Home > Category > Banking > Regulation, Competition, and the Threat to Revenues in the UK Card Market
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Market Research Report
Regulation, Competition, and the Threat to Revenues in the UK Card Market
| Published by |
Datamonitor |
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| Published |
2007/10 |
Content info |
67 pages |
| Product code |
56783 |
| Price |
From US $ 2795  |
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PDF by E-Mail Approx. 1-2 business days
Hard Copy/CD-ROM Approx. 3-4 business days
If you need expedited delivery, please call us.
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Table of Contents
- Overview
- Catalyst
- Summary
- Methodology
- Table of Contents
- Table of figures
- Table of tables
- Regulation, competition and the threat to revenues
- The UK card market continues to face regulatory intervention at the
national level
- 2006 saw many issues wrapped up
- The OFT has set a threshold of £12 for default fees
- ATM fees have been the subject of scrutiny
- Credit card purchase cover has been extended to overseas transactions
- The CCA 2006 has extended protection offered to consumers and was
enacted in April 2007
- Datamonitor Cards and Payments Team view
- The OFT has referred its report on payment protection insurance to the
Competition Commission
- The FSA has been investigating the sale of PPI since 2005, and has
imposed penalties on several players
- Datamonitor Cards and Payments Team view
- The OFT has called for greater information to be provided with credit
card cheques
- The DTI began a consultation following earlier discussions by the
TSC and the Task Force on Tackling Over-indebtedness
- Following up on this, the OFT has agreed that further regulation is
required to improve transparency
- Datamonitor Cards and Payments Team view
- The Payment Systems Task Force was wound up in December 2006 and
replaced with a new strategic governance body
- The PSTF published a report into access and governance of the LINK
ATM network
- The PSTF did not pursue its investigation into the access and
governance of UK card schemes
- Following an appeal, the OFT' s ruling on MasterCard' s MIF was
overturned. However, it has vowed to continue its investigations
- The OFT' s current investigation is likely to focus more closely on
the principle of interchange itself
- Datamonitor Cards and Payments Team view
- Background to interchange and its regulation
- Interchange is one of five key revenue streams for the industry
- Merchants are behind the downward pressure on interchange
- The OFT' s current interest in domestic interchange began when
MasterCard applied for an exemption from the UK Competition Act 1998
- In its September 2005 ruling, the OFT accepted the need for a
collective agreement on interchange, but objects to what it sees as
' extraneous costs'
- In response to this finding, MasterCard, backed up by the rest of
the industry, lodged an appeal with the CAT
- Although reasonably unlikely, there remains a possibility that
domestic interchange fees could be reduced to around 0.7%
- Domestic regulators are pushing to make interchange a more accurate
reflection of costs
- A cut in interchange would significantly reduce issuer revenues,
forcing them to make cuts elsewhere
- Datamonitor Cards and Payments Team view
- The UK card market also continues to face regulatory intervention at the
international level
- The European CCD promises to make further changes to regulation in the
UK
- Timeline of the directive
- The revised proposal has seen changes to a number of key areas, but
the commitment to maximum harmonization remains
- Other areas of the directive remain unchanged from its previous form
- Despite being well intentioned, there are key problems with the
directive
- Datamonitor Cards and Payments Team view
- The European banking industry continues to work towards the creation
of SEPA
- For a number of years the EC has pushed to create a single payments
area
- However, Europe' s banks were initially reluctant to change their
practices
- Yet the threat of further regulation pushed the industry to take
steps to self-regulate
- At the end of 2004, the EPC issued a roadmap to 2010
- However, there are signs that regulators are becoming frustrated
with the slow progress of the banks with SEPA
- In March 2006, the EPC published a second version of its Cards
Framework
- Datamonitor Cards and Payments Team view
- Intense competition in the market has driven down interest margins
- Intense price competition has kept a downward pressure on introductory
rates, while the pressure to earn revenue has kept headline rates up
- APRs have risen, reflecting recent rises in the base rate and the
pressure to generate revenue
- Introductory APRs have fallen 5.6% relative to the base rate since
January 2001
- The introduction of balance transfer fees reflects this shift away
from the aggressive acquisition campaigns of recent years
- Regulation and competition have cut into issuer revenues. Current
regulatory moves will reduce this further
- Datamonitor' s UK Credit Card Industry Revenue Model
- This model estimates revenue flows from the card issuance side of
the business only
- A wide range of data resources and qualitative input have been
brought together to form this model
- Datamonitor estimates that the revenue pool from issuance in the UK
credit card market has shrunk to £9.9 billion
- Interest is the key revenue stream for the industry
- Other sources make up the remaining revenue income
- Interest is accounting for a greater share of revenue as the base
rate increases and income from other areas is cut
- The recent changes in regulation and the general slowdown of the UK
card market have cost issuers approximately £357m in revenues. Future
restrictions on the sale of PPI could cost issuers even more.
- Issuers have a range of levers to pull in terms of revenue generation
- Scenario 1: the fall in revenue is countered by an increase in the
standard rate of APR charged by issuers
- Scenario 2: the fall in revenue is countered by the introduction of
annual fees on a greater proportion of cards
- Scenario 3: ' hidden charges' can help issuers recover revenue
- Datamonitor Cards and Payments Team view
- Summary
- APPENDIX
- Data tables relating to the revenue model
- Definitions
- AAGR
- APACS
- Average transaction value
- Balances outstanding
- Bank of England base rate
- CAGR
- Charge card
- Credit card
- CVV
- Debit card
- EMV
- Fraudulent use of card details (card-not-present fraud), also known as
fraud on phone, mail order or Internet transactions
- Interchange
- Non-standard
- OFT
- Methodology
- Primary research
- Secondary research
- Further Reading
- Ask the analyst
- Datamonitor Consulting
- Disclaimer
- List of Tables
- Table 1: The credit card industry can recover revenue by raising
charges and fees in a number of areas, 2006
- Table 2: Breakdown of revenue in the UK credit card market by channel,
2002-2006
- Table 2: Current relevant Datamonitor publications, 2007
- Table 4: Future relevant Datamonitor publications, 2007
- List of Figures
- Figure 1: Interest is the key revenue stream for the UK credit card
issuance business, 2006
- Figure 2: Organization chart of the EPC, 2006
- Figure 3: While standard purchase APRs have been stable, introductory
and balance transfer APRs have fallen, 2001-07
- Figure 4: Average APRs have been rising at a faster rate than the base
rate, November 2005-January 2007
- Figure 5: Introductory purchase APRs have fallen relative to the base
rate, 2001-07
- Figure 6: Average balance transfer APRs have fallen, despite a rising
base rate, November 2005-January 2007
- Figure 7: The total issuance revenue pool in the UK credit card market
fell from 2005 to 2006, in absolute terms and as a proportion of
transaction values
- Figure 8: The margin between the base rate and APRs has begun to grow,
2002-06
- Figure 9: Interest is the key revenue stream for the UK credit card
issuance business, 2006
- Figure 10: Revenue from interest on balances and interchange has
declined, while income from default fees has fallen, 2005-06
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