Debit Card Interchange Fees and Routing, 81722-81763 [2010-32061]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 248 / Tuesday, December 28, 2010 / Proposed Rules
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 235
[Regulation II; Docket No. R–1404]
RIN 7100–AD63
Debit Card Interchange Fees and
Routing
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
The Board is requesting
public comment on proposed new
Regulation II, Debit Card Interchange
Fees and Routing, which: establishes
standards for determining whether an
interchange fee received or charged by
an issuer with respect to an electronic
debit transaction is reasonable and
proportional to the cost incurred by the
issuer with respect to the transaction;
and prohibits issuers and networks from
restricting the number of networks over
which an electronic debit transaction
may be processed and from inhibiting
the ability of a merchant to direct the
routing of an electronic debit
transaction to any network that may
process such transactions. With respect
to the interchange fee standards, the
Board is requesting comment on two
alternatives that would apply to covered
issuers: an issuer-specific standard with
a safe harbor and a cap; or a cap
applicable to all such issuers. The
proposed rule would additionally
prohibit circumvention or evasion of the
interchange fee limitations (under both
alternatives) by preventing the issuer
from receiving net compensation from
the network (excluding interchange fees
passed through the network). The Board
also is requesting comment on possible
frameworks for an adjustment to
interchange fees for fraud-prevention
costs. With respect to the debit-card
routing rules, the Board is requesting
comment on two alternative rules
prohibiting network exclusivity: one
alternative would require at least two
unaffiliated networks per debit card,
and the other would require at least two
unaffiliated networks for each type of
transaction authorization method.
Under both alternatives, the issuers and
networks would be prohibited from
inhibiting a merchant’s ability to direct
the routing of an electronic debit
transaction over any network that may
process such transactions.
DATES: Comments must be submitted by
February 22, 2011.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket No. R–1404 and
RIN No. 7100 AD63, by any of the
following methods:
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SUMMARY:
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Agency Web site: https://
www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/
generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
Federal eRulemaking Portal:https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
E-mail:
regs.comments@federalreserve.gov.
Include the docket number in the
subject line of the message.
Fax: (202) 452–3819 or (202) 452–
3102.
Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary,
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20551.
All public comments are available
from the Board’s Web site at https://
www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/
foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as submitted,
unless modified for technical reasons.
Accordingly, your comments will not be
edited to remove any identifying or
contact information.
Public comments may also be viewed
electronically or in paper in Room MP–
500 of the Board’s Martin Building (20th
and C Streets, NW.) between 9 a.m. and
5 p.m. on weekdays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Dena Milligan, Attorney (202/452–
3900), Legal Division, David Mills,
Manager and Economist (202/530–
6265), Division of Reserve Bank
Operations & Payment Systems, Mark
Manuszak, Senior Economist (202/721–
4509), Division of Research & Statistics,
or Ky Tran-Trong, Counsel (202/452–
3667), Division of Consumer &
Community Affairs; for users of
Telecommunications Device for the Deaf
(TDD) only, contact (202/263–4869);
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th and C Streets,
NW., Washington, DC 20551.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
Background
I. Section 1075 of the Dodd-Frank Act—
Overview
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act (the
‘‘Dodd-Frank Act’’) (Pub. L. 111–203,
124 Stat. 1376 (2010)) was enacted on
July 21, 2010. Section 1075 of the DoddFrank Act amends the Electronic Fund
Transfer Act (‘‘EFTA’’) (15 U.S.C. 1693 et
seq.) by adding a new section 920
regarding interchange transaction fees
and rules for payment card
transactions.1
1 Section 920 is codified in 15 U.S.C. 1693o–2. As
discussed in more detail below, interchange
transaction fees (or ‘‘interchange fees’’) are fees
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EFTA Section 920 provides that,
effective July 21, 2011, the amount of
any interchange transaction fee that an
issuer receives or charges with respect
to an electronic debit transaction must
be reasonable and proportional to the
cost incurred by the issuer with respect
to the transaction.2 That section
authorizes the Board to prescribe
regulations regarding any interchange
transaction fee that an issuer may
receive or charge with respect to an
electronic debit transaction and requires
the Board to establish standards for
assessing whether an interchange
transaction fee is reasonable and
proportional to the cost incurred by the
issuer with respect to the transaction.
Under EFTA Section 920, the Board
may allow for an adjustment to an
interchange transaction fee to account
for an issuer’s costs in preventing fraud,
provided the issuer complies with the
standards to be established by the Board
relating to fraud-prevention activities.
EFTA Section 920 also authorizes the
Board to prescribe regulations in order
to prevent circumvention or evasion of
the restrictions on interchange
transaction fees, and specifically
authorizes the Board to prescribe
regulations regarding any network fee to
ensure that such a fee is not used to
directly or indirectly compensate an
issuer and is not used to circumvent or
evade the restrictions on interchange
transaction fees.
EFTA Section 920 exempts certain
issuers and cards from the restrictions
on interchange transaction fees
described above. The restrictions on
interchange transaction fees do not
apply to issuers that, together with
affiliates, have assets of less than $10
billion. The restrictions also do not
apply to electronic debit transactions
made using two types of debit cards—
debit cards provided pursuant to
government-administered payment
programs and reloadable, general-use
prepaid cards not marketed or labeled as
a gift card or certificate. EFTA Section
920 provides, however, that beginning
July 21, 2012, the exemptions from the
interchange transaction fee restrictions
will not apply for transactions made
using debit cards provided pursuant to
a government-administered payment
program or made using certain
reloadable, general-use prepaid cards if
the cardholder may be charged either an
overdraft fee or a fee for the first
established by a payment card network, charged to
the merchant acquirer and received by the card
issuer for its role in transaction.
2 Electronic debit transaction (or ‘‘debit card
transaction’’) means the use of a debit card,
including a general-use prepaid card, by a person
as a form of payment in the United States.
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withdrawal each month from ATMs in
the issuer’s designated ATM network.
In addition to rules regarding
restrictions on interchange transaction
fees, EFTA Section 920 also requires the
Board to prescribe certain rules related
to the routing of debit card transactions.
First, EFTA Section 920 requires the
Board to prescribe rules that prohibit
issuers and payment card networks
(‘‘networks’’) from restricting the number
of networks on which an electronic
debit transaction may be processed to
one such network or two or more
affiliated networks. Second, that section
requires the Board to prescribe rules
prohibiting issuers and networks from
inhibiting the ability of any person that
accepts debit cards from directing the
routing of electronic debit transactions
over any network that may process such
transactions.
EFTA Section 920 requires the Board
to establish interchange fee standards
and rules prohibiting circumvention or
evasion no later than April 21, 2011.
These interchange transaction fee rules
will become effective on July 21, 2011.
EFTA Section 920 requires the Board to
issue rules that prohibit network
exclusivity arrangements and debit card
transaction routing restrictions no later
than July 21, 2011, but does not
establish an effective date for these
rules.
II. Overview of the Debit Card Industry
Over the past several decades, there
have been significant changes in the
way consumers make payments in the
United States. The use of checks has
been declining since the mid-1990s as
checks (and most likely some cash
payments) are being replaced by
electronic payments (e.g., debit card
payments, credit card payments, and
automated clearing house (ACH)
payments). Debit card usage, in
particular, has increased markedly
during that same period. After a long
period of slow growth during the 1980s
and early 1990s, debit card transaction
volume began to grow very rapidly in
the mid-1990s. Debit card payments
have grown more than any other form of
electronic payment over the past
decade, increasing to 37.9 billion
transactions in 2009. Debit cards are
accepted at about 8 million merchant
locations in the United States. In 2009,
debit card transactions represented
almost half of total third-party debits to
deposit accounts, while approximately
30 percent of total third-party debits to
deposit accounts were made by checks.3
3 Third-party debits are those debits initiated to
pay parties other than the cardholder. These thirdparty debit numbers are derived from the 2010
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In general, there are two types of debit
card transactions: PIN (personal
identification number)-based and
signature-based.4 The infrastructure for
PIN debit networks differs from that for
signature debit networks. PIN debit
networks, which evolved from the ATM
networks, are single-message systems in
which authorization and clearing
information is carried in one single
message. Signature debit networks,
which leverage the credit card network
infrastructure, are dual-message
systems, in which authorization
information is carried in one message
and clearing information is carried in a
separate message. In the current
environment, certain transactions
cannot readily be accommodated on
PIN-based, single-message systems, such
as transactions for hotel stays or car
rentals, where the exact amount of the
transaction is not known at the time of
authorization. In addition, PIN debit
transactions generally are not accepted
for Internet transactions. Overall,
roughly one-quarter of the merchant
locations in the United States that
accept debit cards have the capability to
accept PIN-based debit transactions.
According to the Board’s survey of
covered card issuers, roughly 70 percent
of debit cards outstanding (including
prepaid cards) support both PIN- and
signature-based transactions (87
percent, excluding prepaid cards).5
Networks that process debit card
transactions exhibit two main
organizational forms, often referred to as
three-party and four-party systems.6 The
so-called four-party system is the model
used for most debit card transactions;
the four parties are the cardholder, the
entity that issued the payment card to
the cardholder (the issuer), the
merchant, and the merchant’s bank (the
acquirer or merchant acquirer).7 The
network coordinates the transmission of
Federal Reserve Payments Study. The Study
reported that a total of 108.9 billion noncash
payments were made in 2009, 35 percent of which
were debit card payments. For purposes of
determining the proportion of noncash payments
that were third-party debits to accounts, ATM cash
withdrawals and prepaid card transactions are
excluded from the calculation. A summary of the
2010 Federal Reserve Payments Study is available
at https://www.frbservices.org/files/communications/
pdf/press/2010_payments_study.pdf.
4 Increasingly, however, cardholders authorize
‘‘signature’’ debit transactions without a signature
and, sometimes, may authorize a ‘‘PIN’’ debit
transaction without a PIN. PIN-based and signaturebased debit also may be referred to as ‘‘PIN debit’’
and ‘‘signature debit.’’
5 ‘‘Covered issuers’’ are those issuers that, together
with affiliates, have assets of $10 billion or more.
6 Industry participants sometimes refer to fourparty systems as ‘‘open loop’’ systems and threeparty systems as ‘‘closed loop’’ systems.
7 Throughout this proposed rule, the term ‘‘bank’’
often is used to refer to depository institutions.
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information between the issuing and
acquiring sides of the market
(authorization and clearing) and the
interbank monetary transfers
(settlement).8
In a typical three-party system, the
network itself acts as both issuer and
acquirer. Thus, the three parties
involved in a transaction are the
cardholder, the merchant, and the
network. Three-party systems are also
referred to as ‘‘closed,’’ because the
issuer and acquirer are generally the
same institution—they have, thus,
tended to be closed to outside
participants. The three-party model is
used for some prepaid card transactions,
but not for other debit card transactions.
In a typical four-party system
transaction, the cardholder initiates a
purchase by providing his or her card or
card information to a merchant. In the
case of PIN debit, the cardholder also
enters a PIN. An electronic
authorization request for a specific
dollar amount and the cardholder’s
account information is sent from the
merchant to the acquirer to the network,
which forwards the request to the cardissuing institution.9 The issuer verifies,
among other things, that the
cardholder’s account has sufficient
funds to cover the transaction amount
and that the card was not reported as
lost or stolen. A message authorizing (or
declining) the transaction is returned to
the merchant via the reverse path.
The clearing of a debit card
transaction is effected through the
authorization message (for PIN debit
systems) or a subsequent message (for
signature debit systems). The issuer
posts the debits to the cardholders’
accounts based on these clearing
messages. The network calculates and
communicates to each issuer and
acquirer its net debit or credit position
to settle the day’s transactions. The
interbank settlement generally is
effected through a settlement account at
a commercial bank, or through
automated clearinghouse (ACH)
transfers. The acquirer credits the
merchant for the value of its
transactions, less the merchant
discount, as discussed below.
There are various fees associated with
debit card transactions. The interchange
fee is set by the relevant network and
paid by the merchant acquirer to the
issuer. Switch fees are charged by the
network to acquirers and issuers to
compensate the network for its role in
8 The term ‘‘four-party system’’ is something of a
misnomer because the network is, in fact, a fifth
party involved in a transaction.
9 Specialized payment processors may carry out
some functions between the merchant and the
network or between the network and the issuer.
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processing the transaction.10 The
merchant acquirer charges the merchant
a merchant discount—the difference
between the face value of a transaction
and the amount the merchant acquirer
transfers to the merchant–that includes
the interchange fee, network switch fees
charged to the acquirer, other acquirer
costs, and an acquirer markup. The
interchange fee typically comprises a
large fraction of the merchant discount
for a card transaction.
