Samsung takes fight to Apple with mobile
wallet strategy
Send a link to a friend
[June 22, 2016]
By Matt Siegel and Se Young Lee
SYDNEY/SEOUL (Reuters) - Smartphone leader
Samsung Electronics <005930.KS> has for years been a spectator as Apple
<AAPL.O> built a services "ecosystem" supporting its products. But now,
as the two develop the market for mobile payments, the Korean tech giant
is taking the fight to its U.S. archrival.
For Apple, offering users the ability to tap their iPhones on
sales terminals to buy a coffee, snack or train ticket is a fresh
revenue stream, like its iTunes music and entertainment service. The
banks it works with cough up a small charge for each transaction -
reportedly 0.15 percent in the United States.
Samsung, which has trailed behind its competitors in software and
services, is taking a different path.
It is not seeking fees from its financial partners, viewing Samsung
Pay as an engine to drive sales of phones and other devices.
"We're a hardware company, and at the end of the day I think what
we're trying to do is get people who hold (one of) our phones and
use it ... to just love it more," Elle Kim, Global Vice President of
Samsung Pay, told Reuters in Sydney.
It is early days yet; the companies' payment services have been
direct competitors in the United States only since last September,
China for four months, and Australia and Singapore for just a week
or two. Apple Pay is also available in Britain and Canada, and
Samsung Pay in South Korea and Spain.
Apple Pay usage totaled just $10.9 billion last year, mostly in the
United States, tiny compared with China, where an estimated $1
trillion worth of mobile transactions were completed last year,
dominated by Internet giants Alibaba <BABA.N> and Tencent <0700.HK>.
Alibaba and Tencent have ambitions to develop their business outside
China, too, but have yet to make significant inroads.
Samsung said on Tuesday its payments service had processed more than
$1 billion in South Korea since its August launch – still only a
fraction of the country's $500 billion-plus credit card transactions
last year.
There is no reason why banks can't work with both rivals, since
these are not exclusive technologies, but Samsung's approach could
help it scale up quickly with banking partners.
"Apple wants more control, and the negotiations are more complex,"
said Christophe Uzureau, Vice President of Digital Payment
Strategies at Gartner. "Samsung is more flexible, so from a bank's
perspective there is an ability to have more flexible terms and
conditions."
The two have partnerships with a long list of banks and credit card
companies in the United States and have many of the same partners in
Singapore.
Samsung Pay launched in Australia last Wednesday with partners
American Express <AXP.N> and Citibank <C.N>. Apple Pay has also
teamed up with Amex there and with Australia and New Zealand Bank
(ANZ)<ANZ.AX>, so far the only major local bank to offer either
service to its customers.
Australia's large banks all have their own mobile payment services,
though National Australia Bank <NAB.AX> said it welcomed strategic
partnerships in this space, and Westpac <WBC.AX> said it had
discussions with a range of wallet providers and was assessing its
options.
EXTRA WEAPON
Samsung Pay also has an extra technological weapon in its armory.
[to top of second column] |
Samsung's new Samsung Pay mobile wallet system is demonstrated at
its Australian launch in Sydney, June 15, 2016. REUTERS/Matt Siegel
Apple Pay only works with sales terminals equipped with Near Field
Communications (NFC) technology, but phones compatible with Samsung
Pay use both NFC and the older technology Magnetic Secure
Transmission (MST), which mimics the magnetic strip on traditional
payment cards.
That gives Samsung an edge in countries like the United States,
where NFC terminals are far from ubiquitous, said Thomas Ko, Vice
President of Samsung's Service R&D Team, Mobile communications
business.
"Mobile payments need at the end of the day to make it available as
much as where plastic is acceptable. If the mobile payments cannot
match it, it's very difficult for someone to replace their wallet
with a mobile," Ko said.
Both Apple and Samsung, which sell 40 percent of global smartphones,
are investing in mobile payment in part to defend their premium
product pricing as the industry's growth slows and Chinese rivals
bring down average selling prices.
Apple Pay is currently available on its late-model iPhones and the
Apple Watch. Samsung Pay is available on its newer Galaxy mobile
phones and some tablets.
Samsung plans to offer the service on its virtual reality headset,
and hopes that will enhance sales of the novel device.
"Both companies will be looking to their payment solutions to drive
loyalty," said Foad Fadaghi, managing director of technology
researcher Telsyte.
Apple has been able to drive loyalty through its unique ecosystem
and proprietary operating software, while Samsung, like many makers,
runs its phones on Google's <GOOG.O> Android software, making it
more difficult to differentiate its offering.
"It's more important for Samsung to have services like Samsung Pay
so that it can edge out its competitors which are numerous and many
in the Android space, particularly the Chinese vendors," Fodaghi
said.
Kim Ki-su, an IT industry worker in Seoul who uses Samsung Pay, has
witnessed the marketing power of the service.
"I know several people who were trying to decide between Galaxy S7
and LG’s G5, and they ultimately ended up with the S7 because of
Samsung Pay," he said.
(Additinal reporting by Nataly Pak in SEOUL and Jeremy Wagstaff in
SINGAPORE; Editing by Will Waterman)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |