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The Commission is in the final stages of preparing its long-awaited decision on MasterCard’s suspected abuse of payment card fees, with publication expected just before the Christmas break. Payments networks, retailers, banks and consumers are waiting to see if the decision succeeds in rewriting the rules for the cards industry as well as reducing shop-floor prices.
The decision has had a complicated path through the commission’s own services, but a meeting of member state competition authorities has been slated for 13 December to review the decision before final publication by the commission, which is expected for 19 December – with the important proviso that there are no slippages in the meantime.
While Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes has publicly stated her intention to wrap up the case before year-end, her services are cutting it fine with 19 December being the last meeting of the
The antitrust investigation into one of the world’s two major payments networks concerns the setting of cross-border ‘interchange fees’: the fee charged between a shop’s bank and a cardholder’s bank to balance the transaction.
These charges have long been in the cross-hairs of
While MasterCard has announced to investors it is not anticipating a fine (since the measures were notified to the commission), the decision is expected to result in changes to the calculation method of such fees and a subsequent drop in their levels.
The interchange fee can cover factors as diverse as processing costs, risk management fees, marketing services and the cost of funds, some of which retailers don't think they should pay for. Indeed, some associations claim that retailers should only foot the bill for processing and guarantees against fraud.
Conversely, banks and card networks argue that “nothing comes for free”, and if
In recent months, consumer groups, banks, retailers, card networks and even the European Central Bank have complained that delays over the commission's crucial decision on MasterCard are holding back investments vital for the construction of
The hold-up is thought to have been due to friction between DG Competition and two other commission departments: the legal services and DG Internal Market, the department charged with financial services regulation.
And while MasterCard sits and waits for the decision, the entire industry is watching. Retail associations such as Eurocommerce and the British Retail Consortium have been raising the volume in past weeks, preparing for the commission's verdict and pushing for a total ban on the fees.
Recently, the commission has been steeling itself ahead of the much-awaited MasterCard decision, concluding hard-hitting cases against French network Cartes Bancaires and Visa (in a membership dispute involving Morgan Stanley). Although the cases were only loosely related, they have been positioned as part of the quest to liberalise
But MasterCard has stated that an appeal to
By Lewis Crofts