When PIN debit networks were first
introduced, some of them structured
interchange fees in a manner similar to
ATM interchange fees.11 For ATM card
transactions, the cardholder’s bank
generally pays the ATM operator an
interchange fee to compensate the ATM
operator for the costs of deploying and
maintaining the ATM and providing the
service. Similarly, some PIN debit
networks initially structured
interchange fees to flow from the
cardholder’s bank to the merchant’s
bank to compensate merchants for the
costs of installing PIN terminals and
making necessary system changes to
accept PIN debit at the point of sale. In
the mid-1990s, these PIN debit networks
began to shift the direction in which
PIN debit interchange fees flowed. By
the end of the decade, all PIN debit
interchange fees were paid by acquirers
to card issuers.12
During the 1990s, most PIN debit
networks employed fixed pertransaction interchange fees. Beginning
around 2000, many PIN debit networks
incorporated an ad valorem (i.e.,
percentage of the value of a transaction)
component to their interchange fees,
with a cap on the total amount of the fee
for each transaction. In addition, PIN
debit networks expanded the number of
interchange fee categories in their fee
schedules. For example, many networks
created categories based on type of
merchant (e.g., supermarkets) and began
to segregate merchants into different
categories based on transaction volume
(e.g., transaction tiers). Over the course
of the 2000s, most PIN debit networks
raised the levels of fixed component
fees, ad valorem fees, and caps on these
fees. By 2010, some networks had
removed per-transaction caps on many
interchange fees.
In general, interchange fees for
signature debit networks, like those of
credit card networks, combine an ad
valorem component with a fixed fee
component. Unlike some PIN debit
networks, the interchange fees for
signature debit networks generally do
not include a per transaction cap.
Beginning in the early 1990s, signature
debit networks also began creating
separate categories for merchants in
certain market segments (e.g.,
supermarkets and card-not-present
transactions) 13 to gain increased
acceptance in those markets. Until 2003,
signature debit interchange fees were
generally around the same level as
credit card interchange fees and have
generally been significantly higher than
those for PIN debit card transactions.
PIN debit fees began to increase in the
early 2000s, while signature debit fees
declined in late 2003 and early 2004.14
More recently, both PIN and signature
debit fees have increased, although PIN
debit fees have increased at a faster
pace.
In addition to setting the structure
and level of interchange fees and other
fees to support network operations, each
card network specifies operating rules
that govern the relationships between
network participants. Although the
network rules explicitly govern the
issuers and acquirers, merchants and
processors also may be required to
comply with the network rules or risk
losing access to that network. Network
operating rules cover a broad range of
activities, including merchant card
acceptance practices, technological
specifications for cards and terminals,
risk management, and determination of
transaction routing when multiple
networks are available for a given
transaction.
10 A variety of other network fees may be
collected by the network from the issuer or
acquirer.
11 In the late 1970s, bank consortiums formed
numerous regional electronic funds transfer (‘‘EFT’’)
networks to enable their customers to withdraw
funds from ATMs owned by a variety of different
banks. The EFT networks were first used to handle
PIN debit purchases at retailers in the early 1980s.
It was not until the mid-1990s, however, that PIN
debit became a popular method of payment for
consumers to purchase goods and services at retail
stores.
12 Debit Card Directory (1995–1999). See also,
Fukimo Hayashi, Richard Sullivan, & Stuart E.
Weiner, ‘‘A Guide to the ATM and Debit Card
Industry’’ (Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
2003).
A. Summary of Outreach
Since enactment of the Dodd-Frank
Act, Board staff has held numerous
meetings with debit card issuers,
payment card networks, merchant
acquirers, merchants, industry trade
associations, and consumer groups. In
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III. Outreach and Information
Collection
13 Card-not-present transactions occur when the
card is not physically presented to the merchant at
the time of authorization. Examples include
Internet, phone, and mail-order purchases.
14 This decline followed the settlement of
litigation surrounding signature debit cards. See In
re: Visa Check/MasterMoney Antitrust Litigation,
192 F.R.D. 68 (F.D.N.Y. 2000).
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general, those parties provided
information regarding electronic debit
transactions, including processing flows
for electronic debit transactions,
structures and levels of current
interchange transaction fees and other
fees charged by the networks, fraudprevention activities performed by
various parties to an electronic debit
transaction, fraud losses related to
electronic debit transactions, routing
restrictions, card-issuing arrangements,
and incentive programs for both
merchants and issuers. Interested
parties also provided written
submissions.15
B. Surveys
On September 13, 2010, the Board
distributed three surveys to industry
participants (an issuer survey, a network
survey, and a merchant acquirer survey)
designed to gather information to assist
the Board in developing this proposal.
Industry participants, including
payment card networks, trade groups
and individual firms from both the
banking industry and merchant
community, commented on preliminary
versions of the issuer and network
surveys, through both written
submissions and a series of drop-in
calls. In response to the comments, the
two surveys were modified, as
appropriate, and an additional survey of
merchant acquirers was developed.16
The card issuer survey was
distributed to 131 financial
organizations that, together with
affiliates, have assets of $10 billion or
more.17 The Board received 89
15 The meeting summaries and written
submissions are available on the Regulatory Reform
section of the Board’s Web site, available at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/
reform_meetings.htm.
16 Documentation and forms for the card issuer,
payment card network, and merchant acquirer
surveys are respectively available at https://
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/files/
card_issuer_survey_20100920.pdf, https://
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/files/
payment_card_network_survey_20100920.pdf, and
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/files/
merchant_acquirer_survey_20100920.pdf.
17 These institutions include bank and thrift
holding companies with assets of at least $10
billion; independent commercial banks, thrifts, and
credit unions with assets of at least $10 billion; and
FDIC-insured U.S. branches and agencies of foreign
banking organizations with worldwide assets of at
least $10 billion. Assets were computed using the
Consolidated Financial Statements for Bank
Holding Companies (FR Y–9C; OMB No. 7100–
0128), the Consolidated Reports of Condition and
Income (Call Reports) for independent commercial
banks (FFIEC 031 & 041; OMB No. 7100–0036) and
for U.S. branches and agencies of foreign banks
(FFIEC 002; OMB No. 7100–0032), the Thrift
Financial Reports (OTS 1313; OMB No. 1550–0023)
for Thrift Holding Companies and thrift
institutions, and the Credit Union Reports of
Condition and Income (NCUA 5300/5300S; OMB
No. 3133–0004) for credit unions. The ownership
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responses to the survey. An additional
13 organizations informed the Board
that they do not have debit card
programs. Three organizations that
issued a small number of cards declined
to participate in the survey. The Board
did not receive any communication
from the other 26 organizations. The
network survey was distributed to the
14 networks believed to process debit
card transactions, all of which provided
responses. The merchant acquirer
survey was distributed to the largest
nine merchant acquirers/processors, all
of whom responded to the survey.
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Information Requested and Summary
Results
In general, the surveys requested
information on signature debit, PIN
debit and prepaid card operations and,
for each card type, the costs associated
with those card types, interchange fees
and other fees established by networks,
fraud losses, fraud-prevention and datasecurity activities, network exclusivity
arrangements and debit-card routing
restrictions. The Board compiled the
survey responses in a central database,
and reviewed the submissions for
completeness, consistency, and
anomalous responses. As indicated
above, the response rates for the three
surveys were high; however, some
respondents were not able to provide
information on all data elements
requested in the surveys. For example,
most respondents provided cost data at
an aggregate level, but some were
unable to provide cost data at the level
of granularity requested in the surveys.
In addition, there were inconsistencies
in some data that were reported within
individual responses and across
responses. Therefore, each of the
summary statistics reported below may
be based on a subset of the responses
received for each of the three surveys.
The reporting period for each survey
was calendar year 2009, unless
otherwise noted.
Card use. The networks reported that
there were approximately 37.7 billion
debit and prepaid card transactions in
2009, valued at over $1.45 trillion, with
an average value of $38.58 per
transaction.18 19 20 Responding issuers
structure of banking organizations was established
using the FFIEC’s National Information Center
structure database.
18 These data do not include ATM transactions.
Responding issuers accounted for approximately 60
percent of total debit and prepaid card transactions
in 2009. The acquirers surveyed handled about 95
percent of these total transactions.
19 Of these 37.7 billion transactions, 22.5 billion
were signature debit transactions, with a total value
of $837 billion and an average value of $37.15 per
transaction; 14.1 billion were PIN debit transactions
with a total value of $584 billion and an average
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reported that, on average, they had 174
million debit cards and 46 million
prepaid cards outstanding during 2009.
Eighty-seven percent of debit cards and
25 percent of prepaid cards were
enabled for use on both signature and
PIN networks. Four percent of debit
cards and 74 percent of prepaid cards
were enabled for use on signature
networks only. Finally, 9 percent of
debit cards and 1 percent of prepaid
cards were enabled for use on PIN
networks only. Responding acquirers
reported that 6.7 million merchant
locations were able to accept signature
debit cards and 1.5 million were able to
accept PIN debit cards.21
Interchange fees. Networks reported
that debit and prepaid interchange fees
totaled $16.2 billion in 2009.22 The
average interchange fee for all debit
transactions was 44 cents per
transaction, or 1.14 percent of the
transaction amount. The average
interchange fee for a signature debit
transaction was 56 cents, or 1.53 percent
of the transaction amount. The average
interchange fee for a PIN debit
transaction was significantly lower than
that of a signature debit transaction, at
23 cents per transaction, or 0.56 percent
of the transaction amount. Prepaid card
interchange fees were similar to those of
signature debit, averaging 50 cents per
transaction, or 1.53 percent of the
transaction amount.23
Processing costs. Issuers reported
their per-transaction processing costs,
which are those costs related to
value of $41.34 per transaction; and 1.0 billion were
prepaid card transactions, with a total value of $33
billion and an average value of $32.54 per
transactions. Of the 37.7 billion transactions, 90
percent were card-present transactions. Eighty-six
percent of signature debit and 97 percent of PIN
debit transactions were card-present transactions.
20 The recently released 2010 Federal Reserve
Payments Study reported 6.0 billion prepaid card
transactions in 2009, of which 1.3 billion were
general purpose prepaid card transactions and 4.7
billion were private label prepaid card and
electronic benefit transfer card transactions that
were not included in the Board survey.
21 These numbers differ from the estimates that
were otherwise provided to the Board by major
payment card networks, card issuers, and merchant
acquirers.
22 Of the $16.2 billion in interchange-fee revenue,
$12.5 billion was for signature debit transactions,
$3.2 billion was for PIN debit transactions and $0.5
billion was for prepaid card transactions. The
responding issuers reported receiving $11.0 billion,
or about 68 percent of total interchange fees.
23 The network survey also requested information
on historical interchange fees. Not all networks
reported historical interchange fees back to 1990.
However, from 1990 to 2009, it appears that
interchange fees for signature debit transactions
generally were around 1.5 percent of transaction
value. Based on other industry resources,
interchange fees on PIN debit transactions in the
late 1990s were about 7 cents per transaction (Debit
Card Directory, 1995–1999). Therefore, it appears
that these fees rose significantly during the 2000s.
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authorization, clearance, and settlement
of a transaction.24 The median pertransaction total processing cost for all
types of debit and prepaid card
transactions was 11.9 cents.25 The
median per-transaction variable
processing cost was 7.1 cents for all
types of debit and prepaid card
transactions.26 The median pertransaction network processing fees
were 4.0 cents for all types of debit and
prepaid card transactions.27
Network fees. Networks reported
charging two types of per-transaction
fees: processing and non-processing
fees. Networks also reported charging
fees other than on a per-transaction
basis. Networks charged issuers a total
of $2.3 billion in fees and charged
acquirers a total of $1.9 billion in fees.
In general, the proportion of fees paid
by each party varied by network type.
Aggregating these fees across all debit
and prepaid card transactions, the
average network fee attributable to each
transaction was 6.5 cents for issuers and
5.0 cents for acquirers. The average
network fee attributable to each
signature debit transaction was 8.4 cents
for issuers and 5.7 cents for acquirers.
Thus, about 60 percent of signature
debit network fees were paid by issuers
and 40 percent by acquirers. For PIN
debit transactions, the average network
fee attributable to each transaction was
2.7 cents for issuers and 3.7 cents for
acquirers. Thus, about 42 percent of PIN
debit network fees were paid by issuers
and 58 percent by acquirers. As noted
above, these fees include per-transaction
processing fees and non-processing fees,
as well as other fees. Based on data
reported by responding issuers,
signature debit network processing fees
were 3.0 cents per transaction on
average and PIN debit network
processing fees were 1.6¢ per
transaction on average.
