- Networks, retailers have fought over interchange for decades
- Concessions likely to crimp revenue of banks like BofA, Citi
The deal, which is subject to court approval, also would allow retailers to charge consumers extra at checkout for using Visa or Mastercard credit cards and use pricing tactics to steer customers to lower-cost cards, according to a statement Tuesday from attorneys representing the merchants.
“This settlement achieves our goal of eliminating anti-competitive restraints and providing immediate and meaningful savings to all US merchants, small and large,”
The legal fight over credit card swipe fees dates back to at least 2005 — before both Visa and Mastercard were spun off from the banks that owned them to become publicly traded companies. The fees, also known as interchange, are a key driver of profit for card-issuing banks and they are the primary mechanism used to fund popular rewards programs.
In recent years, merchants have grown increasingly vocal about their opposition to these fees, which typically amount to about 2% of a purchase and totaled more than $100 billion last year. While Visa and Mastercard set the level of these fees, it’s the banks that issue the cards that actually collect most of that revenue.
That means banks including
Settlement Terms
As part of the settlement, Visa and Mastercard agreed to reduce the swipe fees they charge each merchant by at least 4 basis points for at least three years, lawyers for the retailers said. And, for a period of five years, the average systemwide swipe fee for both networks must be at least 7 basis points below the current average, subject to review by an independent auditor.
Retailers will now be able to charge consumers for using a Visa or a Mastercard card and they’ll be able to adjust their prices based on the cost of accepting different credit cards. That could mean, for instance, that a consumer with a Chase Sapphire Reserve card, which carries the Visa Infinite branding and therefore comes with a higher interchange fee, would be charged more at checkout than a customer using a Chase Freedom Unlimited card.
That should help address a pain point among those merchants who despise Visa and Mastercard’s “honor all cards” rules, which stipulate that if a merchant accepts one of the brands’ cards, then it has to accept all of the brands’ cards. Some retailers have said those rules are behind the surge in interchange fees in recent years because Visa and Mastercard have worked with banks to issue more cards that run on their
“This agreement brings closure to a long-standing dispute by delivering substantial certainty and value to business owners, including flexibility in how they manage acceptance of card programs,”
Merchants will also now be allowed to offer discounts to consumers using cards from a certain bank.
The latest agreement comes about 5 years after Visa and Mastercard agreed to pay around $6 billion to millions of merchants, in what was then the largest-ever class-action settlement of a US antitrust case.
While that agreement addressed monetary damages associated with the lawsuit, it didn’t resolve the merchants’ concerns about interchange and other business practices.
“By negotiating directly with merchants, we have reached a settlement with meaningful concessions that address true pain points small businesses have identified,” Kim Lawrence, Visa’s president of North America, said in a separate statement. “Importantly, we are making these concessions while also maintaining the safety, security, innovation, protections, rewards, and access to credit that are so important to millions of Americans and to our economy.”
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Peter Eichenbaum, Jenny Surane
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