Paying with a cellphone is gradually becoming a reality for consumers, with banks, telecommunications operators and Internet players all jumping in to offer payment options.
However, while one group is pushing for a system of payment through an electronic wallet hosted on the Web, another is investing in infrastructure that would allow customers to pay by swiping their phones against a reader.
The latter, championed by Internet giant Google and telecoms operators such as Orange and Vodafone, is made possible by so-called Near Field Communication (NFC) technology.
Photo: Bloomberg
It requires buyers to have specially equipped telephones, while sellers need to have new payment terminals installed. Yet it is the method preferred by both operators and banks, and particularly appears destined for developed countries.
At the world’s biggest mobile show in Barcelona, Spain, last week, several handset makers previewed telephones compatible with NFC, while chipmakers Gemalto, INSIDE Secure or STMicroelectronics all demonstrated their solutions for cellphone payment.
However, “despite the large-scale trials and some other announcements, we are far from a massive utilization by consumers, neither are we seeing deployment on an industrial scale among sellers,” said Patrick Flamant, manager at Internet payment operator Ogone.
Analysts say that payment by NFC telephones may be eclipsed by other methods that consumers find more handy — public transport cards, identification badges or store cards.
“For me, NFC will never take off because I believe more in payment solutions via social networks — Facebook credit or PayPal,” said Gilles Blanc, Benchmark group’s research director.
Indeed, Internet payment specialist PayPal already has 106 million active online users and mobile payment is already a reality with US$4 billion in transactions made last year and US$7 billion is expected this year.
Under PayPal’s system, a buyer can scan the item and pay by phone using his or her PayPal account.
“It is important to follow our users everywhere where they are buying,” PayPal mobile vice president David Marcus said.
“We are now investing in physical boutiques,” he said, because “we offer solutions for whatever the payment method.”
Starting this week, the group has begun allowing customers of US chain Home Depot to pay with PayPal in 2,000 locations across the country.
Meanwhile, US credit card giants Visa and MasterCard have chosen to invest in both methods of payment — NFC and its sophisticated telephones, as well as mobile payments with basic telephones, which would be better adapted for developing countries.
“Mobile is a channel which allows many different things across different markets,” said Hannes van Rensburg, who heads Visa’s mobile payment unit for emerging markets.
Orange Money, a subsidiary of French operator Orange, has also signed a deal with Visa to offer pre-paid accounts in seven African countries and the Middle East for mobile clients — many of whom have never had a bank account — to pay using their telephones.
Mastercard has also partnered with banks or operators to offer mobile payments.
“It’s not so much about technology, but to make an experience proposition for the consumer better, more secure and faster,” said Javier Herraiz, a manager at Santander Card, a partner of Mastercard.
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