Posts Tagged ‘CREDIT CARD INTERCHANGE FEES’
Card Game – Series – The New York Times
Wednesday, January 6th, 2010The 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
- Tips for Avoiding Overdraft and Bounced-Check Fees
- Federal Reserve
- Guide to Debit Card Rules
- U.S. PIRG
- Report on Debit Cards and Overdrafts
- Center for Responsible Lending
- Federal Joint Guidance on Overdraft Programs
- Federal Reserve, Feb. 2005 (pdf)
- Report on Disclosure Documents for Checking Account Customers
- General Accounting Office, Jan. 2008 (pdf)
- Proposal on Overdraft Fees
- Federal Reserve, Jan. 2009 (pdf)
- 2008 Study of Bank Overdraft Programs
- FDIC (pdf)
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, 2010How Visa, Using Card Fees, Dominates a Market
By ANDREW MARTINWhen 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, 2010Card Fees Pit Retailers Against Banks
By ANDREW MARTINAs 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, 2010Visa 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, 2010Credit 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.
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, 2010The 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!
Should Credit Card Transactions Be Free? There May Be A Way » StorefrontBacktalk » Blog Archive »
Thursday, December 17th, 2009Franchisee Columnist Todd Michaud has spent the last 16 years trying to fight IT issues, with the last six years focused on franchisee IT issues. He is currently responsible for IT at Focus Brands (Cinnabon, Carvel, Schlotzsky’s and Moe’s Southwestern Grill).
Envision a world where credit card transactions are free. How could we accomplish such an outrageous feat? Well, crazy things can happen when you start to apply IT problem-solving initiatives to business issues.
I just finished reading “Free – The Future Of A Radical Price” by Chris Anderson. Chris, the author of “The Long Tail,” discusses how several factors–including the constant reduction of technology costs–have enabled companies to give away valuable services to their customers. Examples include Google giving away search functions and videos on YouTube, eBay giving away free phone calls with Skype and Linux as a free version of Unix software. But for some reason, the costs of processing credit card transactions have been immune to the same trends that have provided free versions of far more complex technology. Why?
Somehow, the system has evolved in a way that primarily protects the banks at the expense of retailers and, ultimately, customers. From a purely technological perspective, credit card transactions should cost a fraction of what they actually do. Moore’s Law, loosely translated, states that the cost of technology will reduce by roughly 50 percent every 18 months. If this law is true, then why, after decades of credit card processing, does Home Depot pay more for credit card processing than it does for employee healthcare benefits?
A credit card transaction is fairly complicated and involves several different organizations/people:
The issuing bank: The bank that provides the credit card to the consumer. The cardholder: The person who uses the card to make purchases at various retailers. The merchant: The retail organization that accepts the credit card in exchange for goods or services. The acquiring bank: The bank that processes the credit card transactions. The bankcard association: Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discover, etc.What is the big problem in this ecosystem? The merchant is the only one hit up for a fee to process a credit card transaction. The merchant pays a “merchant discount” to the acquirer, which then splits up the fee among itself (processing fee), the issuing bank (interchange) and the bankcard association (assessments). In the case of credit cards that offer rewards programs, the merchant also funds these customer perks through a forced higher interchange fee. Ridiculous! So how do we change it?Interchange rates should be demolished.
Issuing banks will no longer be paid an interchange fee; instead, a transaction processing fee will be charged to manage the costs of providing authorizations, settlements and money transfers. The rate should be about equal to the current ACH transaction costs, which should serve as a good benchmark for the costs associated with moving money between two bank accounts. Rewards programs would then be completely funded by the issuing bank.Remove Overhead From The System.
In this crazy New World, the bankcard associations are no longer in the transaction processing business. With 88 percent of all cards issued by the top 10 issuing banks, the acquiring banks should process directly with each issuing bank. They will take on this responsibility in exchange for lower assessment fees.Reduce Costs Through Improved Efficiencies.
