Early days, but Apple Pay
struggles outside U.S.
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[June 02, 2016]
By Matt Siegel, Jeremy Wagstaff and Eric Auchard
(Reuters) - More than 18 months after Apple
Pay took the United States by storm, the smartphone giant has made only
a small dent in the global payments market, snagged by technical
challenges, low consumer take-up and resistance from banks.
The service is available in six countries and among a limited range of
banks, though in recent weeks Apple has added four banks to its sole
Singapore partner American Express; Australia and New Zealand Banking
Group in Australia; and Canada's five big banks.
Apple Pay usage totaled $10.9 billion last year, the vast majority of
that in the United States. That is less than the annual volume of
transactions in Kenya, a mobile payments pioneer, according to research
firm Timetric.
And its global turnover is a drop in the bucket in China, where Internet
giants Alibaba and Tencent dominate the world's biggest mobile payments
market - with an estimated $1 trillion worth of mobile transactions last
year, according to iResearch data.
Anecdotal evidence from Britain, China and Australia suggests Apple Pay
is popular with core Apple followers, but the quality of service, and
interest in it, varies significantly.
To use Apple Pay, consumers tap their iPhone over payment terminals to
buy coffee, train tickets and other services. It can be also used at
vending machines that accept contactless payments.
Apple Pay transactions were a fraction of the $84.5 billion in iPhone
sales for the six months to March, which accounted for two-thirds of
Apple's total revenue.
TECH HITCHES
In Australia, where Apple Pay launched a month ago, payment machines
supported by one mid-sized bank reported frequent failures.
"Bendigo Bank is experiencing some unforeseen technical issues in
accepting Apple Pay payments at selected merchant terminals," a
spokeswoman for the bank told Reuters, adding that a lack of wider
industry engagement in launching the service limited the lead time in
testing the new technology.
Apple Vice President Jennifer Bailey said such experiences were
premature and not representative. "Like any set of major technology
changes, it takes time," she said. "We want to move as quickly as
possible, we push it as quickly as possible."
Facing a slowing smartphone business, Apple has taken on the payments
market hoping to add ways to make its devices more appealing, and more
revenue streams. Apple takes a cut of up to 15 cents in the United
States on every $100 spent.
While it has long mastered the supply chain for its mobile devices, the
payments ecosystem has proved harder to control, and banks in other
countries have reportedly negotiated lower transaction fees,
contributing to its slow global roll-out.
Apple nearly doubled its R&D spending to more than $8 billion in 2013-15
as it pushed out a wave of new products including Apple Watch and Apple
Pay, as well as upgrades to existing hardware devices and new services.
RESISTANCE
Apple has leveraged its huge U.S. user base to push Pay, but has met
resistance in Australia, Britain and Canada where banks are building
their own products.
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An Apple iphone 6 with Apple Pay is shown in this photo illustration
in Encinitas , California June 3, 2015. REUTERS/Mike Blake
"Payments in general is such a complicated system with so many incumbent
providers that revolutionary change like this was not going to happen very
quickly," said Joshua Gilbert, an analyst at First Annapolis Consulting.
The upshot: Apple has rolled out Pay in a dribble, adding countries and partners
where it can - Hong Kong is expected to be added next - resulting in an uneven
banking landscape with users and retail staff not always sure what will work and
how.
In Britain, for example, $14 billion was spent via contactless cards last year,
according to Windsor Holden, a Juniper Research analyst. That makes it harder to
persuade people to take the extra step on their smartphone for the same checkout
convenience.
"You have over 86 million contactless cards in circulation, you have to persuade
Britons to register their cards to the (Apple Pay) service when they can already
use them to make a contactless payment," Holden said.
In Australia, where more than 60 percent of all card transactions are through
contactless cards, reception has also been muted. A spokesman for one large
retailer said he had seen "very little uptake of the payment option" in his
sector. He didn't want to be named as he was not authorized to speak publicly
about the matter.
Diego Machuca, 32, banks with Apple Pay-holdout Commonwealth Bank, has an iPhone
and is already "largely cashless". He says Apple Pay is appealing, but he
wouldn't switch banks just to access that one feature. "Not over that. There's
too much work involved just for tap-and-go," he told Reuters.
Three months after the China launch, users on online forums complained that
using Apple Pay, even at popular fast-food outlets, was not as seamless as local
services such as WeChat, Tencent's messaging and mobile commerce phenomenon.
Nonetheless, Apple's approach has spurred development in several markets where
the mobile payments industry had previously not taken hold - giving it the jump
on rivals Google's Android Pay and Samsung Pay.
Android Pay only launched in the United States in March and in Britain last
month for use on the latest model Android phones. Samsung Pay is available in
three markets; China, South Korea and the United States.
(Reporting by Matt Siegel in SYDNEY, Jeremy Wagstaff in SINGAPORE, Eric Auchard
in LONDON and Beijing Newsroom; Editing by Ian Geoghegan)
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