Justice Department Probing Visa Over Debit-Card Practices (reuters.com) 63
The U.S. Department of Justice is investigating whether Visa is engaging in anticompetitive practices in the debit-card market, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday, citing people familiar with the matter. From a report: The department's antitrust division has been probing if Visa limited merchants' ability to route debit-card transactions over card networks that are often less expensive, the WSJ reported. Many of the department's questions are focused on online debit-card transactions, but investigators are looking into in-store issues as well, according to the report. Earlier this year, Visa and fintech startup Plaid called off their $5.3 billion merger following a lawsuit from the Justice Department aimed at blocking the deal on antitrust grounds.
Hopefully (Score:4, Insightful)
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debit cards suck (Score:1, Interesting)
You pay a proportionally exorbitant fee at the machine. You pay an additional per transaction fee if you are out of network. And most banks charge you a monthly fee if you use any out of network ATMs.
We should regulate these transactions. And bring in nationalize standards for consumer banking, even if that means we have to create a new Postal banking service to operate as a model and provide competition.
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For ATMs, its pretty easy to justify why there is a fee. Someone had to drive around with an armor car getting 8 MPG with a stack of cash to fill that thing up. For most bank's own ATMs, they eat the cost of that as the price of doing business (some banks don't). Other banks charge your bank a fee for pulling their cash that they paid someone to fill and your bank may pass this on to you. This all makes sense (unless your bank is charging you a fee on top of the ATM fee). The transaction fees on electro
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Yes, and that is the transaction fee that I mentioned, the rest is talking about physical ATMs (same as the parent of your reply). If your bank does that, I would drop said bank. I know mine doesn't, but then again I rarely use debit cards for online purchases as there is a major lack of protects like there are with credit cards.
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This isn't about people that have good credit and a regular bank. This is about the people called "under-banked" who are fico 500 or less that a normal sane bank wouldn't touch. Even some low 600's use them regularly.
I worked shortly at a pay day lender umbrella company to build a vm/citrix farm. I was shocked at how many people actually use them as a regular bank to "deposit" paper checks and pay there loans. They issue a 3rd party debit card with all kinds of transaction fees (monthly, intake, outtake
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This isn't about people that have good credit and a regular bank. This is about the people called "under-banked" who are fico 500 or less that a normal sane bank wouldn't touch. Even some low 600's use them regularly.
I don't know why you're bringing credit scores into a discussion about debit cards. You know, the cards with which you spend money that's already deposited into your checking account. Borrowing has nothing to do with it.
And who goes to the bank to open a checking account and gets turned down for poor credit? A loan, sure, but a checking account?
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You obviously haven't had much experience in the banking industry. I can guarantee any bank/credit union that open's a savings/checking account for a customer pulls a SP (Soft Pull) on at least Fico8 if not Fico9 before giving them an account it's all automated at the desk during the process. Even a checking account has to be insured on the back-end for accounting purposes.
Try going into a bank with a sub-600 score and see if you can open anything easily. Not to mention the fact that those people will no
Re:debit cards suck (Score:5, Informative)
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Cash isn't free for the merchant either. You need change - which the bank will charge you for. You need to keep the cash secure - secure cash drawers, a safe, cameras and alarms to deter robbers (and insurance for when they're not deterred). And you need a security van to take the cash away, and someone to count and bank it. There's a good reason some businesses have been looking at going card-only.
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And most merchants handle cards, too. You didn't cite sources for if handling cash is cheaper or more expensive for the merchant than processing debit and/or credit transactions.
And in some states, merchants can offer a discount/lower price for paying in cash. Colorado did this a couple years ago, and doesn't seem to have ended the world.
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just go to a merchant that will give cash back. That is what I do when I need cash and there are no fees. Mostly use mobile payments anyway so cash not needed for most transactions.
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This is not a debit card issue. It's 100% an issue with who you choose to hold your money. If you're with one of the super-mega banks like Bank of America or Wells Fargo, ya, they'll nickle and dime you wherever possible. They have to make money for their investors.
If you're with a half-decent credit union, you don't get any of these fees and chances are you can use 30,000 ATMs nationwide with the Co-Op network-- free of charge. https://www.co-opfs.org/Shared... [co-opfs.org]
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This is not a debit card issue. It's 100% an issue with who you choose to hold your money. If you're with one of the super-mega banks like Bank of America or Wells Fargo, ya, they'll nickle and dime you wherever possible. They have to make money for their investors.
That's what interest is for. Banks are making the difference between the prime rate, and their lending rate. If they can't stay in business on that basis alone, then they are business FAILURES.
