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There Are 48 Billion Reasons Why Retailers Are Going To War With Apple

target shoppers
MCX partners like Target will not accept Apple Pay. REUTERS/Eric Thayer

Apple and some major retailers are at war over how people pay for stuff in stores.

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Apple recently launched Apple Pay, which allows iPhone and iPad users to pay using their gadgets.

But some retailers like Walmart are refusing to accept it.

The logic comes down to two major things:

  1. The retailers want to reduce the fees they have to pay to credit card companies and banks with each swipe. (Apple Pay uses credit cards, and the retailers have to pay the fees).
  2. Retailers don't get much personal information when a customer uses a credit card. (Apple doesn't share much information with the retailers).
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The credit card fees are probably the most important.

Most credit card companies take about 2% or 3% of each transaction. Retailers paid approximately $48 billion to credit card companies in 2013, according to BI Intelligence analyst John Heggestuen. That's a big expense retailers would like to reduce. 

To try to reduce these fees, a group of major retailers formed something called the Merchant Consumer Exchange (MCX), which will launch its own mobile payment solution called CurrentC. CurrentC is an app that connects to your checking account and lets you pay for stuff at MCX members like Wal-Mart and Target by scanning a barcode on your phone. As it stands now, credit card companies don't want to partner with CurrentC as they have with Apple Pay, according to sources with familiar with major credit card companies' plans. 

CurrentC is designed to disrupt the model credit card companies put in place, by cutting them out of the loop. Instead of paying fees to the credit card companies, MCX retailers will be able to withdraw the money directly from a customer's bank account.

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Even if CurrentC isn't as versatile as Apple Pay, MCX retailers at least want to give it a try.

Credit card companies can charge those fees because credit cards are easy for customers to use, and customers like using them. They also provide security and other services to customers and merchants.

Major retailers would probably lose a ton of business if they decided to stop accepting credit cards, so paying that ~3% cut to Visa, MasterCard, American Express, etc. is worth it for now. And Apple Pay is very tiny. Fewer than 1 million people have it on their phones. Meanwhile, there are about 600 million credit and debit cards in circulation in the US. Plus, only a tiny fraction of retailers accept Apple Pay compared to regular credit cards. If digital wallets like Apple Pay are the future, this future is not going to happen any time soon.

us credit volume
Credit card payments volume continues to increase in the US. Business Insider Intelligence

Wal-Mart, one of the leaders in MCX, is a good example. It's suing Visa, claiming Visa illegally fixes the fees it charges retailers. Wal-Mart famously sells products at thin margins, so it needs to protect every dollar it can, especially in light of increased competition from Amazon.

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Then there's the data retailers can collect about you when you make purchases using CurrentC. Right now, much of that data is only given to the banks and credit card companies. Apple Pay is even more anonymous and encrypted, meaning the retailers have absolutely no idea who you are and what you're buying.

Without that data, retailers can't offer you targeted awards, coupons, advertisements, and so on. CurrentC will have all that stuff built into the app, so you can redeem offers through your phone at checkout.

So yes, MCX retailers are removing a potentially good payment option from customers in an effort to battle credit card companies, but from their perspective, the gamble on CurrentC could save them billions. If not, it'll be relatively easy for them to start accepting Apple Pay and similar digital wallets.

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