And what about the acquiring banks? Because their job will also be one of transaction processing, they will earn a flat monthly fee from each merchant rather than a transaction fee. A flat monthly fee? That is crazy talk! Now, imagine travelling back in time to 1999 and telling Michael Armstrong (then CEO of AT&T) that in just 10 years an Internet company would offer unlimited calling to anywhere in the world for just $24.99 per month. (Vonage recently announced this plan.) I’m pretty sure he would have told you that you were nuts.Subsidize The Remaining Costs With Someone Who Gains Value.
OK, but I said that in this crazy New World credit card processing would be free. Except that the previous examples still add costs. Granted, this solution is a ton better than where we are today. But you were promised free. So, how do we get there? I’m going to leverage more of what I learned from Chris Anderson and his book. In the book, Chris discusses the concept of “free” as a “three party market,” where a third party subsidizes the costs of providing the goods or services between the merchant and the consumer.An example is how TV stations can offer you free programming in exchange for broadcasting advertisers’ commercials. In our crazy New World of free credit card transactions, we are going to subsidize the costs of credit card transactions by leveraging a three party market. So how do we do this?
Sell Receipt Space.
Acquiring banks can work with merchants and POS companies to pass along small “banner ads” that are displayed at the bottom of each receipt. The merchant has the opportunity to set parameters for which ads are displayed to avoid conflicts, such as making sure that no competitors’ ads are run. In today’s media-heavy world, eyeballs are worth money.Sell Signature Banners.
Let the acquiring banks display small banners that are placed above the spot on the electronic signature pad where a customer signs for credit card purchases. This option could be used in conjunction with selling receipt space.Sell Data.
Allow marketers to access information about spending at your location. Each company would be aligned with a central catalog of different merchant types. The transactions would then be categorized and aggregated in a central system that can be used by marketers for a fee.Sell More Data.
Provide the line-item details of the transactions to a centralized database. The products and services would also be categorized and aggregated from many merchants. Although most large organizations would not dream of giving away such intimate data, thousands of small businesses would be happy to provide the data anonymously (only the industry would be required) in exchange for lower transaction fees.That’s my case. It feels a little like a Sprint/Nextel commercial doesn’t it? (What if IT people ran the world?) Find major holes in my theories? Disagree with the concept? Love it like RockBand? Let me know: Todd.Michaud@FranchiseIT.org.
MAYBE ONE DAY, BUT UNTIL THEN YOU NEED KV MANAGEMENT’S RATE LOCK PROGRAM AND OUR TEAM OF CREDIT CARD INTERCHANGE EXPERTS!
KV MANAGEMENT IS FOCUSED ON PROVIDING YOU THE EXPERTISE NEEDED TO REDUCE THESE HIDDEN EXPENSES THAT FOR NOW ARE ONLY GETTING WORSE!
DID YOU KNOW THAT CREDIT CARD INTERCHANGE FEES ARE CURRENTLY THE HIGHEST EXPENSE FOR SMALL BUSINESSES BEHIND PAYROLL AND HEALTHCARE.
DO SOMETHING THAT WILL NOT COST YOU ANYTHING BUT TIME AND SAVE UP TO 20%!
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!
Job Growth Hindered by Interchange Fees
Wednesday, December 16th, 2009Job Growth Hindered by Interchange Fees
Hefty credit card interchange ’swipe’ fees prevent small business owners from hiring new employees
INDIANAPOLIS, Dec. 4 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Consumers for Competitive Choice (C4CC) president Bob Johnson has a suggestion that will spur more job growth: interchange fee reform. The President and his economic team gathered yesterday to hear from some of the best and brightest CEOs, small business owners, and financial experts about ideas for continuing to grow the economy and put Americans back to work at a Forum on Jobs and Economic Growth. The meeting was held in advance of the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ announcement today that our national unemployment rate remains in the double digits, at an unsettling 10%.
Interchange fees are the charges that merchants, local governments, universities, or anyone else who accepts plastic, are assessed every time a transaction is completed by swiping or keying in a credit or debit card. Last year alone credit card companies received $48 billion dollars in these fees, this number up 300% since 2001. Not surprisingly, small business owners say that if they were not saddled with these skyrocketing fees, they would be able to spread those resources elsewhere – like hiring additional employees.