Floating stock in a bank is an abomination of greed, just like card fees are.
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You really should switch banks.
Not only does my bank NOT charge any ATM fees they'll reimburse you up to $6 a month for fees the ATM operators charge.
Granted they pay very little interest on a checking accounts and not much better on savings accounts but last I looked around a few months ago, pretty much everyone else has dropped their rates to damn near zero too on most types of accounts.
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Either good or donations will come of it, which? (Score:5, Insightful)
1. The Justice Department is doing something good and actually regulating big banks for a change
2. Visa is about to increase their political donations and lobbying and nothing will have a hope of passing
Oh yeah, and since Biden is associated with it, Fox News and the RNC will call it socialism, marxism, terrorism, genocide of jobs, link it to the "squad" for no reason, etc.
It's donations (Score:2)
It's neither good or bad, it's a fight between mega corps. The savings will not be passed onto consumers in any appreciable fashion. For that to happen the DOJ needs to go after the constant stream of Mergers & Acquisitions, and there's zero political will to do that.
There's more to this than fees (Score:5, Insightful)
Try reloading a 'prepaid' card with your debit card. Many prepaids don't allow loads from debit cards, some charge pretty substantial fees. Prepaid cards are aimed, mostly at the 'unbanked', and intend to give these 'unbanked' a simple and manageable solution to various purchasing problems, especially online purchasing. But they miss the real reason so many are 'unbanked', they just have lifestyles and make choices that do not work within traditional banking. It costs, but that's another discussion.
Look out for how this blossoms into examining restrictions on debit use v. ACH or checking use. A debit card access your checking account, usually, and as such is a virtual immediate check. Why do prepaid cards so often refuse debit loads? Network fees. They want all the fees for themselves, and when your bank/network charges them, they are reluctant to pass that along, possibly because it exposes the real fees they want to charge.
Only any specific regulations, restrictions, or costs associated with fraud protection could justify debit fees so much in excess of credit fees - except that debit cards have no interest revenue. Gotta make the buck somehow. That's the crux. No interest, no revenue.
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Of course irresponsible is relative. Have you ever tried to get assurances from a bank that a deposit from a check is FINAL? That is, it's in your account and cannot be clawed back? You can't do it. They will not make such an assurance.
Then, if/when they DO claw a deposit back, they will happily bounce checks you wrote against that deposit and charge you hefty fees for doing so, pulling your balance down further, causing more checks to bounce. Banks have even been known to structure processing in order to m
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Certainly I do that and presumably you do, but some people are stuck living paycheck to paycheck. Sometimes the "shady people" they deal with are mid to large companies that get defrauded by an outsourced payroll company. We even saw a case here on /. where an outsource payroll company clawed back multiple months of paychecks from people. How much slush do you expect people to maintain? A remarkable number of small employers really suck at accounting. It's not exactly shady since no fraud was intended and
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There's no reason at all, to be "unbanked" if you don't want to.
Even if that were true—which it isn't, to be clear—what of it? Why should people be compelled to put their money in banks if they don't want to? Whatever their reasons, "not wanting to bank" is a valid life choice and something that should be both permissible and supported, in much the same way that cash remains an option despite much of the world having switched to credit cards and the like. The fact that you and I bank doesn't mean everyone else should as well. The fact that you and I may use
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Between people who are physically incapable of leaving their homes, people who can't afford gas or public transportation, and people who simply can't spare the time to open/manage an account in between their other obligations, I disagree that everyone has access to banking. Sure, some Walmarts have banks, but not all of them. Sure, there are plenty of decent, online banks that operate as you described, but the banks these sorts of people tend to find within walking distance are the types that charge ATM and
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At some point, people have to be adults - and that applies equally to able persons in the community to assist those that legitimately can't get access to finance.
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Then what's the solution?
Prepaid cards. That's, I think, what the OP was complaining about. Prepaid cards can be picked up at practically any grocery or convenience store and give those people nearly all of the convenience that comes from having a credit or debit card. The OP was suggesting that prepaid cards are in some ways rigged to discourage various behaviors that should be permissible.
Re: There's more to this than fees (Score:2)
You know very little about the unbanked. Watch "Spent: Looking for Change", YouTube by American Express.
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When I had a Serve card, for specific purposes, the rules changed. No debit loads. I've looked at others - Bluebird, only for the Amex -branded account; Many Visa Prepaid cards simply do not specify a method that includes loading from an external account with a debit card - 'checking account', usually scheduled.
