Proposed Changes to the Credit Card Interchange Standard:
A Consultation Document – July 2005
Standard No. (..) B
The Setting of Wholesale (‘Interchange’) Fees in designated credit
card schemes
Objective
The objective of this Standard is to ensure that the setting of wholesale ('interchange') fees in the designated credit card schemes is transparent and promotes:
- efficiency; and
- competition
in the Australian payments system.
Application
- This Standard is determined under Section 18 of the Payment Systems (Regulation) Act 1998.
- This Standard applies to the payment systems operated within Australia known as the Bankcard Scheme, the MasterCard system and Visa system, each of which was designated as a payment system on 12 April 2001 by the Reserve Bank of Australia under Section 11 of the Payment Systems (Regulation) Act 1998, and referred to as follows as 'the Schemes'.
- In this Standard:
an 'acquirer' is a participant in any of the Schemes that provides services to a merchant to allow that merchant to accept a credit card;
'credit card' means a card issued under the rules of any of the Schemes that can be used for purchasing goods or services on credit, or any other article issued under the rules of any of the Schemes and commonly known as a credit card;
'credit card transaction' or 'transaction' means a transaction in Australia between a credit cardholder and a merchant involving the purchase of goods or services using a credit card;
'financial year' is the 12-month period ending 30 June;
an 'issuer' is a participant in any of the Schemes in Australia that issues credit cards to the issuer's customers;
'merchant' means a merchant in Australia that accepts a credit card for payment for goods or services;
'nominated participants' are those issuers that, when selected in order of their share of the value of credit card transactions of all the Schemes in Australia as reported to the Reserve Bank of Australia in the financial year prior to the date by which the applicable cost-based benchmark must be calculated, are the minimum number of issuers to account for at least 90 per cent of those transactions, those issuers being determined by the Reserve Bank of Australia;
'rules of the Scheme' mean the constitution, rules, by-laws, procedures and instruments of the relevant Scheme as applied in Australia, and any other arrangement relating to the Scheme by which participants in that Scheme in Australia consider themselves bound;
terms defined in the Payment Systems (Regulation) Act 1998 have the same meaning in this Standard.
- This Standard refers to wholesale fees, known as 'interchange' fees, which are payable by an acquirer, directly or indirectly, to an issuer in relation to a credit card transaction in any of the Schemes.
- Each participant in any of the Schemes must do all things necessary on its part to ensure compliance with this Standard.
- If any part of this Standard is invalid, it is ineffective only to the extent of such part without invalidating the remaining parts of this Standard.
- This Standard is to be interpreted:
- in accordance with its objective; and
- by looking beyond form to substance.
- This Standard comes into force on 1 July 2006 and the benchmark set under it will become effective from 1 November 2006.
- This Standard will replace Standard No. 1, The Setting of Wholesale ('Interchange') Fees which applies to each of the Schemes individually. The benchmarks determined under that Standard will be effective until 30 October 2006.
Interchange fees
- On each of the dates specified in paragraph 11, the average of interchange fees implemented in each of the Schemes in Australia, calculated in accordance with paragraph 17 below, must not exceed the common cost-based benchmark calculated in accordance with paragraphs 12 to 16 below.
- For the purposes of paragraph 10, the dates are:
- 1 November in the year in which the relevant common cost-based benchmark is published by the Reserve Bank of Australia ; and
- the date any interchange fee is introduced, varied, or removed.
Methodology
- The common cost-based benchmark is calculated as the total of eligible costs for the nominated participants for the financial year prior to the date by which the common cost-based benchmark must be calculated, divided by the total value of credit card transactions for the same period undertaken using credit cards of all the Schemes issued by the nominated participants, and expressed as a percentage. Eligible costs are:
- issuers' costs incurred principally in processing credit card transactions, including the costs of receiving, verifying, reconciling and settling such transactions;
- issuers' costs incurred principally in respect of fraud and fraud prevention in connection with credit card transactions;
- issuers' costs incurred principally in providing authorisation of credit card transactions; and
- issuers' costs incurred in funding the interest-free period on credit card transactions, calculated using the average of the cash rate published by the Reserve Bank of Australia over the three financial years prior to the date by which the cost-based benchmark must be calculated.
- Data on eligible costs must be drawn from accounting records of the nominated participants, prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and Australian accounting standards.
- Data on eligible costs and the total value of transactions of each nominated participant must be provided by that participant to an independent expert proposed by the nominated participants and agreed to by the Reserve Bank of Australia. The expert must review the data to determine if the costs included are eligible costs.
- The independent expert and the nominated participants must provide the data on eligible costs of each nominated participant and the total value of transactions of each of the nominated participants to the Reserve Bank of Australia by 15 September of the relevant year. The Reserve Bank of Australia will calculate the common cost-based benchmark by 30 September and publish it on its website.
- The common cost-based benchmark will be calculated by 15 September 2006 and by each third anniversary thereafter. If the Reserve Bank of Australia agrees in writing, a recalculation of the common cost-based benchmark may be undertaken at another date if changes in eligible costs or other factors warrant.
- For purposes of paragraph 10, the average of interchange fees in each Scheme is a weighted average calculated as follows:
- each interchange fee rate, net of applicable taxes, is expressed as a percentage of transaction value for the transactions in the relevant Scheme to which that interchange fee rate applies for the financial year prior to the applicable date specified in paragraph 10;
- the weights to be applied to these percentages are the shares of transactions in the relevant Scheme to which each such interchange fee rate applies in the total value of transactions in the Scheme in Australia for the financial year prior to the applicable date specified in paragraph 10.
Transparency
- The administrator of each Scheme or a representative of the participants in the Scheme in Australia must publish the interchange fee rates of the Scheme in Australia on the Scheme's website or make the interchange fee rates generally available through other means.
- The administrator of each Scheme must certify annually in writing to the Reserve Bank of Australia, on or before 30 November each year, that interchange fees of the Scheme in Australia over the prior twelve months ending 31 October were in compliance with this Standard.