Viewpoint: Why Banks Still May Be Nervous about Banking Nonbank Money Services Businesses
The FDIC draws attention to a standard fraud claim without offering much guidance.
The FDIC draws attention to a standard fraud claim without offering much guidance.
Apple Pay will be available in the UK from next month, with eight of the UK’s most established banks and the major credit and debit card networks supporting it – along with Transport for London.
In the latest move to blur the lines between social media and e-commerce, popular social sharing site Pinterest will enable users to make purchases through its platform.
The U.K. might not be a cashless society by 2020, but Visa Europe research predicts mobile payments will help displace cash as they gain popularity.
Reuters research suggests Apple may be having more trouble signing up top retailers to accept Apple Pay than the tech company anticipated.
The vast majority of payments worldwide are still made in cash. But if mobile were to combine e-commerce with proximity payment, that could be a problem for banks. One potential solution is tokenisation.
For the first time since the financial crisis, banks are investing in digital strategies. That’s a step in the right direction, but how banks incorporate mobile into those strategies, ultimately, will determine their success.
Google’s open approach contrasts starkly with Apple’s, which has continued to maintain tight control over all integrated hardware and software components. But what does Android Pay really mean for banks?
Samsung Pay will roll out in September, a bit later than its originally planned summer 2015 launch. But when the m-payments service goes live in the U.S. and Korea, it will include a consumer rewards program.
Cybercriminals are using a new form of malware to steal shoppers’ personal financial data, according to an FBI alert issued to retailers last week.
Home Depot has filed a motion to dismiss a class action lawsuit stemming from a data breach last September.
Despite industry fervor behind mobile payments, 47 percent of U.K. consumers don’t want to use their phone to make payments, with 81 percent citing security concerns, according to a recent survey.
Nearly half of smartphone users do not want to use their device to make contactless payments, mostly over fears about security, according to a survey.
Fintech funding is booming globally and within the overall sector, mobile fintech is getting the most money.
Innovation continues to be a hot commodity in payments, and five U.S. startups have been chosen to participate in Commerce.Innovated., an accelerator program to help companies focused on commerce grow their businesses.
On the heels of Facebook’s app-based money transfer service expanding to New York City and adding functions, money management provider Virtual Piggy Inc. has unveiled a P2P transfer service of its own.
Australian grocery store chain Woolworths is canceling more than AUD1.3 million (US$1 million) worth of gift cards after it mistakenly emailed nearly 8,000 redeemable card codes to more than 1,000 consumers, according to reports.
As the payments industry adjusts to the gradual demise of interchange fees, banks will face declining profits. That means data will have to be used more effectively to squeeze out the remaining opportunities. But it also means they face a dilemma between building their own services and outsourcing.
If Apple Pay provided the first example of a mobile wallet with the right ingredients to finally ignite user (and partner) interest, Google Inc.’s Android Pay platform is poised to accelerate m-payments scale.
New York State’s Department of Labor has published draft regulations for businesses that pay workers with debit cards, including a prohibition on employers profiting from card programs or passing along associated costs to their employees.
Facebook Messenger’s money transfer service has arrived in the New York City market decked out with a few added features.
Equens has announced the first go-live of its new white-label PSP proposition for banks, acquirers and payment service providers (PSPs), which creates a one-stop-shop model for banks, acquirers and PSPs both for offline and online retail payments across Europe.
The ability to browse limitless shops and purchase goods and services from almost anywhere in the world has revolutionised commerce. Yet this revolution is unfinished because no matter what the choice, no matter what the shopping experience, the critical moment of entering personal and payment details can be so complex and lead to the customer abandoning the sale
As the global payments industry transforms itself to take advantage of new technologies, some services offer the prospect of real change, but others are simply hype. Telling the difference will be the key to success in the next five years …
Processors are poised to ignite innovation by rethinking traditional business models and devising solutions for an emerging customer-centered approach to payments.
When it comes to faster payments, the U.S. has reached a tipping point with new technology driving advances that are fueling consumer demand for real-time payments.
Cybercriminals accessed the personal information of about 100,000 U.S. taxpayers in an attack on the IRS’s systems, the agency confirmed this week.
Gift card providers should expect stronger sales as the weather gets warmer and summer celebrations get into full swing, according to the latest research from the Retail Gift Card Association (RGCA).
The U.K.’s share of electronic payments transaction volume surpassed cash for the first time last year, according to the London-based Payments Council, which tracks payments data for Britain.
If you’re tracking the hottest topics in payments, watch Mozido. Over the past several months, the Austin, Texas-based mobile wallet provider has been investing, hiring and expanding in sync with the most important industry trends.
The CFPB’s final rule for prepaid financial products will come in January 2016, according to the agency’s latest rulemaking timetable.
Strong signs suggest Google Inc. this week will announce Android Pay, its new mobile payments API for developers, likely revitalizing prospects for Google Wallet, and kicking off a summer of fresh m-payments competition, putting the heat on Apple Pay and other emerging approaches.
Issued by the European Banking Association (EBA), the report cites several possible use cases in which cryptotechnology can help banks reduce costs, improve product offerings and speed new product development.
The CFPB this month updated its Company Portal Manual, which explains in detail the process when consumer complaints are submitted to the bureau as well as the procedures companies must follow if they wish to respond to a complaint.
A settlement between MasterCard and Target stemming from the retail giant’s 2013 data breach has been scrapped after failing to earn approval by enough MasterCard-issuing banks.
Limonetik, a Paris-based global digital payments provider, has expanded internationally with a new subsidiary in the U.K., Limonetik UK Ltd. The company also has appointed Clive Williams managing director and Masha Cilliers principal consultant.
Pensions and payments company Equiniti has opened a new fintech innovation centre in Cardiff, which will focus on bringing together fintech tools for employee share plans, online applications for investment platforms and web and mobile applications for pension products.
The growth of mobile money has been a steep upward curve and looks set to continue – Juniper Research predicts that there will be one billion mobile banking users worldwide by the end of 2017, up from 590 million in 2013. A recent Forrester report predicted that purchases on mobile devices would double by 2018, as even more people become comfortable buying online and retailers create more user-friendly mobile experiences
The race to accelerate payments heated up this week with the introduction of MasterCard Send, a new platform enabling the rapid transfer of funds by businesses, merchants, governments, nonprofits and card issuers to consumers via debit network rails.
With enviable annual growth rates across Europe—27 percent from 2010-2017—providers tapping new market opportunities, and digital and physical channels converging, prepaid is destined to become everyday money, according to Jason Field, head of prepaid product management, Europe, MasterCard.