Payments company Square
launches in the UK
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[March 28, 2017]
By Anna Irrera and Heather Somerville
SAN
FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Square Inc, the payments company led by Twitter
Inc Chief Executive Jack Dorsey, has launched in the United Kingdom in
its first European foray.
The San Francisco-based company said on Tuesday that small-and
medium-sized businesses in the U.K. would be able to use Square's credit
card reader to accept payments on mobile devices. The feature helps
small merchants and self-employed professionals complete credit card
transactions without a cash register or expensive software.
Square estimated that, while more shoppers were choosing plastic over
cash, about half of the U.K.'s 5.4 million small businesses do not yet
take card payments.
Reuters reported in July that Square had incorporated a business called
Squareup Europe Ltd in Britain and the company had been testing its
payment system in London.
Square last year added Paul Deighton to its board of directors, an
effort to establish its footing in the U.K. Deighton is a member of the
House of Lords and previously served as Britain's commercial secretary
to the treasury.
Square, which went public in 2015, also operates in the Canada, Japan
and Australia, as well as the United States.
While
the company has largely focused on growing in the United States, startups around
the world have launched similar services. In Europe, it would be competing with
well-established companies such as the U.K.'s SumUp, which is backed by Groupon
Inc, and Sweden’s iZettle. The United States' PayPal Holdings has been in
Britain for years.
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Jack Dorsey, CEO of Square and CEO of Twitter, speaks during an
interview November 19, 2015. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/Files
As it exports its flagship payments globally, Square has also been expanding
into new businesses, including financial software and business loans. The
company's lending division, called Square Capital, analyzes data from its
merchants payment flows and offers those that qualify short-term loans at a
fixed rate.
Square is also looking to attract larger companies, which process more sales and
could generate more revenue for Square. It processed $50 billion in payments
last year.
Square's U.K. launch comes as Britain's burgeoning financial technology sector
faces some uncertainty in light of the country's decision to leave the European
Union.
(Reporting by Anna Irrera in New York and Heather Somerville in San Francisco;
Editing by Leslie Adler)
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