Merchants Welcome Reported DOJ Investigation of Visa Debit Card Routing Issues

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: J. Craig Shearman
(202) 257-3678 craig@shearmancommunications.com

WASHINGTON, March 19, 2021 – The Merchants Payments Coalition welcomed published reports today that the Department of Justice is investigating whether Visa is engaging in anticompetitive practices related to how debit card transactions are routed for processing.

“The MPC has been concerned about these practices to limit debit routing for years and it’s great to see the Department of Justice looking into it,” MPC spokesman J. Craig Shearman said. “Limits on routing have been an issue both for in-store and online transactions, but routing for online transactions is particularly important at a time when online shopping has accelerated so rapidly during the pandemic.”

The Wall Street Journal reported today that DOJ is looking into whether Visa has limited merchants’ ability to route debit transactions to other card networks, which often offer lower “swipe” fees to process the transactions.

Under the Durbin Amendment, passed by Congress in 2010, debit cards issued in the United States are required to include at least two unaffiliated networks ensuring routing options for merchants. That usually includes either Visa or Mastercard plus one or more competitive debit networks. The routing provision in the law was a response to Visa and Mastercard signing exclusivity contracts with issuing banks removing competition from the market.

Card processing fees are one of merchants’ highest costs after labor and drive up prices for goods and services paid by the average U.S. family by hundreds of dollars a year. Processing fees for Visa and Mastercard debit cards totaled $19.7 billion in 2019, according to the Nilson Report, a trade publication that follows the card industry.

About MPC
The Merchants Payments Coalition represents retailers, supermarkets, convenience stores, gasoline stations, online merchants and others fighting for a more competitive and transparent card system that is fair to consumers and merchants.

Merchants Welcome Delay of Visa/Mastercard Swipe Fee Hike but Say Fees Are Still Too High

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: J. Craig Shearman
(202) 257-3678 craig@shearmancommunications.com

WASHINGTON, March 16, 2021 – The Merchants Payments Coalition welcomed today’s announcement by Visa and Mastercard that nearly $1.2 billion in credit card swipe fee increases will be postponed for a year, but said existing fees are already too high and need to be addressed by Congress.

“Visa and Mastercard did the right thing in delaying this dramatic and unwarranted increase,” MPC Counsel Doug Kantor said. “An increase would have been a serious blow for merchants still trying to recover from the pandemic. But the fact remains that credit card swipe fees paid by U.S. merchants are among the highest in the world. The way these fees are set shows how Visa and Mastercard’s market power allows them to charge more than any free and open market would bear. Rather than just delaying an increase, they need to lower these fees and encourage the banks that issue their cards to embrace competition and transparency. Since they haven’t shown any sign of doing that voluntarily, it’s time for Congress and enforcement agencies to take action.”

Visa and Mastercard were set to implement a wide-ranging restructuring of the “swipe” fees banks charge merchants to process credit card transactions beginning in April. While the matrix of fees is complex, the net impact was estimated at increases of $768 million a year for Visa and $383 million for Mastercard, or a total of $1.15 billion, according to analysis by global payments consulting firm CMSPI. Increases were expected for Visa and Mastercard’s most prominent credit card programs, and for online transactions, which have grown sharply during the pandemic and already carry higher fees than in-store transactions.

Both said today, however, that the increases will be delayed until April 2022.

The delay comes after Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Richard J. Durbin, D-Ill., and Representative Peter Welch, D-Vt., wrote to the two card companies earlier this month asking them to cancel the increases. Durbin and Welch said an increase would be “slamming struggling merchants” during the coronavirus pandemic and “would undermine efforts to help the economy recover.” Last week, Durbin spoke at a Senate antitrust hearing, saying the increase was an attempt to “get even” over earlier legislation on swipe fees and asked “where is the policing authority to stop this duopoly?”

Processing fees vary widely according to type of card, type of transaction and size of merchant, but average 2.25 percent of the transaction amount for Visa and MasterCard credit cards, according to the Nilson Report, a trade newsletter that follows the card industry. The fees have increased dramatically in recent years, more than doubling from $25.6 billion a year in 2009 to $67.6 billion in 2019 for Visa and MasterCard credit cards alone, according to Nilson. Overall processing fees paid by U.S. merchants to accept all card payments totaled $116.4 billion in 2019, up 88 percent over the previous decade. 

The fees are among most merchants’ highest costs after labor and drive up prices for goods and services paid by the average U.S. family by hundreds of dollars a year.