Networks also reported providing
discounts and incentives to issuers and
acquirers/merchants. Issuers were
provided discounts and incentives
totaling $0.7 billion, or an average of 2.0
cents per transaction, while acquirers
24 Unlike other statistics in this discussion, the
Board discusses cost information using percentiles
within this Federal Register Notice to avoid having
summary measures distorted by extreme values in
the sample cost data.
25 By transaction type, the median total pertransaction processing cost was 13.7 cents for
signature debit, 7.9 cents for PIN debit and 63.6
cents for prepaid cards.
26 By transaction type, the median variable pertransaction processing cost was 6.7 cents for
signature debit, 4.5 cents for PIN debit, and 25.8
cents for prepaid cards.
27 By transaction type, the median per-transaction
network processing fees were 4.7 cents for signature
debit, 2.1 cents for PIN debit, and 6.9 cents for
prepaid cards.
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were provided discounts and incentives
of $0.3 billion, or an average of 0.9 cents
per transaction. Signature debit
networks provided average incentives
and discounts of 2.6 cents per
transaction to issuers and 1.2 cents per
transaction to acquirers. Thus, 69
percent of signature debit network
incentives and discounts were provided
to issuers and 31 percent to acquirers.
PIN debit networks provided average
incentives and discounts of 0.7 cents
per transaction to issuers and 0.5 cents
per transaction to acquirers. Thus, 61
percent of PIN debit network incentives
and discounts were provided to issuers
and 39 percent to acquirers.
Discounts and incentives effectively
reduce the per-transaction amount of
network fees each party pays. After
adjusting for discounts and incentives,
the average net network fee per
transaction is 4.5 cents for issuers and
4.1 cents for acquirers.28 For signature
debit transactions, the average net
network fee per transaction is 5.9 cents
for issuers and 4.5 cents for acquirers.
Thus, 57 percent of net network fees on
signature networks were paid by issuers
and 43 percent by acquirers. For PIN
debit networks, the average net network
fee per transaction is 1.9 cents for
issuers and 3.2 cents for acquirers.
Thus, 37 percent of net network fees on
PIN debit networks were paid by issuers
and 63 percent by acquirers.
Fraud data. Survey responses on
fraud occurrence, fraud losses, and
fraud-prevention and data-security costs
are discussed in section IV of this
notice.
Exclusivity arrangements and routing
restrictions. The surveys also included a
number of questions about exclusivity
arrangements and transaction routing
procedures. Respondents reported that
there are arrangements, either rulesbased or contractual, under which
transactions must be routed exclusively
over specific networks or that commit
issuers to meet certain volume and
dollar thresholds for transactions on
those networks. Respondents also
reported that they receive incentives
under these arrangements, which for
issuers take the form lower network
fees, signing bonuses, and marketing
and development funds. For acquirers,
the incentives typically take the form of
lower network fees.
Summary of Proposal
Reasonable and proportional fees.
The Board is requesting comment on
two alternative standards for
28 Net network fees paid by issuers and acquirers
were calculated by subtracting incentives and
discounts provided from network fees paid.
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determining whether the amount of an
interchange transaction fee is reasonable
and proportional to the cost incurred by
the issuer with respect to the
transaction. Alternative 1 adopts issuerspecific standards with a safe harbor
and a cap. In contrast, Alternative 2
adopts a cap that is applicable to all
covered issuers.
Under Alternative 1, an issuer could
comply with the standard for
interchange fees by calculating its
allowable costs and ensuring that,
unless it accepts the safe harbor as
described below, it did not receive any
interchange fee in excess of its
allowable costs through any network.
An issuer’s allowable costs would be
those costs that are attributable to the
issuer’s role in authorization, clearance,
and settlement of the transaction and
that vary with the number of
transactions sent to an issuer within a
calendar year (variable costs). The
issuer’s allowable costs incurred with
respect to each transaction would be the
sum of the allowable costs of all
electronic debit transactions over a
calendar year divided by the number of
electronic debit transactions on which
the issuer received or charged an
interchange transaction fee in that year.
The issuer-specific determination in
Alternative 1 would be subject to a cap
on the amount of any interchange fee an
issuer could receive or charge,
regardless of the issuer’s allowable cost
calculation. The Board proposes to set
this cap at an initial level of 12 cents per
transaction. Alternative 1 also would
permit an issuer to comply with the
regulatory standard for interchange fees
by receiving or charging interchange
fees that do not exceed the safe harbor
amount, in which case the issuer would
not need to determine its maximum
interchange fee based on allowable
costs. The Board proposes to set the safe
harbor amount at an initial level of 7
cents per transaction. Therefore, under
Alternative 1, each payment card
network would have the option of
setting interchange fees either (1) at or
below the safe harbor or (2) at an
amount for each issuer such that the
interchange fee for that issuer does not
exceed the issuer’s allowable costs, up
to the cap.
Under Alternative 2, an issuer would
comply with the standard for
interchange fees as long as it does not
receive or charge a fee above the cap,
which would be set at an initial level of
12 cents per transaction. Each payment
card network would have to set
interchange fees such that issuers do not
receive or charge any interchange fee in
excess of the cap.
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Fraud-prevention adjustment. The
Board’s proposal requests comment on
two general approaches to the fraudprevention adjustment framework and
asks several questions related to the two
alternatives. One approach focuses on
implementation of major innovations
that would likely result in substantial
reductions in total, industry-wide fraud
losses. The second approach focuses on
reasonably necessary steps for an issuer
to maintain an effective fraudprevention program, but would not
prescribe specific technologies that
must be employed as part of the
program. At this time, the Board is not
proposing a specific adjustment to the
amount of an interchange fee for an
issuer’s fraud-prevention costs. After
considering the comments received, the
Board expects to develop a specific
proposal on the fraud adjustment for
public comment.
Exemptions. The Board’s proposed
rule exempts issuers that, together with
affiliates, have assets of less than $10
billion. The Board’s proposed rule also
exempts electronic debit transactions
made using debit cards issued under
government-administered programs or
made using certain reloadable prepaid
cards. These exempt issuers or
transactions would not be subject to the
interchange transaction fee restrictions.
The exemptions do not apply to the
proposed rule’s provisions regarding
network exclusivity and routing
restrictions.
Prohibition on circumvention or
evasion. In order to prevent
circumvention or evasion of the limits
on the amount of interchange fees that
issuers receive from acquirers, the
proposed rule would prohibit an issuer
from receiving net compensation from a
network for debit card transactions,
excluding interchange transaction fees.
For example, the total amount of
compensation provided by the network
to the issuer, such as per-transaction
rebates, incentives or payments, could
not exceed the total amount of fees paid
by the issuer to the network.
Limitation on debit card restrictions.
The Board is requesting comment on
two alternative approaches to
implement the statute’s required rules
that prohibit network exclusivity. Under
Alternative A, an issuer or payment card
network may not restrict the number of
payment card networks over which an
electronic debit transaction may be
carried to fewer than two unaffiliated
networks. Under this alternative, it
would be sufficient for an issuer to issue
a debit card that can be processed over
one signature-based network and one
PIN-based network, provided the
networks are not affiliated. Under
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Alternative B, an issuer or payment card
network may not restrict the number of
payment card networks over which an
electronic debit transaction may be
carried to less than two unaffiliated
networks for each method of
authorization the cardholder may select.
Under this alternative, an issuer that
used both signature- and PIN-based
authorization would have to enable its
debit cards with two unaffiliated
signature-based networks and two
unaffiliated PIN-based networks.
Transaction routing. The Board
proposes to prohibit issuers and
payment card networks from restricting
the ability of a merchant to direct the
routing of electronic debit transactions
over any of the networks that an issuer
has enabled to process the electronic
debit transactions. For example, issuers
and payment card networks may not set
routing priorities that override a
merchant’s routing choice. The
merchant’s choice, however, would be
limited to those networks enabled on a
debit card.
Scope of Rule
In general, the Board’s proposed rule
covers debit card transactions (not
otherwise exempt) that debit an
account. The Board’s proposed rule also
covers both three-party and four-party
systems. Throughout the proposal, the
Board generally describes the
interchange fee standards and the
network exclusivity and routing rules in
a manner that most readily applies to
debit card transactions initiated at the
point of sale for the purchase of goods
and services and debit card transactions
carried over four-party networks. The
scope of the proposed rule, however,
covers three-party networks and could
cover ATM transactions and networks.
The Board requests comment on the
application of the proposed rule to ATM
transactions and ATM networks, as well
as to three-party networks.
Coverage of ATM transactions and
networks. The Board requests comment
on whether ATM transactions and ATM
networks should be included within the
scope of the rule. Although the statute
does not expressly include ATM
transactions within its scope, EFTA
Section 920’s definitions of ‘‘debit card,’’
‘‘electronic debit transaction,’’ and
‘‘payment card network’’ could be read
to bring ATM transactions within the
coverage of the rule. Specifically, most
ATM cards can be used to debit an asset
account. It could also be argued that an
ATM operator accepts the debit card as
form of payment to carry out the
transaction, so the ATM network could
be covered by the statutory definition of
a ‘‘payment card network.’’
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Under EFTA Section 920(c)(8), the
term ‘‘interchange transaction fee’’ is
defined as a fee charged ‘‘for the purpose
of compensating an issuer.’’
Traditionally, however, the interchange
fee for ATM transactions is paid by the
issuer and flows to the ATM operator.
Thus, the proposed interchange
transaction fee standards would not
apply to ATM interchange fees and
would not constrain the current level of
such fees.29
The network-exclusivity prohibition
and routing provisions, however, would
directly affect the operations of ATM
networks if these provisions were
applied to such networks. Issuers would
be required to offer ATM cards that can
be accepted on at least two unaffiliated
networks, and the ATM operator would
have the ability to choose the network
through which transactions would be
routed. As discussed below, in point-ofsale transactions, these provisions
improve the ability of a merchant to
select the network that minimizes its
cost (particularly the cost associated
with interchange fees) and otherwise
provides the most advantageous terms.
In the case of ATM transactions,
however, the exclusivity and routing
provisions would give the ATM
operator, which is receiving the ATM
interchange fee, the ability to select the
network that maximizes that fee.
Therefore, coverage of ATM networks
under the rule may result in very
different economic incentives than
coverage of point-of-sale debit card
networks.
If ATM networks and ATM
transactions are included within the
scope of the rule, the Board requests
comment on how to implement the
network exclusivity provision. For
example, if the Board requires two
unaffiliated networks for each
authorization method, should it
explicitly require an issuer to ensure
that ATM transactions may be routed
over at least two unaffiliated networks?
Should the Board state that one pointof-sale debit network and one ATM-only
network would not satisfy the
exclusivity prohibition under either
proposed alternative? The Board also
specifically requests comment on the
effect of treating ATM transactions as
‘‘electronic debit transactions’’ under the
rule on small issuers, as well as the
cardholder benefit, if any, of such an
approach.
Coverage of three-party systems. The
Board also requests comment on the
appropriate application of the
interchange fee standards to electronic
debit transactions carried over threeparty systems. In a three-party payment
system, the payment card network
typically serves both as the card issuer
and the merchant acquirer for purposes
of accepting payment on the network.30
In this system, there is no explicit
interchange fee. Instead, the merchant
directly pays a merchant discount to the
network. The merchant discount
typically is equivalent to the sum of the
interchange fee, the network switch fee,
other acquirer costs, and an acquirer
markup that would typically be
imposed in a four-party system.
Both the statutory and proposed
definition of ‘‘interchange transaction
fee’’ would cover the part of the
merchant discount in a three-party
system that is used to compensate the
network for its role as issuer. If a threeparty network apportioned its entire
merchant discount to its roles as
network or merchant acquirer, however,
the interchange fee would, in effect, be
zero. This outcome, coupled with the
fact the statute does not restrict fees an
acquirer charges a merchant, may
present practical difficulties in limiting
the amount of a merchant discount
charged in a three-party network. The
Board requests comment on the
appropriate way to treat three-party
networks and on any specific
clarifications with respect to such fees
that should be provided in the
regulation.
In addition, the Board requests
comment on how the network
exclusivity and routing provisions
should be applied to three-party
systems. If the limitations on payment
card network restrictions under § 235.7
were applied to a three-party system,
debit cards issued by the network would
be required to be capable of being
routed through at least one unaffiliated
payment card network in addition to the
network issuing the card, and the
network may not inhibit a merchant’s
ability to route a transaction to any
other unaffiliated network(s) enabled on
a debit card. For example, under
Alternative A for the network
exclusivity provisions, the payment
card network would be required to add
an unaffiliated network and arrange for
the unaffiliated debit network to carry
debit transactions, for ultimate routing
29 The rule’s interchange fee standard could
become a constraint in the future if ATM
interchange fees begin to flow in the same direction
as point-of-sale debit card transactions, as was the
case for interchange fees of certain PIN debit
networks in the 1990s.
