Visa, MasterCard and major banks agreed to pay US retailers at least US$6 billion to settle a long-running lawsuit that alleged the card issuers conspired to fix the fees that stores pay to accept credit cards. As part of the settlement, stores from Rite Aid to Kroger will be allowed to charge customers more if they pay using a credit card.
The pact, announced late on Friday, was called by lawyers involved in the case the largest antitrust settlement in US history. It was seen as a major victory for merchants that have long complained about the billions of dollars in so-called “swipe” or “interchange” fees that they pay to banks for purchases made using plastic.
However, at a time when shoppers are increasingly using credit and debit cards, merchants will face a dilemma: whether to charge shoppers extra for using plastic, and if so, how to do so without angering them.
Marilyn Landis, who was last year’s chairman of the National Small Business Association, said that the settlement was a victory for small businesses across the country because it could ultimately lead to banks lowering the fees they charge stores for customers’ credit card purchases.
Landis, who owns Pittsburgh-based financial services firm Basic Business Concepts, said that would be a big relief. She is now paying 3.75 percent each time a customer pays with a credit card. If bank card companies reduce the fees they charge her to 2.75 percent, she would save US$1 on every US$100 in sales.
“That’s huge,” she said.
According to the National Retail Federation, the nation’s largest retail group, swipe fees costs for stores total about US$30 billion per year. Mallory Duncan, senior vice president and general counsel for the group, said the settlement was a step in the right direction.
“What we need are changes in the rules that bring about transparency and competition that would be here for years to come,” he said.
The dispute between stores and banks dates back to 2005. That is when large retailers, including Kroger Co, Safeway Inc and Walgreen Co began filing price-fixing lawsuits against Visa, MasterCard and other banks.
The retailers claimed the credit card issuers worked together to fix the fees that stores pay to accept credit and debit cards. The fees, which vary depending on the type of store and the type of card issues, average about 2 percent of the price of a purchase.
Visa and MasterCard make money on the fees that stores pay for each customer that uses credit or debit cards for their purchases. The fees are set by card processing networks, but collected by, and split with, the banks that issue the cards.
The card companies long have defended the fees they charge stores. They say stores benefit from being able to accept credit and debit cards from customers, who often spend more when they are using plastic instead of cash or checks.
Retailers fought to charge customers who use plastic for their purchases extra. They have argued that the ability to charge customers who use plastic more for their purchases would reduce their costs for accepting the cards.
However, up until now, Visa and MasterCard have banned stores from charging customers who use credit cards more.
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