgt.com/rate-lock-program.html to learn more!

Card Game – Series – The New York Times

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010
Visa Reigns with Silent TaxVideo

Visa Reigns with Silent Tax

The growing use of debit cards has meant big profits for Visa, and there are concerns that the company’s market power has led to unnecessarily high fees to merchants.

STOP merchant service providers from padding their margins with your money. Call me today at 800 590 1296 x52 for FREE consultation and analysis or visit http://www.rangulo.kvmgt.com/rate-lock-program.html to learn more!

Card Game – Series – The New York Times

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

Credit and debit cards have become a profitable machine for the financial services industry, sometimes at the expense of consumers who can least afford it. Even as Washington considers clamping down on deceptive practices, financial firms are finding new ways to generate revenue from their cards. Articles and multimedia offerings in this series, which is part of a joint reporting project with PBS “Frontline,” will examine the changing world of the consumer credit business.

Frontline Logo

The Card Game series is a joint reporting project with the PBS program “Frontline.” Watch the documentary that was broadcast Nov. 24 here: pbs.org/frontline/creditcards.

STOP merchant service providers from padding their margins with your money. Call me today at 800 590 1296 x52 for FREE consultation and analysis or visit http://www.rangulo.kvmgt.com/rate-lock-program.html to learn more!

Card Game – Series – The New York Times

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

Frontline Logo

The Card Game series is a joint reporting project with the PBS program “Frontline.” Watch the documentary that was broadcast Nov. 24 here: pbs.org/frontline/creditcards.

STOP merchant service providers from padding their margins with your money. Call me today at 800 590 1296 x52 for FREE consultation and analysis or visit http://www.rangulo.kvmgt.com/rate-lock-program.html to learn more!

The Card Game – How Visa, Using Fees Behind Its Debit Card, Dominates a Market – Series

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

Every day, millions of Americans stand at store checkout counters and make a seemingly random decision: after swiping their debit card, they choose whether to punch in a code, or to sign their name.

Skip to next paragraph

Your Money Guides

Credit and Debit Cards »

Monica Almeida/The New York Times

Mitch Goldstone, in his digital photo-processing shop in Irvine, Calif., is part of a suit against Visa and MasterCard.

Frontline Logo

The Card Game series is a joint reporting project with the PBS program “Frontline.”

Readers’ Comments

“Smart retailers take advantage and offer a ‘discount’ on debit purchases. Sharing the savings with the customers is a great incentive.”

Tom, Texas

It is a pointless distinction to most consumers, since the price is the same either way. But behind the scenes, billions of dollars are at stake.

When you sign a debit card receipt at a large retailer, the store pays your bank an average of 75 cents for every $100 spent, more than twice as much as when you punch in a four-digit code.

The difference is so large that Costco will not allow you to sign for your debit purchase in its checkout lines. Wal-Mart and Home Depot steer customers to use a PIN, the debit card norm outside the United States.

Despite all this, signature debit cards dominate debit use in this country, accounting for 61 percent of all such transactions, even though PIN debit cards are less expensive and less vulnerable to fraud.

How this came to be is largely a result of a successful if controversial strategy hatched decades ago by Visa, the dominant payment network for credit and debit cards. It is an approach that has benefited Visa and the nation’s banks at the expense of merchants and, some argue, consumers.

Competition, of course, usually forces prices lower. But for payment networks like Visa and MasterCard, competition in the card business is more about winning over banks that actually issue the cards than consumers who use them. Visa and MasterCard set the fees that merchants must pay the cardholder’s bank. And higher fees mean higher profits for banks, even if it means that merchants shift the cost to consumers.

Seizing on this odd twist, Visa enticed banks to embrace signature debit — the higher-priced method of handling debit cards — and turned over the fees to banks as an incentive to issue more Visa cards. At least initially, MasterCard and other rivals promoted PIN debit instead.

As debit cards became the preferred plastic in American wallets, Visa has turned its attention to PIN debit too and increased its market share even more. And it has succeeded — not by lowering the fees that merchants pay, but often by pushing them up, making its bank customers happier.

In an effort to catch up, MasterCard and other rivals eventually raised fees on debit cards too, sometimes higher than Visa, to try to woo bank customers back.

“What we witnessed was truly a perverse form of competition,” said Ronald Congemi, the former chief executive of Star Systems, one of the regional PIN-based networks that has struggled to compete with Visa. “They competed on the basis of raising prices. What other industry do you know that gets away with that?”

Visa has managed to dominate the debit landscape despite more than a decade of litigation and antitrust investigations into high fees and anticompetitive behavior, including a settlement in 2003 in which Visa paid $2 billion that some predicted would inject more competition into the debit industry.

Yet today, Visa has a commanding lead in signature debit in the United States, with a 73 percent share. Its share of the domestic PIN debit market is smaller but growing, at 42 percent, making Visa the biggest PIN network, according to The Nilson Report, an industry newsletter.

The Risk of Refusing

Critics complain that Visa does not fight fair, and that it used its market power to force merchants to accept higher costs for debit cards. Merchants say they cannot refuse Visa cards because it would result in lower sales.

“A dollar is no longer a dollar in this country,” said Mallory Duncan, senior vice president of the National Retail Federation, a trade association. “It’s a Visa dollar. It’s only worth 99 cents because they take a piece of every one.”

Visa officials say its critics are griping about debit products that have transformed the nation’s payment system, adding convenience for consumers and higher sales for merchants, while cutting the hassle and expense of dealing with cash and checks. In recent years, New York cabbies and McDonald’s restaurants are among those reporting higher sales as a result of accepting plastic.