30 In addition, under a three-party system, outside
processors generally are not authorized by the
network to acquire transactions from merchants.
Although outside processors may provide some
processing services to the merchant, the network is
ultimately the acquirer for every transaction.
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to the contracting network, which may
result in more circuitous routing that
would otherwise be the case. Under
Alternative B, which requires at least
two unaffiliated payment card networks
for each method of authorization, the
payment card network would be
required to add at least one unaffiliated
signature debit network for a signatureonly debit card. In addition, if the debit
card had PIN debit functionality, the
card would also have to be accepted on
at least two unaffiliated PIN debit
networks.
The Board recognizes that the nature
of a three-party system could be
significantly altered by any requirement
to add one or more unaffiliated payment
card networks capable of carrying
electronic debit transactions involving
the network’s cards. Nonetheless, the
statute does not provide any apparent
basis for excluding three-party systems
from the scope of the provisions of
EFTA Section 920(b). The Board
requests comment on all aspects of
applying the proposed rule to threeparty payment systems, including on
any available alternatives that could
minimize the burden of compliance on
such systems.
Section-by-Section Analysis
I. Sec. 235.1
Authority and purpose
This section sets forth the authority
and purpose for the proposed rule.
II. Sec. 235.2
Definitions
The proposed rule provides
definitions for many of the terms used
in the rule. As noted throughout this
section, many of the definitions follow
the EFTA’s definitions. The proposed
rule also provides definitions for terms
not defined in EFTA Section 920. Some
of these definitions are based on
existing statutory or regulatory
definitions, while others are based on
terminology in the debit card industry.
The Board requests comment on all of
the terms and definitions set out in this
section. In particular, the Board requests
comment on any terms used in the
proposed rule that a commenter believes
are not sufficiently clear or defined.
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A. Sec. 235.2(a) Account
EFTA Section 920(c) defines the term
‘‘debit card’’ in reference to a card, or
other payment code or device, that is
used ‘‘to debit an asset account
(regardless of the purpose for which the
account is established) * * *.’’ That
section, however, does not define the
terms ‘‘asset account’’ or ‘‘account.’’
EFTA Section 903(2) defines the term
‘‘account’’ to mean ‘‘a demand deposit,
savings deposit, or other asset account
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(other than an occasional or incidental
credit balance in an open end credit
plan as defined in section 103(i) of [the
EFTA]), as described in regulations of
the Board established primarily for
personal, family, or household
purposes, but such term does not
include an account held by a financial
institution pursuant to a bona fide trust
agreement.’’ 31
Similar to EFTA Section 903(2),
proposed § 235.2(a) defines ‘‘account’’ to
include a transaction account (which
includes a demand deposit), savings, or
other asset account. The proposed
definition, however, differs from EFTA
Section 903(2) because EFTA Section
920(c) does not restrict the term debit
card to those cards, or other payment
codes or devices, that debit accounts
established for a particular purpose.
Accordingly, the proposed definition
includes both an account established
primarily for personal, family, or
household purposes and an account
established for business purposes. For
the same reason, the proposed
definition of ‘‘account’’ includes an
account held by a financial institution
under a bona fide trust arrangement.
These distinctions from the EFTA
Section 903(2)’s definition are clarified
in proposed comment 2(a)–1.
The proposed definition of ‘‘account’’
is limited to accounts that are located in
the United States. The Board does not
believe it is appropriate to apply EFTA
Section 920’s limitations to foreign
issuers or accounts, absent a clear
indication from Congress to do so.
B. Sec. 235.2(b) Acquirer
Proposed § 235.2(b) defines the term
‘‘acquirer.’’ Within the debit card
industry, there are numerous models for
acquiring transactions from merchants,
and the term ‘‘acquirer’’ may not always
be used to refer to the entity that holds
a merchant’s account. In some acquiring
relationships, an institution performs all
the functions of the acquirer (e.g.,
signing up and underwriting merchants,
processing payments, receiving and
providing settlement for the merchants’
transactions, and other account
maintenance). In other acquiring
relationships, an institution performs all
the functions of the acquirer except for
settling the merchant’s transactions with
both the merchant and the network.
The Board is proposing to limit the
term ‘‘acquirer’’ to entities that ‘‘acquire’’
(or buy) the electronic debit transactions
from the merchant. Proposed § 235.2(b)
defines ‘‘acquirer’’ as a person that
‘‘contracts directly or indirectly with a
merchant to receive and provide
31 15
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settlement for the merchant’s electronic
debit transactions over a payment card
network.’’ Proposed § 235.2(b) limits the
term to those entities serving a financial
institution function with respect to the
merchant, as distinguished from a
processor function, by stipulating that
the entity ‘‘receive and provide
settlement for the merchant’s’’
transactions. Proposed § 235.2(b) also
explicitly excludes entities that solely
process transactions for the merchant
from the term ‘‘acquirer.’’
Proposed § 235.2(b), however, takes
into consideration the fact that the
degree of involvement of the entity
settling with the merchant varies under
different models by defining ‘‘acquirer’’
as a person that ‘‘contracts directly or
indirectly with a merchant.’’ See
proposed comment 2(b)–1.
C. Sec. 235.2(c) Affiliate and § 235.2(e)
Control
Proposed §§ 235.2(c) and (e) define
the terms ‘‘affiliate’’ and ‘‘control.’’ EFTA
Section 920(c)(1) defines the term
‘‘affiliate’’ as ‘‘any company that
controls, is controlled by, or is under
common control with another
company.’’ The proposed rule
incorporates the EFTA’s definition of
‘‘affiliate.’’
Although the EFTA’s definition of
affiliate is premised on control, the
EFTA does not define that term. The
Board is proposing to adopt a definition
of ‘‘control’’ that is consistent with
definitions of that term in other Board
regulations.32
D. Sec. 235.2(d) Cardholder
Proposed § 235.2(d) defines the term
‘‘cardholder’’ as the person to whom a
debit card is issued. Proposed comment
2(d) clarifies that if an issuer issues a
debit card for use to debit a transaction,
savings, or other similar asset account,
the cardholder usually will be the
account holder. In some cases, however,
such as with a business account, there
may be multiple persons who have been
issued debit cards and are authorized to
use those debit cards to debit the same
account. Each employee issued a card
would be considered a cardholder. In
the case of a prepaid card, the
cardholder is the person that purchased
the card or a person who received the
card from the purchaser. See proposed
comment 2(d)–1.
32 See Regulation Y (Bank Holding Companies
and Change in Bank Control), 12 CFR 225.2(e)) and
Regulation P (Privacy of Consumer Financial
Information), 12 CFR 216.3(g).
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F. Sec. 235.2(f) Debit Card and § 235.2(i)
General-Use Prepaid Card
Debit Card (§ 235.2 (f))
EFTA Section 920(c)(2) defines the
term ‘‘debit card’’ as ‘‘any card, or other
payment code or device, issued or
approved for use through a payment
card network to debit an asset account
(regardless of the purpose for which the
account is established), whether
authorization is based on signature, PIN,
or other means.’’ The term includes a
general-use prepaid card, as that term
was previously defined by the gift card
provisions of the Credit Card
Accountability, Responsibility and
Disclosure Act of 2009 (Credit Card
Act).33 The statute excludes paper
checks from the definition of ‘‘debit
card.’’
Proposed § 235.2(f) defines the term
‘‘debit card’’ and generally tracks the
definition set forth in EFTA Section
920. Thus, proposed § 235.2(f)(1)
generally defines the term ‘‘debit card’’
as ‘‘any card, or other payment code or
device, issued or approved for use
through a payment card network to
debit an account, regardless of whether
authorization is based on signature,
personal identification number (PIN), or
other means.’’ In addition, the term
applies regardless of whether the issuer
holds the underlying account. This is
consistent with the statutory definition
of ‘‘debit card’’ which does not require
that an issuer also hold the account
debited by the card, code, or device.
Proposed § 235.2(f)(2) further provides
that ‘‘debit card’’ includes a ‘‘general-use
prepaid card.’’ See proposed comment
2(f)–4.
Proposed comment 2(f)–1 clarifies
that the requirements of this part
generally apply to any card, or other
payment code or device, even if it is not
issued in card form. That is, the rule
applies even if a physical card is not
issued or if the device is issued with a
form factor other than a standard-sized
card. For example, an account number
or code that could be used to access
underlying funds in an account would
be considered a debit card under the
rule (except when used to initiate an
ACH transaction). Similarly, the term
‘‘debit card’’ would include a device
with a chip or other embedded
mechanism that links the device to
funds held in an account, such as a
mobile phone or sticker containing a
contactless chip that enables the
cardholder to debit an account.
Proposed comments 2(f)–2 and –3
address deferred and decoupled debit
cards, two types of card products that
33 See
EFTA Section 915(a)(2)(A).
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the Board believes fall within the
statutory definition of ‘‘debit card’’
notwithstanding that they may share
both credit and debit card-like
attributes. Under a deferred debit
arrangement, transactions are not
immediately posted to a cardholder’s
account when the card transaction is
received by the account-holding
institution for settlement, but instead
the funds in the account are held and
made unavailable for other transactions
for a specified period of time.34 Upon
expiration of the time period, the
cardholder’s account is debited for the
amount of all transactions made using
the card which were submitted for
settlement during that period. For
example, under some deferred debit
arrangements involving consumer
brokerage accounts (whether held at the
issuer or an affiliate), the issuer agrees
not to post the card transactions to the
brokerage account until the end of the
month. Regardless of the time period
chosen by the issuer for deferring the
posting of the transactions to the
cardholder’s account, deferred debit
cards would be considered debit cards
for purposes of the requirements of this
part. Deferred debit card arrangements
do not refer to arrangements in which a
merchant defers presentment of
multiple small dollar card payments,
but aggregates those payments into a
single transaction for presentment, or
where a merchant requests placement of
a hold on certain funds in an account
until the actual amount of the
cardholder’s transaction is known. See
proposed comment 2(f)–2.
Proposed comment 2(f)–3 addresses
decoupled debit arrangements in which
the issuer is not the institution that
holds the underlying account that will
be debited. That is, the issuercardholder relationship is ‘‘decoupled’’
from the cardholder’s relationship with
the institution holding the cardholder’s
account. In these ‘‘decoupled debit’’
arrangements, transactions are not
posted directly to the cardholder’s
account when the transaction is
presented for settlement with the card
issuer. Instead, the issuer must send an
ACH debit instruction to the accountholding institution in the amount of the
transaction in order to obtain the funds
from the cardholder’s account. As noted
above, the term ‘‘debit card’’ includes a
card, or other payment code or device,
that debits an account, regardless of
whether the issuer holds the account.
Accordingly, the Board believes it is
34 The issuer’s ability to maintain the hold
assumes that the issuer has received a settlement
record for the transaction within the time period
required under card network rules.
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appropriate to treat decoupled debit
cards as debit cards subject to the
requirements of this part.
Moreover, the Board understands that
there may be incentives for some issuers
to design or offer products with ‘‘creditlike’’ features in an effort to have such
products fall outside the scope of the
interchange fee restrictions to be
implemented by this rulemaking. For
example, an issuer may offer a product
that would allow the cardholder the
option at the time of the transaction to
choose when the cardholder’s account
will be debited for the transaction. Any
attempt to classify such a product as a
credit card is limited by the prohibition
against compulsory use under the EFTA
and Regulation E. Specifically, the
EFTA and Regulation E provide that no
person may condition the extension of
credit to a consumer on such
consumer’s repayment by means of
preauthorized electronic fund
transfers.35 Thus, an issuer of a charge
or credit card is prohibited from
requiring a consumer’s repayment by
preauthorized electronic fund transfers
from a deposit account held by the
consumer as a condition of opening the
charge or credit card account. The Board
solicits comment on whether additional
guidance is necessary to clarify that
deferred and decoupled debit, or any
similar products, qualify as debit cards
for purposes of this rule.
The proposed rule also sets forth
certain exclusions from the term ‘‘debit
card’’ in § 235.2(f)(3) to clarify the
definition. Proposed § 235.2(f)(3)(i)
clarifies that retail gift cards that can be
used only at a single merchant or
affiliated group of merchants are not
subject to the requirements of this part.
The Board believes that by including an
explicit reference to general-use prepaid
cards in the statutory definition of
‘‘debit card,’’ Congress did not intend the
interchange fee restrictions to apply to
other types of prepaid cards that are
accepted only at a single merchant or an
affiliated group of merchants. These
cards are generally used in a closed
environment at a limited number of
locations and are not issued for general
use. See § 235.7(a), discussed below.
