MasterCard may apply for
China payment license this year
Send a link to a friend
[July 22, 2016]
By Matthew Miller
BEIJING (Reuters) - MasterCard Inc
hopes to apply this year to become a payment service provider in
China after the government opened the market, but the company is
still weighing whether to do so alone or with a partner, senior
executives said on Friday.
The world's most populous country is "pretty crucial" to its future,
but MasterCard is still studying rules in China that would affect
its business and is hammering out a business plan, Ann Cairns,
president of international markets, told Reuters in an interview.
China in June allowed foreign payment card companies to operate in
the country under new rules, potentially giving companies like
MasterCard and Visa Inc <V.N> access to its 55 trillion yuan ($8.25
trillion) card payment market.
Under the rules, China's national security and cyber security
standards must be met. Applicants must also hold 1 billion yuan in
registered capital in a local company.
"We're trying to understand the rules," Cairns said, adding that
MasterCard would like to enter China as soon as possible. "Certain
things inside the rules – such as the new cyber rules, which need
more development and understanding about how they’re going to work."
Visa and MasterCard, the world's two largest credit and debit card
companies, have been lobbying for more than a decade for direct
access to China's cards market, projected to become the world's
biggest by 2020.
Asked if it was possible that MasterCard submits a license
application this calendar year, Ling Hai, co-president for
Asia-Pacific, said that was the hope but there were no guarantees.
"There is so much uncertainty and variability in the process.
Something that should take one year can take two years," he said.
[to top of second column] |
A MasterCard credit card is pictured next to a computer chip on a
bank card in this photo illustration taken June 9, 2016.
REUTERS/Maxim Zmeyev/Illustration
Bank card consumer transactions reached 55 trillion yuan in 2015,
accounting for 48 percent of total social consumption, according to
the People's Bank of China. The market is dominated by state-run
China UnionPay Co.
Asked what was holding MasterCard back from jumping in, Cairns said
it hinged on the business model and which local partners it decides
to go with.
Cairns said capital requirements, security standards and for
MasterCard to be locally based did not represent obstacles to the
company.
MasterCard has never said it was under pressure to partner in China,
according to Cairns.
($1 = 6.6690 yuan)
(Reporting by Matthew Miller; Writing by John Ruwitch; Editing by
Ryan Woo)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|