“In 1995, CN Brown paid $353,000 in interchange fees,” said Jinger Duryea, President of CN Brown, which owns Big Apple convenience stores across Maine. “In 2007, we paid $3,494,000 in interchange fees. This amount of money could stretch very far if any portion were available to us to hire additional employees or lower costs for consumers, rather than lining the pockets of credit card companies.”
Every dollar spent on interchange fees is a dollar not spent hiring workers or providing savings to customers. At an average cost of 2% per credit card swipe these fees add up quickly, and the potential savings or job growth that could result if the funds were not going to big banks and credit card companies is one that we cannot afford to overlook.
“With the national unemployment still at a troubling level, we have a very long way to go before this economy is where we need it to be,” said Johnson. “I have spoken with small business owners throughout the country these past few weeks and they all have one thing to say – credit card interchange “swipe” fees are increasing and are hurting both small business and consumers. This fact was recently supported by the Government Accountability Office’s report on interchange fees.”
“Interchange fees are currently the highest expense for small businesses behind payroll and healthcare. The cost is astronomic, and we don’t need a job summit to know that the jobs that could be saved or created if these fees are reduced are real. The numbers don’t lie. Any level of relief would be a significant step toward our economic recovery. With unemployment holding steady in the double digits and small business growth being impaired, it is imperative that our Representatives and Senators in Washington take steps to reduce this unfair burden, especially considering the economic impact such reform could have.”
About The Credit Card Con
The Credit Card Con is a project by the Consumers for Competitive Choice. For more information, visit The Credit Card Con website at www.thecreditcardcon.com.
SOURCE Consumers for Competitive Choice
KV Management launches The Rate Lock Protection Program
KV Management is a Highly Specialized Consulting Firm, founded for the express purpose of reducing the core processing costs for our clients through very unique and tested techniques proprietary to our firm. In fact, it is our sole purpose to protect the business owners and NOT the banks. Most importantly, we are not a credit card processor and therefore, have no conflict of interest in representing you.
The easiest way to envision what we do is to think of hiring the best lawyers in America and ONLY paying them on contingency if, and only if, they win your case for you. That is what we do for business owners on a daily basis and it is truly revolutionizing this industry with our Rate Lock technology and processes that will more than impress you and your bottom line without Change or Effort or the need to switch from your current provider.
Merchant service providers can never pad their margins with your money again call me today at 800 590 1296 x52 for FREE consultation and analysis or visit http://bit.ly/RateLock to learn more!
Making Credit Card Processors Accountable for the Credit Card Interchange Fees YOU are Charged!
Tuesday, December 15th, 2009The GAO Report to Congressional Addressees highlights ‘Rising Interchange Fees Have Increased Costs for Merchants, but Options for Reducing Fees Pose Challenges’.
GAO opens report by saying ‘ According to Federal Reserve analysis, total costs of accepting credit cards for merchants have risen over time as consumers use cards more. Part of these increased costs also may be the result of how Visa and MasterCard competed to attract and retain issuers to offer cards by increasing the number of interchange fee categories and the level of these rates.’
But is this the case?
Options are available – services like The Rate Lock from KV Management gives the SMB (small and medium businesses) access to Credit Card Interchange Experts that until now only merchants with sufficient credit card interchange fees volumes could afford.
KV Management offers merchants a FREE no obligation consultation and analysis.
Read the GAO Report to Congressional Addressees.
About KV Management and The Rate Lock Protection Program
KV Management is a Highly Specialized Consulting Firm, founded for the express purpose of reducing the core processing costs for our clients through very unique and tested techniques proprietary to our firm. In fact, it is our sole purpose to protect the business owners and NOT the banks. Most importantly, we are not a credit card processor and therefore, have no conflict of interest in representing you.
The easiest way to envision what we do is to think of hiring the best lawyers in America and ONLY paying them on contingency if, and only if, they win your case for you. That is what we do for business owners on a daily basis and it is truly revolutionizing this industry with our Rate Lock technology and processes that will more than impress you and your bottom line without Change or Effort or the need to switch from your current provider.
Merchant service providers can never pad their margins with your money again call me today at 800 590 1296 x52 for FREE consultation and analysis or visit http://bit.ly/RateLock to learn more!

