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Credit card - Profits and losses

Credit card - Profits and losses: Encyclopedia II - Credit card - Profits and losses

Credit card issuers (banks) cover their costs (including the interest costs for the money that is paid to merchants prior to the bank being paid by customers), and earn profits, by: Interchange fees. Interchange fees are charged by the merchant's acquirer to a card-accepting merchant as component of the so-called merchant discount fee. The merchant pays a merchant discount fee that is typically 2 to 3 percent (this is negotiated), which is why some merchants prefer cash, debit cards, or even checks. The majority of this fee, cal ...

See also:

Credit card, Credit card - How they work, Credit card - The merchant's side, Credit card - Secured credit cards, Credit card - Features, Credit card - Security, Credit card - Profits and losses, Credit card - History, Credit card - Controversy, Credit card - Credit card numbering, Credit card - Credit cards in ATMs, Credit card - Credit card networks, Credit card - Collectible credit cards

Credit card, Credit card - Collectible credit cards, Credit card - Controversy, Credit card - Credit card networks, Credit card - Credit card numbering, Credit card - Credit cards in ATMs, Credit card - Features, Credit card - History, Credit card - How they work, Credit card - Profits and losses, Credit card - Secured credit cards, Credit card - Security, Credit card - The merchant's side, Credit card debt, Credit card fraud, Credit card interest, Credit history, Credit score, Debit card, Electronic money, Loan, Stored-value card

Credit card: Encyclopedia II - Credit card - Profits and losses



Credit card - Profits and losses

Credit card issuers (banks) cover their costs (including the interest costs for the money that is paid to merchants prior to the bank being paid by customers), and earn profits, by:

  • Interchange fees. Interchange fees are charged by the merchant's acquirer to a card-accepting merchant as component of the so-called merchant discount fee. The merchant pays a merchant discount fee that is typically 2 to 3 percent (this is negotiated), which is why some merchants prefer cash, debit cards, or even checks. The majority of this fee, called the interchange fee, goes to the issuing bank, but parts of it go to the processing network, the card brand (American Express, Visa, MasterCard, etc.), and the merchant's acquirer. The interchange fee that applies to a particular merchant is a function of many variables including the type of merchant, the merchant's average ticket dollar amount, whether the cards are physically present, if the card's magnetic stripe is read or if the transaction is hand-keyed, the specific type of card, when the transaction is settled, the authorized and settled transaction amounts, etc. For a typical credit card issuer, interchange fee revenues may represent about fifteen percent of total revenues.
  • Charging interest on outstanding balances. Customers who do not pay in full the amount owed on their monthly statement (the "balance") by the due date (that is, at the end of the "grace period") owe interest ("finance charges"). These customers are known in the industry as "revolvers". Those who pay in full (pay the entire balance) do not. These customers are known in the industry as "transactors" or "deadbeats". Interest charges vary widely from card issuer to card issuer. Often, there are "teaser" rates in effect for initial periods of time (as low as zero percent for, say, six months), whereas rates for those with poor credit can be as much as 29.74 percent (annualized). In the U.S. rules governing interest rates are set at the state level; some banks have chosen to establish their credit card operations in states such as South Dakota that have less restrictive limits on interest rates.
  • Fees charged to customers. The major fees are for (1) late payments; (2) charges that result in exceeding the credit limit on the card (whether done deliberately or by mistake); (3) cash advances and convenience checks (often 3 percent of the amount); (4) transactions in a foreign currency (as much as 3 percent of the amount; a few financial institutions charge no fee for this); and (5) membership fees (annual or monthly).

Credit card companies generally guarantee the merchant will be paid on legitimate transactions regardless of whether the consumer pays their credit card bill. However, credit card companies generally will not pay a merchant if the consumer challenges the legitimacy of the transaction and will fine merchants who have a large number of chargebacks.

In recent times, credit card portfolios have been very profitable for banks, largely due to the booming economy of the late nineties. However in the case of credit cards, such high returns go hand in hand with risk, since the business is essentially one of making unsecured (uncollateralized) loans, and thus dependent on borrowers to not default in large numbers.

In some areas, such as Ireland, governments profit from credit cards through the imposition of a stamp duty or credit card tax. This is usually done where a cheque tax previously existed. This tax is taken automatically from the account, just like a purchase, by the bank on behalf of the government annually. This tax - unlike its cheque counterpart - is payable in arrears so no refund is possible.

Other related archives

1920s, 1938, 1950, 1958, ATM, American Express, Australia, Bank One, Bank of America, Bankcard, Banknotes, CVV2, Canadian Tire Money, Chase, Cheques, China UnionPay, Citibank, Coining, Coins, Congress, Credit card debt, Credit card fraud, Credit card interest, Credit card number, Credit cards, Credit history, Credit score, Debit card, Designers, Diners Club, Discover, EMV, Electronic, Electronic money, Exonumia, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Hammering, ISO 7810, Interest rates, Ireland, JCB, Loan, MasterCard, Medals, Milling, Mints, Orders, Personal Identification Number, Providian, SSL, Stored-value card, The Americas, Tokens, USA, United Kingdom, United States, VISA, Visa, automobile, bank, black market, booming economy, budget airlines, cash, cashback, celluloid, charge card, checks, cheque, college, consumer, consumer advocacy groups, controversy, credit, credit history, credit limit, databases, debit card, debit cards, debt, due date, employees, employment, expenses, fiber, fine print, floppy disk, forgery, fraud, frequent flier, fuel, gift certificates, goods, hackers, interest, lawmakers, liable, loans, logos, magnetic tape, magnetized, merchants, metal, money, numbering scheme, numismatics, offline, online, paper, personal computers, plastic, receipt, reimbursement, retail, revolving credit, rewards schemes, savings account, services, smart cards, stamp duty, strip, taxation, tuition, twentieth century, universal default



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Profits and losses", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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