Proposed comment 2(f)–5 clarifies
that two or more merchants are
affiliated if they are related by either
common ownership or common
corporate control. For purposes of the
definition of ‘‘debit card,’’ the Board
views franchisees to be under common
corporate control if they are subject to
a common set of corporate policies or
practices under the terms of their
franchise licenses. Accordingly, gift
35 EFTA
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cards that are redeemable solely at
franchise locations would be excluded
from the definition of debit card for
cards, or other payment codes or
devices, usable only at a single
merchant or affiliated group of
merchants, from the definition of ‘‘debit
card.’’
Proposed § 235.2(f)(3)(ii) expands the
statutory exclusion for paper checks to
exempt any ‘‘check, draft, or similar
paper instrument, or electronic
representation thereof’’ from the
definition of ‘‘debit card.’’ This
adjustment is proposed because in many
cases paper checks may be imaged and
submitted electronically for
presentment to the paying bank.
Proposed comment 2(f)–6 further
clarifies that a check that is provided as
a source of information to initiate an
ACH debit transfer in an electronic
check conversion transaction is not a
debit card.
Finally, proposed § 235.2(f)(iii) would
generally exclude ACH transactions
from the requirements of this part.
Specifically, the proposed exclusion
provides that an account number is not
a debit card when used to initiate an
ACH transaction from a person’s
account. The Board believes that this
exclusion is necessary to clarify that
ACH transactions initiated by a person’s
provision of a checking account number
are not ‘‘electronic debit transactions’’
for purposes of the network exclusivity
and routing provisions under § 235.7.
However, this exclusion is not intended
to cover a card, or other payment code
or device, that is used to directly or
indirectly initiate an ACH debit from a
cardholder’s account, for example,
under a decoupled debit arrangement.36
Proposed comment 2(f)–7 sets forth this
guidance.
General-Use Prepaid Cards (§ 235.2(i))
The statutory definition of ‘‘debit
card’’ includes a ‘‘general-use prepaid
card’’ as that term is defined under
EFTA Section 915(a)(2)(A).37 Proposed
§ 235.2(i) defines ‘‘general-use prepaid
card’’ as a card, or other payment code
or device, that is (1) issued on a prepaid
basis in a specified amount, whether or
not that amount may be increased or
reloaded, in exchange for payment; and
(2) redeemable upon presentation at
multiple, unaffiliated merchants or
service providers for goods or services,
or usable at ATMs.
The proposed definition of ‘‘generaluse prepaid card’’ generally tracks the
36 However, a decoupled debit card issued by a
merchant that can be used only at that merchant or
its affiliate(s) may qualify for the separate exclusion
under proposed § 235.2(f)(3)(i).
37 See EFTA Section 920(c)(2)(B).
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definition as it appears under EFTA
Section 915(a)(2)(A), with modifications
to simplify and clarify the definition.38
For example, the proposed rule refers to
cards issued in a ‘‘specified’’ amount to
capture a card, or other payment code
or device, whether it is issued in a
predenominated amount or in an
amount requested by a cardholder in a
particular transaction.
The inclusion of general-use prepaid
cards in the definition of ‘‘debit card’’
under EFTA Section 920(c)(2)(B) refers
only to the term ‘‘general-use prepaid
card’’ as it is defined in EFTA Section
915(a)(d)(A), and does not incorporate
the separate exclusions to that term that
are set forth in the gift card provisions
of the Credit Card Act.39 Thus, for
purposes of this proposed rule, the
definition of ‘‘general-use prepaid card’’
would include the cards, or other
payment codes or devices, listed under
EFTA Section 915(a)(2)(D) to the extent
they otherwise meet the definition of
‘‘general-use prepaid card.’’ 40
Proposed comment 2(i)–1 clarifies
that a card, or other payment code or
device, is ‘‘redeemable upon
presentation at multiple, unaffiliated
merchants’’ if, for example, the
merchants agree, pursuant to the rules
of the payment network, to honor the
card, or other payment code or device,
if it bears the mark, logo, or brand of a
payment network. (See, however,
proposed comment 2(f)–5, discussed
above, clarifying that franchises subject
to a common set of corporate policies or
practices are considered to be affiliated.)
Proposed comment 2(i)–2 provides
that a mall gift card, which is generally
intended to be used or redeemed at
participating retailers located within the
same shopping mall or in some cases,
within the same shopping district,
would be considered a general-use
prepaid card if it is also networkbranded, which would permit the card
to be used at any retailer that accepts
that card brand, including retailers
located outside the mall.
In some cases, a group of unaffiliated
merchants may jointly offer a prepaid
card that is only redeemable at the
participating merchants. For example,
38 See
also 12 CFR 205.20(a)(3).
example, under the gift card provisions of
the Credit Card Act, general-use prepaid cards do
not include cards that are not marketed to the
general public or cards issued in paper form only.
See EFTA Section 915(a)(2)(D)(iv) and (v).
40 The Board further notes that had Congress
intended to apply the exclusions in EFTA Section
915(a)(2)(D) to the definition of ‘‘general-use
prepaid card’’ for purposes of this rule, it would
have been unnecessary to separately create an
exemption for certain reloadable prepaid cards that
are not marketed or labeled as a gift card. See EFTA
Section 920(a)(7)(ii).
39 For
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‘‘selective authorization’’ cards may be
offered to encourage sales within a
shopping mall or district or at
merchants located in the same resort.
Selective authorization cards generally
are issued by a financial institution or
member of a card network, rather than
a program sponsor as in the case of
many retail gift card programs.
Transactions made using such cards are
authorized and settled over the payment
card networks just like other general-use
prepaid cards. In addition, interchange
transaction fees may be charged in
connection with these cards because
they are processed over a payment card
network.
Selective authorization programs
enable a merchant to offer gift cards to
its customers and ensure that card funds
are spent only within the participating
merchant(s) without incurring the costs
of setting up a separate program. There
may be little difference between these
programs and closed-loop retail gift card
programs operated by a single retailer,
but for the fact that these cards are
accepted at merchants that are
unaffiliated. However, requiring these
selective authorization cards to comply
with the network exclusivity and
routing restrictions could be
problematic and costly for the
participating merchants with little
corresponding benefit. Accordingly,
comment is requested on whether a
prepaid card that is accepted at a
limited number of unaffiliated
participating merchants and does not
carry a network brand should also be
considered a ‘‘general-use prepaid card’’
under the rule.
G. Sec. 235.2(g) Designated automated
teller machine network (Designated
ATM network)
EFTA Section 920(a)(7)(C) defines a
‘‘designated automated teller machine
network’’ as either (1) all ATMs
identified in the name of the issuer or
(2) any network of ATMs identified by
the issuer that provides reasonable and
convenient access to the issuer’s
customers. Proposed § 235.2(g)
implements this definition substantially
as set forth in the statute.
The Board is also proposing to clarify
the meaning of ‘‘reasonable and
convenient access,’’ as that term is used
in § 235.2(g)(2). Proposed comment
2(g)–1 provides that an issuer provides
reasonable and convenient access, for
example, if, for each person to whom a
card is issued, the issuer provides
access to an ATM within the
metropolitan statistical area (MSA) in
which the last known address of the
person to whom the card is issued is
located, or if the address is not known,
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where the card was first purchased or
issued, in order to access an ATM in the
network. The purpose of this comment
is to clarify that if an issuer does not
have its own network of proprietary
ATMs, as provided in § 235.2(g)(1), that
the network the issuer identifies as its
designated ATM network is one in
which a person using a debit card can
access an ATM with relative ease. The
Board believes that having to travel a
substantial distance from where the
person is located, as determined by the
last known address of the person to
whom the card is issued, for an ATM in
the network is neither reasonable nor
convenient. The MSA is a common,
well-known way of defining a
community.41 Therefore, the Board is
proposing the MSA as a proxy for a
reasonable distance from the person’s
location.
Furthermore, because a debit card
includes a general-use prepaid card, for
which the issuer may not have the
address of the person using the card, the
proposed comment provides that the
issuer may use the location of where the
card was first purchased or issued. The
issuer of a general-use prepaid card may
not have address information because
either the person to whom the card is
issued is not the ultimate user of the
card, such as in the case of a gift card,
or the issuer does not collect address
information for the product. In these
instances, the only location known to
the issuer is the place where the card
was first purchased or issued, and the
issuer may assume that the person using
the card is located in that same area.
The Board also requests comment on
whether additional clarification or
guidance is needed for how an issuer
may identify a network of automated
teller machines that provides reasonable
and convenient access to the issuer’s
cardholders.
H. Sec. 235.2(h) Electronic debit
transaction
EFAT section 920(c)(5) defines the
term ‘‘electronic debit transaction’’ as ‘‘a
transaction in which a person uses a
debit card.’’ The Board’s proposed
definition in § 235.2(h) adds two
clarifying provisions.
First, proposed § 235.2(h) clarifies
that the term ‘‘electronic debit
transaction’’ is a transaction in which a
person uses a debit card as ‘‘a form of
payment.’’ The statute defines payment
card network, in part, as a network a
person uses to accept a debit card as a
form of payment. For clarity, the Board
41 See U.S. Census Bureau for information on
MSAs, available at https://www.census.gov/
population/www/metroareas/metroarea.html.
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proposes to incorporate that
requirement into the definition of
electronic debit transaction.
Second, the statutory definition is
silent as to whether use of the debit card
must occur within the United States.
Proposed § 235.2(h) limits electronic
debit transactions to those transactions
where a person uses a debit card for
payment in the United States. The
Board found no indication in the statute
that Congress meant to apply the
interchange provisions extraterritorially.
Moreover, if a person uses a debit card
outside the United States, even if such
use is to debit an account located in the
United States, the amount of the
interchange transaction fees the issuer
may receive often is determined by the
network rules for cross-border
transactions or the laws or regulations of
the country in which the merchant is
located. Therefore, electronic debit
transactions subject to the proposed rule
are those that occur at a merchant
located within the United States.
Proposed comment 2(h)–1 explains
that the term ‘‘electronic debit
transaction’’ includes transactions in
which a person uses a debit card other
than for the initial purchase of goods or
services. For example, after purchasing
goods or services, a person may decide
that such goods and services are
unwanted or defective. If permitted by
agreement with the merchant, that
person may return the goods or cancel
the services and receive a credit using
the same debit card used to make the
original purchase. Proposed § 235.2(h)
covers such transactions. The Board
understands, however, that issuers
typically do not receive interchange fees
for these transactions. Proposed
comment 2(h)–2 clarifies that
transactions in which a person uses a
debit card to purchase goods or services
and also receives cash back from the
merchant are electronic debit
transactions.
I. Sec. 235.2(j) Interchange transaction
fee
Proposed § 235.2(j) generally
incorporates the EFTA Section
920(c)(8)’s definition of ‘‘interchange
transaction fee’’ that defines the term as
‘‘any fee established, charged or received
by a payment card network for the
purpose of compensating an issuer for
its involvement in an electronic debit
transaction.’’ A payment card network
may determine interchange transaction
fees according to a schedule that is
widely applicable, but also may permit
bilateral negotiation of fees between
issuers and acquirers or merchants, as
well as specialized interchange
transaction fee arrangements.
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As discussed above, interchange
transaction fees today are used to
reimburse issuers for their involvement
in electronic debit transactions by
transferring value between acquirers
and issuers. In general, payment card
networks establish the interchange
transaction fees, although the issuers are
receiving the fees by reducing the
amount remitted for a particular
transaction by the amount of that
transaction’s interchange transaction
fee. Therefore, the merchants or
acquirers are paying the amount of the
interchange transaction fee. The
proposed definition, however, clarifies
that interchange transaction fees are
paid by merchants or acquirers. See
proposed comment 2(j)–1.
Proposed comment 2(j)–2 restates the
rule that interchange fees are limited to
those fees established, charged or
received by a payment card network for
the purpose of compensating the issuer,
and not for other purposes, such as to
compensate the network for its services
to acquirers or issuers.
J. Sec. 235.2(k) Issuer
Proposed § 235.2(k) incorporates the
statute’s definition of ‘‘issuer’’ that
defines the term as ‘‘any person who
issues a debit card or the agent of such
person with respect to the card.’’
Proposed § 235.2(k) follows the
statutory definition, but removes the
phrase ‘‘or the agent of such person with
respect to the card.’’ Because agents are,
as a matter of law, held to the same
restrictions with respect to the agency
relationship as their principals, the
Board does not believe that removing
this clause will have a substantive
effect.
Issuing a debit card is the process of
providing a debit card to a cardholder.
The issuing process generally includes
establishing a direct contractual
relationship with the cardholder with
respect to the card and providing the
card directly or indirectly to the
cardholder. The debit card provided
may or may not have the issuer’s name
on the card. For example, a prepaid card
may be issued by a bank that has
partnered with another entity (e.g., a
retail store) and the other entity’s name
may be on the prepaid card. Further, as
discussed below, the issuer is not
necessarily the institution that holds the
cardholder’s account that will be
debited.
