Visa has IPO
Feb. 26th, 2008 12:31 pmSo, Visa is going public. Mastercard did so a year and a half ago. I'm no economist, but I have to wonder if pressure from investors is going to drive higher credit card rates and fees, at a time where economic pinches will force more people to use their cards, and in a culture that is already groomed to turn to credit as the answer to the reality that cost of living is outpacing growth in income for many.
Those with an informed opinion are formally invited to weigh in on the issue. Comment away!
Those with an informed opinion are formally invited to weigh in on the issue. Comment away!
no subject
Date: 2008-02-26 05:45 pm (UTC)I would expect being public should drive credit cards to sound, sustainable business models.
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Date: 2008-02-26 08:35 pm (UTC)My suspicion, actually, is that the reality is quite the reverse: the writing is on the wall, precisely because the existing owners have abused their power a bit too much for a bit too long. Odds are pretty good that they're either going to have to voluntarily rein things in a bit, or they'll find themselves under serious new regulation. So the private owners are using an IPO to cash out and git while the gittin' is good...
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Date: 2008-02-26 08:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-02-26 08:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-02-26 09:14 pm (UTC)In other words, Visa doesn't make any money from credit card customers paying interest, fees, or any such, they make their money as a direct percentage of each purchase.
Which, considering how we're transitioning to a more and more cashless society every day, means that I really should figure out how to buy a couple of stocks in Visa since the stuff will probably double, triple, etc., within a year of the IPO.
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Date: 2008-02-26 09:58 pm (UTC)I know that currently it is a violation of major credit card merchant agreements to specify a minimum amount of sale for credit card use, but even now I see places listing "$5 minimum for credit card sales" and things like that, violation or no. Clearly it is in Visa's best interest to be able to skim from as many transactions as possible, but at what point do more merchants risk it and set transaction minimums? We already pay ATM transaction fees several times higher than the merchant fees are, and if you use another bank's ATM, you'll pay two fees, all for the privilege of accessing your money. What happens if merchant fees go the same route?
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Date: 2008-02-27 12:23 am (UTC)As for what Visa charges merchants per transaction, and what is in their merchant agreements, that one is relative to both the merchant and the state. In some cases merchants pay a flat fee to Visa, MC, etc., per day as well or a few cents to a few dollars per transaction in addition to the percentage of the advance, usually between 2-5% of the transaction.
So when you buy a new $5,000 TV, the store probably gets $4,800 and Visa gets $200. Visa then splits that $200 with your bank by whatever arrangement they have, and your bank then splits their take with you by giving you back $50 in points/miles, etc.
Some transactions are going down as people use their accounts directly for electronic payments, which cuts out the Visa middleman, but there's also hug possibilities of future growth in Visa transactions if the new fad of transferring and storing money on cell phones goes viral.
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Date: 2008-02-27 12:50 am (UTC)I suspect that even with cell phones being used as virtual money accounts, the cell phone itself will only operate like another credit card or debit card, and not actually store any measure of currency. It'll be another gateway to your account, and Visa will be sure to get in and build that network, so they can operate another tollbooth. People don't want to carry money, they want to carry a connection to money, so that if they lose their connector, they don't lose any real capital.
no subject
Date: 2008-02-27 01:04 am (UTC)(Which gives me back a $25 Amazon gift certificates for every $2500 I purchase, 1% coming back to me.)
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Date: 2008-02-27 01:10 am (UTC)I still do carry cash, but it's usually for sundry food purchases throughout the week. Or when I'm going to a con. For everything else....
And how true they're trying to make that line ring....