Australia's big banks
team up to challenge Apple on mobile payment apps
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[July 27, 2016]
By Matt Siegel
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia's three
biggest banks, including no. 1 lender National Australia Bank (NAB)
, on Wednesday said they had lodged a joint application with
anti-trust regulators seeking approval to collectively negotiate
with Apple Inc <AAPL.O> to install their own electronic payments
applications on iPhones.
Apple, which operates its own Apple Pay mobile wallet, does not
allow third-party electronic payment apps to be loaded onto to the
hugely popular smartphones. The banks are seeking to be able to
negotiate jointly for access to Apple's phones without themselves
being accused of violating anti-competition law.
The move escalates a power struggle between Australia's dominant
lenders and Apple on financial technology, a growing force in
shaping global retail banks' strategy. The three banks have resisted
signing deals to use Apple Pay and want iPhone users to be able to
install the electronic wallet systems they have already developed
and financed themselves.
A spokeswoman for Apple in Australia wasn't immediately available to
comment on the move by the banks. For Apple, the payments app offers
a potentially lucrative new stream of revenue from services and
software as iPhone sales retreat - on Tuesday it reported a 15
percent drop in sale of the device.
The country's second-biggest lender, Commonwealth Bank of Australia
<CBA.AX>, and number three, Westpac Banking Corp <WBC.AX>, teamed up
with NAB to file the application with the Australian Competition and
Consumer Commission (ACCC). The big three have been joined in the
move by smaller lender Bendigo and Adelaide Bank <BEN.AX>.
The ACCC declined to comment on the application.
The spokesman for the bloc of lenders, Lance Blockley, Senior
Advisor at banking industry group Novantas, said the move is the
first challenge by banks to Apple on mobile payments restrictions of
which it's aware.
While Apple rival Samsung Electronics Co and Alphabet Inc's
Google have developed proprietary payments systems known as Samsung
Pay and Android Pay, Samsung smartphones and other Android handsets
accept third-party mobile payment apps.
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Pedestrians walk past a logo of the Westpac Bank Corp on display in
a window of a branch located in central Sydney, Australia, July 2,
2016. REUTERS/David Gray
APPLE PAY ROLLOUT
Australia and New Zealand Bank, which signed a deal to use the Apple
Pay system in April, is the only of the country's 'Big Four' banks
not to join the action.
Apple has rolled out its payments system to six countries so far - the United
States, China, Britain, Canada and Singapore, as well as Australia - with plans
to expand to many more.
Some banks in countries beyond Australia have been reluctant to accept the
system, though in recent months Apple has added four banks in Singapore to its
sole partner there, American Express <AXP.N>, as well as Canada's five big
banks.
To use Apple Pay, consumers pay for goods and services by holding hold their
iPhones over special Apple payment terminals, as well as vending machines that
accept contactless payments.
The three Australian banks contend that while Apple allows apps on iPhones using
other commonplace technology, such as Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, restricting the
technology through which mobile wallets function - known as Near Field
Technology - constitutes anti-competitive behavior.
(Reporting by Matt Siegel; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
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