In fact, if you look carefully, I've yet to see a prepaid debit that explicitly addresses loading from a debit card. From the checking/ACH account associated with your regular debit card, yes. Cash,
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Re: There's more to this than fees (Score:2)
Ok, here we go...
First, this isn't about 'sneaky shit'. Several good reasons to use a preloaded/reloadable card. My first reason, I didn't want to use a specific credit account for routine charges where I was limited to one issuer. It was for use at a work location. I like my job. Well the issuer changed the rules, and I used cash instead for a while.
Other people use these reloadable cards as a budgeting tool. And some use them to limit their exposure.
So many people don't understand how these instruments ar
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Why do you need on demand debit loads to a prepaid card unless you're doing sneaky shit behind the back of a significant other? If you're worried about the account details being breached just use a credit card and pay off the balance at the end of the month, if the CC gets breached you can dispute it and not owe a thing till the dispute is settled. If you're doing some other kind of shady purchasing online, do you really think the popo/feds cant subpoena the prepaid card provider to get the details of your debit card used to top up the card and link it right back to you? If you're doing that shit reloading with cash would be the best bet.
I have a serve card and I load it regularly from a debit card. I first started doing it because of mobile banking. It took forever for my bank to add mobile payments to their accounts. I have been using the serve card for years for mobile banking. Now I use the serve prepaid card for online subscriptions, vending machines, flea markets, gas stations or anyplace that I feel is high risk. I just keep enough on it that I feel I can risk at any given time. It is all about keeping my checking account sa
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And by lifestyles you mean being paid in cash off the books. Which means repeated deposits of cash which would, eventually, trigger an investigation into why all that cash keeps being deposited.
As for choices, the lamest excuse I heard is that if they deposit money in the bank, they'd have to pay taxes on the interest earned. Because the tax on fifteen cen
Re: There's more to this than fees (Score:2)
Many reasons why people are unbanked... Some, when they use payday loans, find they need to pay in cash, at the window, on time. Scrambling from work, probably jamming public transit, no time to go to the bank or find an ATM, pay feed there for being out of network, and they are getting by with a few dollars a week to spare. Some do work jobs paid cash. Not all are avoiding taxes... Many have all they can do to get by week to week.
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The lifestyle choice that led to me being unbanked for years was banking with Wells Fargo. They processed withdrawals immediately and deposits eventually, leading to overdraft fees, then canceled my account and reported me to chexsystems, so I could not get an account.
Some people have no bank account through no fault of their own, unless you call living paycheck to paycheck and banking with a major bank a fault. I was young and knew no better.
Just one more way the poor are punished for being poor.
Don't forget adulterers! :) (Score:2)
Prepaid cards are aimed, mostly at the 'unbanked', and intend to give these 'unbanked' a simple and manageable solution to various purchasing problems, especially online purchasing. But they miss the real reason so many are 'unbanked', they just have lifestyles and make choices that do not work within traditional banking.
It's also great for booking a hotel without your wife finding out. :)
:) She even invited me to join her at a hotel once. I was flattered, and secretly thrilled she asked, but was never going to say yes...not worth the divorce.
I have a friend who is constantly cheating on her husband and went on a long tangent about this.
For better or worse, some just don't like being tracked. I think in most cases, it is for worse....people hiding things from their spouses or their ex's divorce attorneys. You c
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my prepaid card does allow loading from debit cards. Like most things, you really need to do your homework before picking one.
Re: There's more to this than fees (Score:2)
Share the issuer with us?
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Share the issuer with us?
american express serve. No fees if loaded at Walmart or online (the two ways I load the card).
Re: There's more to this than fees (Score:2)
Ah. It wasn't always like that. No, it wasn't.
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Ah. It wasn't always like that. No, it wasn't.
Its been that way for at least 8 years because that is how long I have had it. Been using it for mobile payments since.
Re: There's more to this than fees (Score:2)
Well mine didn't... Let's see, 8 years, 2013. I let mine go before that, I had one before it was Amex branded...
Elections matter (Score:3)
I have a hard time imagining Bob Barr's DoJ pursuing this so it looks like elections matter.
However, shouldn't the CFPB be doing this?
What they REALLY need to do is ... (Score:1)
Clearly punishment and revenge (Score:1)
Glad to see team Biden already punishing their political enemies. Visa somewhat loudly stated they're in the business of facilitating payments, not deciding what social justice cause to take up and who to ban from the banking system. Mastercard and Paypal happily play politics with their services.
100% in defense of Visa. When is the investigation into the later?
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Visa blocked Wikileaks just like the rest.
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They did but they haven't gone as far as the rest. They also may not have had a choice with Wikileaks.
Anti-trust (Score:1)