Dec 19 2007

MasterCard Europe to Challenge European Commission Decision on Cross-Border Interchange Fees

Tag: Antitrust, EU, Europe, Legal, MasterCard, Shopping, TechLuverJack @ 9:06 AM

MasterCard Europe to Challenge European Commission Decision on Cross-Border Interchange FeesWaterloo, Belgium and Purchase, NY — Dec 19, `07 — MasterCard Europe said that it will appeal to the European Court of First Instance today’s decision by the European Commission regarding MasterCard Europe’s default cross-border interchange fees.

The Commission’s Order requires the company, among other things, to “repeal [its] Intra-EEA fallback interchange fees, as well as [its] SEPA/Intra-Eurozone interchange fees” within six months. The Order applies only to “interchange fees for MasterCard branded consumer credit and charge cards and for MasterCard or Maestro branded debit cards”.

MasterCard Europe believes that it has strong grounds for its appeal. While it will comply with the Commission’s Order, the company said that it is prepared to take action so that its payment products remain competitive and continue to benefit the millions of European cardholders who use and merchants that accept MasterCard and Maestro cards.

MasterCard Europe said its decision to appeal is based on its firm conviction that market forces, not regulation, should drive key decisions such as the setting of interchange fees and retailers’ choices over which forms of payment to accept. More at MasterCard.


Dec 19 2007

Antitrust: European Commission Prohibits MasterCard’s Intra-EEA Multilateral Interchange Fees

Tag: Antitrust, EU, Europe, Legal, MasterCard, Shopping, TechLuverJack @ 5:01 AM

Antitrust: European Commission Prohibits MasterCard’s Intra-EEA Multilateral Interchange FeesAntitrust: European Commission Prohibits MasterCard’s Intra-EEA Multilateral Interchange FeesBrussels — Dec 19, `07 –The European Commission has decided that MasterCard’s Multilateral Interchange Fees (MIF) for cross-border payment card transactions with MasterCard and Maestro branded debit and consumer credit cards in the European Economic Area (EEA) violate EC Treaty rules on restrictive business practices (Article 81).

The Commission concluded that MasterCard’s MIF, a charge levied on each payment at a retail outlet when the payment is processed, inflated the cost of card acceptance by retailers without leading to proven efficiencies.

MasterCard has six months to comply with the Commission’s order to withdraw the fees. If MasterCard fails to comply, the Commission may impose daily penalty payments of 3.5% of its daily global turnover in the preceding business year.

MIF are not illegal as such. However, a MIF in an open payment card scheme such as MasterCard’s is only compatible with EU competition rules if it contributes to technical and economic progress and benefits consumers. In the EU, over 23 billion payments, exceeding a value of €1350 billion, are made every year with payment cards.

Why does MasterCard’s MIF restrict competition under EC Treaty rules on restrictive business practices (Article 81 (1))?
MasterCard’s MIF is a mechanism that restricts price competition between acquiring banks by artificially inflating the basis on which these banks set their charges to merchants. A MIF effectively determines a floor under the merchant service charge and merchants are unable to negotiate a price below it. This can considerably inflate the costs of payment card usage at merchant outlets to the detriment of merchants and their customers. For instance, the Commission estimates that MasterCard’s MIF accounted for more than 70% of the merchant service charges for credit cards in Belgium (2002) and for approximately 60% of these charges in Italy (2003).

If MasterCard operated without a MIF, merchants would pay lower prices for accepting cards and, as a consequence, their customers should also incur lower costs for shopping at a merchant’s.

Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes said: “Multilateral interchange fee agreements such as MasterCard’s inflate the cost of card acceptance by retailers. Consumers foot the bill, as they risk paying twice for payment cards: once through annual fees to their bank and a second time through inflated retail prices paid not only by card users but also by customers paying cash. The Commission will accept these fees only where they are clearly fostering innovation to the benefit of all users.”

More at the European Commission here and here.