“At times we have a perspective problem,” said William M. Sheedy, Visa’s president for the Americas. “Debit has become so mainstream, some of the people who have benefited have lost sight of what their business model was, what their cost structure was.”

Visa officials said the costs of debit for merchants had not gone down because the cards now provided greater value than they did five or 10 years ago. The costs must not be too onerous, they say, because merchant acceptance has doubled in the last decade.

The fees are “not a cost-based calculation, but a value-based calculation,” said Elizabeth Buse, Visa’s global head of product.

As for Visa’s market share, company officials maintain that it is rather small when considered within the larger context of all payments, where, for now at least, cash remains king.

While Visa may be among the best-known brands in the world, how it operates is a mystery to many consumers.

Visa does not distribute credit or debit cards, nor does it provide credit so consumers can buy flat-screen televisions or a Starbucks latte. Those tasks are left to the banks, which owned Visa until it went public in 2008.

Sign in to Recommend Next Article in Your Money (5 of 28) » A version of this article appeared in print on January 5, 2010, on page A1 of the New York edition.

STOP merchant service providers from padding their margins with your money. Call me today at 800 590 1296 x52 for FREE consultation and analysis or visit http://www.rangulo.kvmgt.com/rate-lock-program.html to learn more!

Merry Christmas

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

I am a Christian (Catholic) so wishing someone a Merry Christmas is what I like do, but I am conscious about not wanting to offend anyone. So if I know a person’s faith I do wish them appropriately or if I feel a person might get offended I will use a generic Holiday Greeting wish. But for me this is the Christmas season, a special time, a time in which me and mine wish you and yours great joy and peace; and for me Merry Christmas represents the best of intentions.

This year I found myself giving this more thought and given today’s social and business networking environment I decided to see what’s being said on the Internet by others. Here are my summary with links to what I found listed in order by that which I related with most.

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You’re only offended if you choose to be offended. (Deepak Chopra)

The PC (politically correct) movement has really gone too far. In an effort to offend no one, I am often wished “Happy Holidays” as I leave stores this season.
And it sucks.
Really? A generic wish? Just in case I’m Jewish? Or Muslim? Or Atheist? Eff, I’d rather someone wish me “Happy Kwanzaa” instead of the generic “Happy Holidays.”
I grew up hearing “Merry Christmas” this time of year. I miss it.
Yes, I know everyone isn’t Christian. (I’m not, either.)

Can we just do away with all the PC-ness around holiday greetings? Please. – Etiquette Bitch http://www.chicagonow.com/blogs/etiquette-bitch/2009/12/only-if-you-choose-to-be-offended.html

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Merry Christmas!

Over the centuries, Christmas has lost a lot of it’s religious meaning and become more of a secular holiday in today’s global marketplace. Yes, Christmas is a religious holiday in which Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, who we believe to be our savior – but the global truth is that we were not the first ones to claim a winter holiday for our religion. Christmas has become and continues to be a global holiday, which means something different to everybody. Christmas should not be recognized as a mere Christian holiday, but as a celebration of family, a time we celebrate the past year with loved ones and prepare for the new. Christmas is truly about love (and let’s not forget about receiving gifts!) and the time we have with each other.
That’s what I feel Christmas is in today’s culture. Please stop calling them holiday trees. Call it was it is and recognize the history and meaning of the day.

Politically Correct’ Holiday Greeting
http://bogopolis.com/blog/?p=442

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Etiquetteer is delighted to wish you a Merry Christmas!

While many are saddened by the secularization of Christmas, including Etiquetteer, it’s an even sadder day when Christians respond critically to a pleasant greeting because it isn’t Perfectly Christian. Really, it’s enough to make Etiquetteer bark “Bah, humbug!” and just stay home by the Christmas tree in Perfect Propriety. They’d be Better Off — and Better Christians, too — by cheerfully replying “I love celebrating Christmas!” instead of making you feel bad.

Encouraging Perfect Propriety in an Imperfect World
http://etiquetteer.com/2009/11/29/holiday-greetings-verbal-vol-8-issue-25/
Etiquetteer is delighted to wish you a Merry Christmas!

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‘Tis the season, not only for corny holiday cliches, but for bickering about the proper way to wish people a happy merry whatever.

But the principle is, if someone’s trying to be nice, do you give them some credit for that, or do you sneer at their attempt just because it doesn’t measure up to your standards, or meet your preferences?

Atheist Etiquette – HOW TO GET ALONG WITH REAL PEOPLE..
http://atheistetiquette.wordpress.com/2009/12/02/seasons-greetings/

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P.S. Proper accepted etiquette seems to be using specific holiday greetings when you know the holiday a person celebrates, and using the generic “Happy Holidays” when you do not.

Sending business greeting cards: 7 etiquette tips
http://www.businessmanagementdaily.com/articles/19622/1/Sending-business-greeting-cards-7-etiquette-tips/Page1.html#

Holiday Card or Christmas Card—Which Should you Send? Business Greeting Card Etiquette
http://knol.google.com/k/linda-cress-dowdy/holiday-card-or-christmas-card-which/gtm2ar0qj5b7/13#

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Here is what I will use this year

Merry Christmas and the Happiest of Holiday Greetings!
Whether You Celebrate Hanukkah, Eid al-Adha, Kwanzaa or other Holiday
I do wish you and yours great joy, peace and a prosperous New Year.