About MPC
The Merchants Payments Coalition represents retailers, supermarkets, convenience stores, gasoline stations, online merchants and others fighting for a more competitive and transparent card system that is fair to consumers and merchants.

Card brands postpone fee hike, but merchants want interchange reform

The major card networks have postponed a planned interchange fee hike yet again in light of the reality of an ongoing pandemic, pleas from merchant groups and pressure from Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill. But while this one-year delay provides immediate relief, it doesn’t address the long-term concerns critics have raised over how much power the card networks have in setting merchants’ costs.

Merchants Welcome Durbin Concern that Visa and Mastercard Want to ‘Get Even’ with Swipe Fee Increases

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: J. Craig Shearman
(202) 257-3678 craig@shearmancommunications.com
        

WASHINGTON, March 11, 2021 – The Merchants Payments Coalition welcomed attention brought to rising credit card processing fees by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Richard J. Durbin, D-Ill., during an antitrust hearing today.

Durbin, who authored legislation that brought transparency, competition and predictability to debit card fees in 2010, cited Visa and Mastercard’s plans for a nearly $1.2 billion increase in credit card swipe fess scheduled to take effect in April.

“They didn’t forget,” Durbin said, referring to his earlier legislation. “They’re waiting for an opportunity to get even again. Where is the policing authority to stop this duopoly from doing this to every merchant and retailer in America?”

“This draws attention to a vitally important issue – that credit card swipe fees are already too high and Visa and Mastercard are trying to use their power to raise them even higher on the backs of small businesses during the middle of a pandemic,” MPC Counsel Doug Kantor said. “Senator Durbin’s concern that Visa and Mastercard are trying to ‘get even’ is right on the mark and his question of what can be done to bring them under control is one that needs to be answered by Congress and the enforcement agencies. These fees are among the highest in the world and neither merchants nor their customers can afford to pay more.”

Durbin’s comments came during a subcommittee hearing on antitrust reform, and he expressed concern about “the power of Visa and Mastercard.”

“They were not negotiated – they were mandated,” he said, referring to what he learned about swipe fees during previous hearings. “Visa and Mastercard said this is what you will pay for each transaction at your restaurant or shop and you have no bargaining power whatsoever. If you don’t want to pay it, don’t use Visa or Mastercard. See how long you last.”

Durbin said the fees are “far in excess of any reasonable measure of cost” and far higher than they would be in a competitive market. Visa and Mastercard are “so dominant in the payments market that merchants couldn’t stay in business without using their cards,” he said.

Durbin said the April increase will come “just in time for your little restaurant that somehow managed to survive and reopen in a pandemic to go into business and have your credit card company say now you’re going to pay us even more.” The cost of swipe fees is “ultimately borne by consumers across America” because they drive up prices, he said.

The hearing came a week after Durbin and Representative Peter Welch sent Visa and Mastercard a letter asking them to cancel the April fee increases, saying they would “undermine efforts to help the economy recover.”

Visa and Mastercard are reportedly set to implement a wide-ranging restructuring of the “swipe” fees banks charge merchants to process credit card transactions beginning in April. While the matrix of fees is complex, the net impact is estimated at increases of $768 million a year for Visa and $383 million for Mastercard, or a total of $1.15 billion, according to analysis by global payments consulting firm CMSPI. Increases are expected for Visa and Mastercard’s most prominent credit card programs, and for online transactions, which have grown sharply during the pandemic and already carry higher fees than in-store transactions. In addition to paying higher fees, merchants shoulder a vast majority of fraud costs online.

Swipe fees vary widely according to type of card, type of transaction and size of merchant, but average 2.25 percent of the transaction amount for Visa and MasterCard credit cards, according to the Nilson Report, a trade newsletter that follows the card industry. The fees have increased dramatically in recent years, more than doubling from $25.6 billion a year in 2009 to $67.6 billion in 2019 for Visa and MasterCard credit cards alone, according to Nilson. Overall processing fees paid by U.S. merchants to accept all card payments totaled $116.4 billion in 2019, up 88 percent over the previous decade. 

The fees are among most merchants’ highest costs after labor and drive up prices for goods and services paid by the average U.S. family by hundreds of dollars a year.

About MPC
The Merchants Payments Coalition represents retailers, supermarkets, convenience stores, gasoline stations, online merchants and others fighting for a more competitive and transparent card system that is fair to consumers and merchants.