Similar to merchant-acquirer
relationships, the issuer-cardholder
relationship varies. Proposed comments
2(k)–2 through 2(k)–5 clarify which
entity is the issuer in the most prevalent
issuing arrangements. In the simple
four-party system, the financial
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institution that holds the account is the
issuer because that is the institution that
directly or indirectly provides the debit
card to the cardholder, holds the
cardholder’s account and has the direct
contractual relationship with the
cardholder with respect to the card. If
the debit card is a prepaid card, the
cardholder may receive the card from a
merchant or other person, and thus may
not receive the card directly from the
issuing bank, which is the entity that
holds the account that pools together
the funds for many prepaid cards. See
proposed comment 2(k)–2.
In contrast, in a three-party system,
the network typically provides the debit
card or prepaid card directly to the
cardholder or through an agent.
Generally, the network also has a direct
contractual relationship with the
cardholder. Notwithstanding the other
roles the network may have with respect
to the transaction, the network is
considered an issuer under proposed
§ 235.2(k) because it provides the card
to the cardholder, and may also be the
account-holding institution. See
proposed comment 2(k)–3.
A variation of the issuer relationship
within the four-party and three-party
systems involves the licensing or
assignment of Bank Identification
Numbers (BINs), which are numbers
assigned to financial institutions by the
payment card networks for purposes of
issuing cards. Some members of
payment card networks permit other
entities that are not members to issue
debit cards using the member’s BIN. The
entity permitting such use is referred to
as the ‘‘BIN sponsor.’’ The entity using
the BIN sponsor’s BIN (‘‘affiliate
member’’) typically holds the account of
the cardholder and directly or indirectly
provides the cardholder with the debit
card. The cardholder’s direct
relationship is with the affiliate
member. Proposed comment 2(k)–4.i
and .ii describes two circumstances
involving BIN sponsorship
arrangements and provides guidance on
the entity that would be considered to
be the issuer in those circumstances.
Another variant of the issuer
relationship within the four-party and
three-party systems is the decoupled
debit card arrangement. In a decoupled
debit card arrangement, a third-party
service provider (which may or may not
be a financial institution) issues a debit
card to the cardholder and enters into a
contractual relationship with the
cardholder with respect to the
decoupled debit card. Therefore,
proposed comment 2(k)–5 clarifies that
the entity directly or indirectly
providing the cardholder with the card
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is considered the issuer under proposed
§ 235.2(k).
Some issuers outsource to a third
party some of the functions associated
with issuing cards and authorizing,
clearing, and settling debit card
transactions. A third party that performs
certain card-issuance functions on
behalf of an issuer would be subject to
the same restrictions as the issuer in the
performance of those functions. An
issuer that outsources certain issuing
functions retains the underlying
relationship with the cardholder and
should retain responsibility for
complying with the rule’s requirements
as they pertain to issuers. Therefore, the
Board’s proposed definition of ‘‘issuer’’
does not include the phrase ‘‘or agent of
the issuer with respect to such card.’’
The Board requests comment on
whether there are circumstances in
which an agent of an issuer also should
be considered to be an issuer within the
rule’s definition.
Proposed § 235.2(k)’s definition of
‘‘issuer’’ applies throughout this part,
except for the provisions exempting
small issuers.42 For purposes of that
exemption, EFTA Section 920 limits the
term ‘‘issuer’’ to the person holding the
account that is debited through the
electronic debit transaction. For
example, issuers of decoupled debit
cards are not considered issuers for
purposes of the small issuer exemption
because they do not hold the account
being debited.
The Board requests comment on all
aspects of the issuer definition. The
Board specifically requests comment on
whether the appropriate entity is
deemed to be the issuer in relation to
the proposed examples.
L. Sec. 235.2(l) Merchant
The statute does not define the term
‘‘merchant.’’ The term is used
throughout the proposed rule, and the
Board is proposing to define a merchant
as a person that accepts a debit card as
payment for goods or services.
M. Sec. 235.2(m) Payment card network
EFTA Section 920(c)(11) defines the
term ‘‘payment card network’’ as (1) an
entity that directly, or through licensed
members, processors, or agents,
provides the proprietary services,
infrastructure, and software that route
information and data to conduct debit
card or credit card transaction
authorization, clearance, and settlement,
and (2) that a person uses in order to
accept as a form of payment a brand of
debit card, credit card, or other device
42 See discussion of proposed § 235.5(a) in the
section-by-section analysis.
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that may be used to carry out debit or
credit transactions. Proposed § 235.2(m)
follows this definition, with revisions
for clarity.
Under the proposed rule, a payment
card network is generally defined as an
‘‘entity that directly or indirectly
provides the proprietary services,
infrastructure, and software for
authorization, clearance, and settlement
of electronic debit transactions.’’
Because the interchange fee restrictions
and network exclusivity and merchant
routing provisions of the Dodd-Frank
Act do not apply to credit card
transactions, the Board believes it is
appropriate to exclude from the
proposed definition the reference to
credit cards in the statutory definition to
avoid unnecessary confusion. No
substantive change is intended.
Likewise, the Board does not believe its
necessary to state that a payment card
network is an entity that a person uses
in order to accept debit cards as a form
of payment, because proposed § 235.2(h)
defines the term ‘‘electronic debit
transaction,’’ as use of a debit card ‘‘as
a form of payment.’’
In addition, the term ‘‘payment card
network,’’ as defined in EFTA Section
920, could be interpreted broadly to
include any entity that is involved in
processing an electronic debit
transaction, including the acquirer,
third-party processor, payment gateway,
or software vendor that programs the
electronic terminal to accept and route
debit card transactions. Each of these
entities arguably provide ‘‘services,
infrastructure, and software’’ that are
necessary for authorizing, clearing, and
settling electronic debit transactions.
However, the Board does not believe
that this is the best interpretation in
light of the statute’s objectives. Instead,
the Board believes that the better
interpretation is that in general, the term
‘‘payment card network’’ only applies to
an entity that establishes the rules,
standards, or guidelines that govern the
rights and responsibilities of issuers and
acquirers involved in processing debit
card transactions through the payment
system. Accordingly, proposed
§ 235.2(m)(2) makes this clarification.
The rules, standards, or guidelines may
also govern the rights and
responsibilities of participants other
than issuers and acquirers. See
proposed comment 2(m)–1.
In certain cases, such as in a threeparty system, the same entity may serve
multiple roles, including that of the
payment card network, the issuer, and
the acquirer. Proposed comment 2(m)–
1 clarifies that the term ‘‘payment card
network’’ would also cover such entities
to the extent that their rules, standards,
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or guidelines also cover their activities
in their role(s) of issuer and/or acquirer.
Proposed comment 2(m)–1 further
clarifies that the term ‘‘payment card
network’’ would generally exclude
acquirers, issuers, third-party
processors, payment gateways, or other
entities that may provide services,
equipment, or software that may be used
in authorizing, clearing, or settling
electronic debit transactions, unless
such entities also establish guidelines,
rules, or procedures that govern the
rights and obligations of issuers and
acquirers involved in processing an
electronic debit transactions through the
network. For example, an acquirer is not
considered to be a payment card
network due to the fact that it
establishes particular transaction format
standards, rules, or guidelines that
apply to electronic debit transactions
submitted by a merchant that uses the
acquirer’s services, because such
standards, rules, or guidelines would
apply only to the merchant using the
acquirer’s services, and not to other
entities that may also be involved in
processing those transactions, such as
the card issuer.
The Board requests comment on
whether other non-traditional or
emerging payment systems would be
covered by the statutory definition of
‘‘payment card network.’’ For example,
consumers may use their mobile phone
to send payments to third parties to
purchase goods or services with the
payment amount billed to their mobile
phone account or debited directly from
the consumer’s bank account. In
addition, consumers may use a third
party payment intermediary, such as
PayPal, to pay for Internet purchases,
using the consumer’s funds that may be
held by the intermediary or in the
consumer’s account held at a different
financial institution. In both examples,
the system or network used to send the
payment arguably provide the
‘‘proprietary services, infrastructure, and
software for authorization, clearance,
and settlement of electronic debit
transactions.’’ Transactions involving
these methods of payment typically are
subject to rules and procedures
established by the payment system. If
such systems are not covered, the Board
requests specific comment how it
should appropriately distinguish these
payment systems from traditional debit
card payment systems that are subject to
the rule.
N. Sec. 235.2(n) Person
The term ‘‘person’’ is not defined in
the EFTA. The proposed definition
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incorporates the definition of the term
in existing Board regulations.43
O. Sec. 235.2(o) Processor
EFTA Section 920 uses the term
‘‘processor’’ but does not define the
term. Proposed § 235.2(o) defines the
term ‘‘processor’’ as a person that
processes or routes electronic debit
transactions for issuers, acquirers, or
merchants.
P. Sec. 235.2(p) United States
Proposed § 235.2(p) defines the term
‘‘United States.’’ The proposed
definition is modified from the EFTA’s
definition of ‘‘State.’’ (15 U.S.C.
1693a(10)).
III. Sec. 235.3 Reasonable and
proportional interchange transaction
fees
Proposed § 235.3 sets forth standards
for assessing whether the amount of any
interchange transaction fee that an
issuer receives or charges with respect
to an electronic debit transaction is
reasonable and proportional to the cost
incurred by the issuer with respect to
the transaction.
A. Statutory Considerations
1. Reasonable and Proportional to Cost
As noted above, EFTA Section 920
requires the Board to establish standards
for assessing whether the amount of any
interchange transaction fee an issuer
receives or charges with respect to an
electronic debit transaction is
reasonable and proportional to the cost
incurred by the issuer with respect to
the transaction. EFTA Section 920 does
not define ‘‘reasonable’’ or
‘‘proportional.’’ The Board has found
only limited examples of other statutory
uses of the terms ‘‘reasonable’’ or
‘‘proportional’’ with respect to fees.44
One example is Section 149 of the Truth
43 Regulation Z (Truth in Lending Act), 12 CFR
226.2(a)(22); Regulation CC (Availability of Funds
and Collections of Checks), 12 CFR 229.2(yy);
44 Several public utility rate-setting statutes
require ‘‘just and reasonable’’ rates. See, e.g., Natural
Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. 717 et seq. In the public utility
rate-setting context, a ‘‘just and reasonable’’ rate
requires that the public utility be able ‘‘to operate
successfully, to maintain financial integrity, to
attract capital, and to compensate its investors for
the risk assumed.’’ Duquense Light Co. v. Barash,
488 U.S. 299 (1989). The Board believes that the
similarities between these statutes and Section 920,
however, are limited. Public utility rate-setting
involves unique circumstances, none of which are
present in the case of setting standards for
interchange transaction fees. Issuers are unlike
public utilities, which, in general, are required to
make their services regularly available to the public.
In addition, unlike in the case of public utilities
where the utility’s only source of revenue is the fees
charged for the service or commodity, issuers have
other sources, besides interchange fees, from which
they can receive revenue to cover their costs of
operations and earn a profit.
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in Lending Act (TILA), which limits
credit card penalty fees for violations of
the cardholder agreement to fees that are
reasonable and proportional to the
violation. In implementing standards
under TILA Section 149, the Board
relied on the commonly accepted legal
definition of ‘‘reasonable’’ (‘‘fair, proper,
or moderate’’) and the commonly
accepted definition of ‘‘proportional’’
(‘‘corresponding in degree, size, or
intensity’’ or ‘‘having the same or
constant ratio’’).45
Although the Board believes the
previously relied upon definitions can
inform this rulemaking, the Board notes
that reasonableness and proportionality
have different connotations in the
context of interchange transaction fees
than in the context of penalty fees. The
TILA provision related to the
reasonableness and proportionality of
the fees charged when a violation of the
account terms occurred. TILA required
the Board to consider the costs incurred
by issuers as a result of violations and
other factors, including the need to
deter violations. In considering whether
an interchange fee is reasonable, the
Board proposes to consider whether the
fee is fair or proper in relation to both
the individual issuer’s costs as well as
the costs incurred by other issuers. As
discussed further below, the Board
believes it may determine that certain
fee levels are reasonable based on
overall issuer cost experience, even if
the individual issuer’s costs are above
(or below) that fee level.
Similarly, in considering whether an
interchange fee is proportional to the
issuer’s costs, the Board does not
believe that proportionality must be
interpreted to require identical cost-tofee ratios for all covered issuers
(although a constant cost-to-fee ratio
would result from the issuer-specific
standard discussed below for issuers
with allowable costs below the cap).
