American Express Wins and No One Loses

win

win

Litigation and credit cards go together like Chip and Pin.  Merchants and card issuers continue to bicker about who owns the customer.  In the latest case, which made its way to the Supreme Court of the United States, the SCOTUS acknowledged the difference between American Express and bank cards.  American Express owns both sides of the transaction while bank cards use two businesses to service merchant and issuer payments.

The real business point is about anti-steering.  Did Amex strategy to prohibit merchants from pushing customers away from least cost options create an unfair advantage? SCOTUS says no, and that becomes the law of the land.

There is plenty of press coverage but my favorite today is in the Washington Post.

There are acceptance issues.  Visa and Mastercard are accepted at 10.3 million locations while Amex is accepted at 9.0 million.

The real question is “does the steering really hurt businesses or consumers?” Consumers will decide with their pockets,  purses and wallets.  And, as for emerging technologies, this is more of a safety shield.

American Express has added several bankcard-type cards, such as the Blue Cash card and the Millennial-focused Cobalt card.    The network stated in their 1Q18 investor reports that they are looking at some merchant discount reductions to gain parity with MC and V at the point of sale.

Maybe the unexpected consequence is that this win will increase competition with the payment networks, protect emerging technology platforms from unnecessary litigation, and let the consumer market decide how to pay.

Except for rewards, consumers rarely see cost efficiencies passed back in retail savings anyway, so from this perspective, the industry has a zero-sum game.  Amex has a victory and there are no measurable negative impacts.

Overview by Brian Riley, Director, Credit Advisory Service at Mercator Advisory Group

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