Rather, if the Board were to adopt a safe
harbor or a fee cap (discussed further
below) that it determined to be
reasonable, the cost-to-fee ratio of any
issuer that received fees at or below the
safe harbor or cap would be deemed to
meet the proportionality standard.
2. Considerations for Standards
In EFTA Section 920, Congress set
forth certain factors that the Board is
required to consider when establishing
standards for determining whether
interchange transaction fees are
reasonable and proportional to the cost
45 See 75 FR 37526, 37531–32 (June 29, 2010),
Black’s Law Dictionary at 1272 (7th ed.
1999)(defining ‘‘reasonable’’) and Merriam Webster’s
Collegiate Dictionary at 936 (10th ed. 1995)
(defining ‘‘proportional’’).
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incurred by the issuer. Specifically,
EFTA Section 920 requires the Board to
(1) consider the functional similarity
between electronic debit transactions
and checks, which are required to clear
at par through the Federal Reserve
System and (2) distinguish between the
incremental cost of authorization,
clearance, and settlement of a particular
transaction, which shall be considered,
and other costs that are not specific to
a particular transaction, which shall not
be considered. Although Section 920
requires only the consideration of these
factors, the Board believes that they are
indicative of Congressional intent with
respect to the implementation of Section
920, and therefore provide a useful
measure for which costs should and
should not be included in ‘‘the cost
incurred * * * with respect to the
transaction.’’
Similarities to Check
There are a number of similarities
between the debit card and check
payment systems. Both are payment
instruments that result in a debit to the
payor’s asset account. Debit card
payments are processed electronically,
and while historically check processing
has been paper-based, today virtually all
checks are processed and collected
electronically. Further, depository
institutions have begun to offer their
depositors remote deposit capture
services to enable merchants to deposit
their checks electronically. For both
debit card and check payments,
merchants pay fees to banks, processors,
or intermediaries to process the
payments. Settlement time frames are
roughly similar for both payment types,
with payments settling within one or
two days of deposit.
However, there are also differences
between debit card and check payment
systems.
Open versus closed systems. Debit
card networks are closed systems that
both issuing and acquiring banks must
join in order to accept and make
payments. To accept debit card
payments, issuing and acquiring banks
must decide which debit card networks
to join, establish a relationship with
those networks, and agree to abide by
those networks’ rules. In contrast, the
check system is an open system in
which a merchant simply needs a
banking relationship through which it
can collect checks in order to be able to
accept check payments from its
customers. The merchant’s bank need
not join a network in order to collect a
check.
Payment authorization. Payment
authorization is an integral part of the
processing of a transaction on a debit
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card network. As part of the payment
authorization process, a card issuer
determines, among other things,
whether the card is valid and whether
there are sufficient funds to cover the
payment. In contrast, payment
authorization is not an inherent part of
the check acceptance process, and
therefore a merchant does not know
whether the check will be returned
unpaid at the time the merchant accepts
the check. However, a merchant that
wants to better manage its risks
associated with unpaid checks can
purchase value-added check verification
and guarantee services from various
third-party service providers.
Processing and collection costs. In the
check system, the payee’s bank (which
is analogous to the merchant-acquiring
bank for debit cards) either incurs costs
to present a check directly to the payor’s
bank (which is analogous to the cardissuing bank) or pays fees to
intermediaries to collect and present the
check to the payor’s bank. In either case,
the payor’s bank does not incur fees to
receive check presentments unless it has
agreed to pay a fee to receive its
presentments electronically. In debit
card systems, the merchant-acquiring
and card-issuing banks both pay fees to
the network to process payments for
their respective customers.
Par clearing. In the check system,
payments clear at par. When a payee’s
bank presents a check to the payor’s
bank, the payor’s bank pays and the
payee’s bank receives the face value of
the check. As discussed above, a payee’s
bank may pay fees to an intermediary
for check collection services; however,
check payments are cleared and settled
for the full face value of the checks. The
payee’s bank is not required to pay a fee
to the payor’s bank to receive the
settlement for the full value of the
checks presented. In contrast, in the
debit card system, because interchange
fees represent fees paid by the
merchant-acquiring bank to card-issuing
banks, the merchant-acquiring bank
receives less than the full value of debit
card payments.
Routing. In the check system, the
payee’s bank decides the avenue
through which it collects checks.
Checks can be presented directly to the
payor’s bank, collected through an
intermediary for a fee, or exchanged
through a clearing house.46 The decision
is often based on the avenue that offers
the lowest clearing cost. For a debit card
payment, the merchant’s choice with
46 For checks exchanged through a clearing
house, both the payor’s bank and the payee’s bank
must be members of or participate in the clearing
house.
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regard to routing is limited to the set of
networks whose cards the merchant
accepts and that are also available to
process a transaction for its customer’s
card. Merchant payment routing may be
further limited if the card issuer has
designated routing preferences that
must be honored when a customer
presents a card that can be used for
payment on multiple (typically PIN)
networks. Such preferences may result
in a transaction being routed to a
network that imposes a higher fee on the
merchant’s bank (and hence the
merchant) than if the payment were
processed on another available network.
Ability to reverse transactions. In the
check system, there is a limited amount
of time during which the payor’s bank
may return a check to the payee’s bank.
Specifically, a check must be returned
by the ‘‘midnight deadline,’’ which is
midnight of the banking day after the
check was presented to the payor’s bank
for payment. After the midnight
deadline passes, a payor’s bank can no
longer return the payment through the
check payment system, although it may
have legal remedies in the event of a
dispute or financial loss.47 In contrast,
in the debit card system, the time period
within which a transaction may be
reversed is not as limited. Typically,
many disputes can be addressed
through network chargeback processes
without having to rely on legal
remedies. These chargebacks and
disputes can be handled through the
network with procedures that are
delineated in network rules.
Activity Costs To Be Considered
As noted above, the statute provides
that, in establishing standards for
assessing whether an interchange fee is
reasonable and proportional to ‘‘the cost
incurred by the issuer with respect to
the transaction,’’ the Board shall
consider the incremental cost of
authorizing, clearing, and settling a
particular transaction and shall not
consider other costs that are not specific
to a particular transaction.48 The statute
is silent with respect to costs that are
specific to a particular transaction other
than incremental costs incurred by an
issuer for authorizing, clearing, and
settling the transaction.
After considering several options for
the costs that may be taken into account
in setting interchange transaction fees
(‘‘allowable costs’’), the Board proposes
such costs be limited to those associated
with authorization, clearing, and
settlement of a transaction. This
formulation includes only those costs
47 Uniform
48 Sec.
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Commercial Code 4–301 and 4–302.
920(a)(3).
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that are specifically mentioned for
consideration in the statute. If an issuer
outsources its authorization, clearance,
and settlement activities, allowable
costs would include fees paid to a
processor for authorization, clearance,
and settlement services.
In the definition of allowable costs,
the Board proposes to exclude network
processing fees (i.e., switch fees) paid by
issuers.49 Card issuers pay such fees to
payment card networks for each
transaction processed over those
networks. Although these network fees
typically are not associated with one
specific component of authorization,
clearance, or settlement of the
transaction, a particular transaction
cannot be authorized, cleared, and
settled through a network unless the
issuer pays its network processing fees.
The Board proposes that network
processing fees be excluded from
allowable costs, because the Board
recognizes that if network processing
fees were included in allowable costs,
acquirers (and, by extension, merchants)
might be in the position of effectively
paying all network fees associated with
debit card transactions. That is, an
acquirer would pay its own network
processing fees directly to the network
and would indirectly pay the issuer’s
network processing fees through the
allowable costs included in the
interchange fee standard.50
The Board considered including other
costs associated with a particular
transaction that are not incurred by the
issuer for its role in authorization,
clearing, and settlement of that
transaction. Such costs might include,
for example, cardholder rewards that are
paid by the issuer to the cardholder for
each transaction. The Board does not
view the costs of cardholder rewards
programs as appropriate for
consideration within the context of the
statute. Other costs associated with a
particular debit transaction might also
include costs associated with providing
customer service to cardholders for
particular transactions, such as dealing
with cardholder inquiries and
complaints about a transaction. Given
the statute’s mandate to consider the
functional similarities between debit
transactions and check transactions, the
49 These fees do not include processing fees paid
by an issuer to a network in its role as processor
(i.e., a role equivalent to that of an issuer’s thirdparty processor).
50 Such an arrangement would be similar to
traditional paper-check processing where the
payee’s bank typically pays all of the processing
costs, while the payor’s bank typically pays no
processing fees. However, this arrangement would
be consistent with electronic check collection
systems where both the payor’s bank and payee’s
bank generally pay processing fees.
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Board proposes that allowable costs be
limited to those that the statute
specifically allows to be considered, and
not be expanded to include additional
costs that a payor’s bank in a check
transaction would not recoup through
fees from the payee’s bank.
The Board requests comment on
whether it should allow recovery
through interchange fees of other costs
of a particular transaction beyond
authorization, clearing, and settlement
costs. If so, the Board requests comment
on what other costs of a particular
transaction, including network fees paid
by issuers for the processing of
transactions, should be considered
allowable costs. The Board also requests
comment on any criteria that should be
used to determine which other costs of
a particular transaction should be
allowable.
The Board considered limiting the
allowable costs to include only those
costs associated with the process of
authorizing a debit card transaction,
because this option may be viewed as
consistent with a comparison of the
functional similarity of electronic debit
transactions and check transactions.
Among the most prominent differences
between debit cards and checks is the
existence of authorization for a debit
card transaction where the deposit
account balance is checked at the time
of the transaction to ensure that the
account has sufficient funds to cover the
transaction amount. Clearing and
settlement occur for both debit cards
and checks, but for checks there is
nothing analogous to an interchange fee
to reimburse the issuer for the cost of
clearing and settling a transaction.
However, because the statute instructs
the Board to also consider the costs of
clearance and settlement, the Board
proposes to include those costs. The
Board requests comment on whether it
should limit allowable costs to include
only the costs of authorizing a debit
card transaction.
Cost Measurement
As noted above, the statute
specifically requires consideration of
the ‘‘incremental’’ cost of authorization,
clearance, and settlement of a particular
transaction. There is no single,
generally-accepted definition of the
term ‘‘incremental cost.’’ One
commonly-used economic definition of
‘‘incremental cost’’ refers to the
difference between the cost incurred by
a firm if it produces a particular
quantity of a good and the cost incurred
by that firm if it does not produce the
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good at all.51 Other definitions of
incremental cost consider the cost of
producing some increment of output
greater than a single unit but less than
the entire production run. However,
under any of these definitions, the
increment of production is larger than
the cost of any particular transaction
(and, in the first definition, as large as
the entire production run in the first
case).52 As a result, the Board believes
that these definitions of incremental
cost do not appropriately reflect the
incremental cost of a particular
transaction to which the statute refers.
The Board proposes that the
interchange fee standard allow for the
inclusion of the per-transaction value of
costs that vary with the number of
transactions (i.e., average variable cost)
within the reporting period. This cost
calculation yields the cost of a typical
or average transaction. This measure of
per-transaction cost does not consider
costs that are shared with other
products of an issuer, such as common
fixed or overhead costs, which would
still be incurred in the absence of debit
card transactions. For example, the
Board does not believe that other costs
of deposit accounts or, more generally,
depository institutions, which cannot be
attributable to debit card transactions,
are appropriate to include in allowable
costs. While a debit card program may
not exist if certain costs are not
incurred, such as account set-up costs or
corporate overhead costs, it does not
follow that those costs would be
avoided in the absence of a debit card
program.
However, if variable costs of
authorizing, clearing, and settling debit
card transactions are shared with credit
card operations, the Board believes that
some portion of such costs should be
allocated to debit card transactions. For
example, these costs may be recorded
jointly in internal cost accounting
systems or not separated on third-party
processing invoices. These costs should
be allocated to debit cards based on the
proportion of debit card transactions to
total card transactions.
51 Baumol, William J., John C. Panzar, and Robert
D. Willig (1982), Contestable Markets and the
Theory of Industry Structure. New York: Harcourt
Brace Jovanovich. This definition involves any
fixed or variable costs that are specific to the entire
production run of the good and would be avoided
if the good were not produced at all. Notably, this
measurement excludes any common costs across
goods that a firm produces, such as common fixed
overhead costs, as those costs would still be
incurred if production of the good of interest were
ceased.
52 Fundamentally, none of these definitions
correspond to a per-transaction measure of
incremental cost that could be applied to any
particular transaction, regardless of the particular
transaction used for such a definition.
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This measure would not consider
costs that are common to all debit card
transactions and could never be
attributed to any particular transaction
(i.e., fixed costs), even if those costs are
specific to debit card transactions as a
whole. Such fixed costs of production
could not be avoided by ceasing
production of any particular transaction
(except perhaps the first).
The Board recognizes that, by
distinguishing variable costs from fixed
costs, this standard imposes a burden on
issuers by requiring issuers to segregate
costs that vary with the number of
transactions from those that are largely
invariant to the number of transactions,
within the reporting period. The Board
also acknowledges that differences in
cost accounting systems across
depository institutions may complicate
enforcement by supervisors. Finally, the
Board recognizes that excluding fixed
costs may prevent issuers from
recovering through interchange fees
some costs associated with debit card
transactions. However, as noted above,
the Board also recognizes that issuers
have other sources, besides interchange
fees, from which they can receive
revenue to help cover the costs of debit
card operations. Moreover, such costs
are not recovered from the payee’s bank
in the case of check transactions.
The Board also considered a cost
measurement in terms of marginal cost
or, in other words, the cost of an
additional transaction. However,
marginal cost can be different for each
unit of output, and it is unclear which
unit of output’s cost should be
considered, although often it is assumed
to be the last unit. Notably, if marginal
cost does not vary materially over the
relevant volume range, then average
variable cost will provide a close
approximation to marginal cost for any
particular transaction.53 In addition,
average variable cost is more readily
measurable than marginal cost for
issuers and supervisors. Specifically,
marginal cost for a given issuer cannot
be calculated from cost accounting data;
instead, it must be identified and
estimated based on assumptions about
costs that would have been incurred if
an issuer’s transaction volume had
differed from that which actually
occurred.54
The Board requests comment on
whether it should include fixed costs in
53 In
particular, if marginal cost is constant, then
average variable cost equals marginal cost. More
generally, average variable cost equals the average
marginal cost across all transactions.
54 See, Turvey, Ralph ‘‘What are Marginal Costs
and How to Estimate Them?’’ University of Bath
School of Management, Centre for the Study of
Regulated Industries, Technical Paper 13(2000).
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B. Proposed Interchange Fee Standards
The statute requires that the amount
of any interchange transaction fee that
an issuer receives or charges with
respect to an electronic debit transaction
must be ‘‘reasonable and proportional to
the cost incurred by the issuer with
respect to the transaction.’’ 55 Proposed
§ 235.3 sets forth two alternatives
(referred to as ‘‘Alternative 1’’ and
‘‘Alternative 2’’) for determining the
level of the allowable interchange fee.
Alternative 1 proposes an issuer-specific
approach combined with a safe harbor
and a cap. Under Alternative 1, an
issuer may receive or charge interchange
transaction fees at or below the safe
harbor amount or based on a
determination of its allowable costs, up
to a cap. Alternative 2 proposes a standalone cap. The Board proposes to adopt
only one of the alternatives and requests
comment on each, as well as on any
other alternatives that could be applied.
1. Alternative 1—Issuer-Specific up to a
Cap, With a Safe Harbor
Under Alternative 1, an issuer could
comply with the regulatory standard for
interchange fees by calculating
allowable per-transaction cost, based on
the allowable costs described by the
Board, and ensuring that it did not
receive an interchange fee for any
transaction in excess of its allowable
per-transaction cost. Proposed § 235.3(c)
sets forth an issuer’s allowable costs. As
discussed above, these are the issuer’s
costs that are attributable to its role in
authorization, clearance, and settlement
of electronic debit transactions and that
vary, up to existing capacity limits
within a reporting period, with the
number of electronic debit transactions
sent to the issuer. Network fees paid by
the issuer are excluded from allowable
costs. Proposed § 235.3(b)(2) limits the
amount of any interchange fee that an
issuer may receive to no more than the
allowable costs divided by the number
of electronic debit transactions on
which the issuer received or charged an
interchange transaction fee in the
calendar year.
Alternative 1 also provides for a cap
of 12 cents per transaction (proposed
§ 235.3(b)(2)). An issuer could not
receive an interchange fee above the cap
regardless of its allowable cost
calculation. In addition, Alternative 1
would deem any interchange fee at or
below a safe harbor level of 7 cents per
transaction to be in compliance with the
regulatory standard (proposed
§ 235.3(b)(1)), regardless of the issuer’s
allowable per-transaction cost.
Under Alternative 1, each payment
card network could set interchange fees
for each issuer (1) at or below the safe
harbor 56 or (2) at a level for the issuer
that would not exceed the issuer’s
allowable per-transaction costs up to the
cap.57 A network would be permitted to
set fees that vary with the value of the
transaction (ad valorem fees), as long as
the maximum amount of the
interchange fee received by an issuer for
any electronic debit transaction was not
more than that issuer’s maximum
permissible interchange fee. A network
would also be permitted to establish
different interchange fees for different
types of transactions (e.g., card-present
and card-not-present) or types of
merchants, as long as each of those fees
satisfied the relevant limits of the
standard. Each issuer’s supervisor
would verify that the amount of any
interchange fee received by an issuer is,
in fact, commensurate with the safe
harbor, the issuer’s allowable pertransaction costs, or the cap, as
appropriate. Each of the three elements
of this alternative, the issuer-specific
determination, the cap, and the safe
harbor, are discussed in more detail
below.
Issuer-Specific Determination
EFTA Section 920(a)(2) requires that
‘‘the amount of any interchange
transaction fee that an issuer may
receive or charge * * * be reasonable
and proportional to the cost incurred by
the issuer with respect to the
transaction.’’ One reading of that
provision is that the use of the definite
article ‘‘the’’ in the second half of the
standard suggests that the interchange
fee limitation should be determined
separately for each issuer and each
transaction presented to that issuer. As
discussed below, however, such an
approach would be impractical and
difficult to administer and enforce, and
would introduce undesirable economic
incentives.
Measuring the allowable cost of each
transaction would be highly
impracticable due to the volume of
the cost measurement, or alternatively,
whether costs should be limited to the
marginal cost of a transaction. If the
latter, the Board requests comment on
how the marginal cost for that
transaction should be measured.
55 See
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56 This rule would not require a payment card
network to set an interchange fee above the safe
harbor. Whether a network would implement an
issuer-specific interchange fee is the network’s
prerogative.
57 Under this option, if a network planned to
establish interchange fees on a per-issuer basis
above the safe harbor, an issuer would report its
maximum allowable interchange fee to the network.
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transactions and the fact that the cost of
each transaction is likely not known
when the interchange fee is charged.
The Board believes that the average
variable cost, as discussed above,
provides a reasonable approximation of
an issuer’s per-transaction cost for its
role in authorization, clearance, and
settlement. The Board believes that a
maximum interchange fee determined
on an issuer-specific basis as provided
in Alternative 1 is both reasonable, in
that it reflects only those allowable costs
identified by the Board (up to a cap,
discussed further below), and is directly
proportional to the issuer’s actual costs.
From an economic perspective, an
issuer-specific determination directly
links the compensation through
interchange fees for each issuer to that
issuer’s specific costs. A major
drawback of this approach is that it
would not provide incentives for issuers
to control their costs. In particular, an
issuer that is eligible to recoup its costs
under an issuer-specific determination
with no cap would face no penalty for
having high costs. Conversely, because
a reduction in costs would lead to a
reduction in an issuer’s interchange fee,
an issuer would receive no reward for
reducing its costs (in the absence of a
safe harbor). As a result, issuers would
have no incentive to minimize their
costs and may incur higher costs than
they would otherwise. An issuerspecific determination might also
encourage over-reporting of costs by an
issuer because any inflation of the
reported costs would be directly
rewarded with a higher interchange fee
for the issuer. Such undesirable
incentive properties have generally led
economists to advocate the
abandonment of cost-of-service
regulation in regulated industries in
favor of approaches that yield better
incentives to the regulated entities.58
An issuer-specific determination, on
its own, would also place a significant
implementation and administration
burden on industry participants and
supervisors. Each issuer would have to
account for its costs in a manner that
enables it to segregate allowable costs
that could be recovered through the
interchange fee from its other costs,
tabulate those costs on an ongoing basis,
and report them to the networks in
which it participates. A network that set
issuer-specific fees would need to
incorporate such fees into its fee
schedules, including the operational
58 Joskow, Paul L. (2008), ‘‘Incentive Regulation
and its Application to Electricity Networks,’’ Review
of Network Economics, Vol. 7, Issue 4, pp. 547–60.
Kahn, Alfred E. (1988), The Economics of
Regulation: Principles and Institutions, Cambridge:
MIT Press.
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ability to distinguish among many
different issuers in order to apply
different rates to each of those issuers’
transactions. The issuers’ supervisors
would need to evaluate each issuer’s
reported costs and verify that each
issuer’s interchange fees appropriately
reflect those reported costs.
Cap
To address, at least in part, the
incentive problems discussed above
with respect to a purely issuer-specific
determination, the Board proposes to
place a ceiling on the amount of any
issuer-specific determination by
specifying a cap of 12 cents per
transaction. With an issuer-specific
determination and a cap, the Board
would deem any interchange fee that
was equal to an issuer’s allowable costs
to be reasonable and proportional to the
issuer’s costs if it is at or below the cap.
Some issuers that are subject to the
interchange fee limitations have debit
card programs with substantially higher
per-transaction costs than others. These
unusually high costs might be due to
small programs targeted at high-networth customers or newer start-up
programs that have not yet achieved
economies of scale. In comparing
reported per-transaction costs to current
interchange transaction fee levels, the
Board believes it is unlikely that these
issuers currently are recovering their
per-transaction costs through
interchange transaction fees. The Board
does not believe it is reasonable for the
interchange fee to compensate an issuer
for very high per-transaction costs. The
Board believes that setting the cap at 12
cents per transaction will be sufficient
to allow all but the highest-cost issuers
discussed above to recover through
interchange transaction fees the costs
incurred for authorizing, clearing, and
settling electronic debit transactions.
The Board notes that even the highestcost issuers have sources of revenue in
addition to interchange fees, such as
cardholder fees, to help cover their
costs.
A cap would eliminate some of the
negative incentives of a purely issuerspecific determination. An issuer with
costs above the cap would not receive
interchange fees to cover those higher
costs. As a result, a high-cost issuer
would have an incentive to reduce its
costs in order to avoid this penalty. The
Board would re-examine the cap
periodically (to coincide with the
reporting requirements in proposed
§ 235.8) to ensure that the cap continues
to reflect a reasonable fee.
To determine an appropriate value for
a cap, the Board used data from
responses to the card issuer survey
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81737
described earlier. The Board used data
on transaction volumes and the variable
cost of authorization, clearing, and
settlement (the allowable costs under an
issuer-specific determination) to
compute an issuer’s per-transaction
cost. These data were used to compute
various summary measures of pertransaction variable costs for issuers,
generally. For this sample of issuers, the
Board estimated that the per-transaction
variable costs, averaged across all
issuers, were approximately 13 cents
per transaction. Average per-transaction
variable costs were approximately 4
cents per transaction when each issuer’s
costs are weighted by the number of its
transactions.59 The 50th percentile of
estimated per-transaction variable costs
was approximately 7 cents.
The Board proposes a cap of 12 cents
per transaction because, while it
significantly reduces interchange fees
from current levels (approximately 44
cents per transaction, on average, based
on the survey of payment card
networks), it allows for the recovery of
per-transaction variable costs for a large
majority of covered issuers
(approximately 80 percent). The
proposed cap does not differentiate
between different types of electronic
debit transactions (e.g., signature-based,
PIN-based, or prepaid). From the survey
results, the Board found some evidence
of differences in allowable costs across
signature and PIN debit transactions. In
particular, the mean and median values
of allowable costs for signature debit
transactions were approximately 2 cents
higher per transaction than the
analogous figures for PIN debit
transactions, while the 80th percentile
was approximately 1 cent higher per
transaction for signature debit
transactions. However, because these
estimates are based on a sample of data,
and because the variation among the
individual issuers’ costs was large, the
ability to reliably infer a statistically
significant difference from the data is
limited. As a result, the Board does not
propose to distinguish initially between
the cap value for signature and PIN
debit transactions, for either Alternative
1 or Alternative 2. For the same reasons,
as described below, the Board does not
propose to allow the safe harbor value
to vary initially by authorization
method. The Board requests comment
on whether it should allow for such
differences in the cap or safe harbor
values.
The Board notes that issuers reported
higher costs for authorizing, clearing,
and settling prepaid card transactions
59 This value corresponds to the aggregate pertransaction cost for all covered issuers.
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(many of which are likely to be exempt
from the interchange fee restrictions).
The Board believes that issuers reported
higher prepaid costs for one or more of
the following reasons. First, many
prepaid programs use stand-alone
components, such as processing
infrastructure, that are unable to exploit
economies of scale that result from a
large number of prepaid transactions or
other debit card transactions. Second,
because of the stand-alone components,
all costs are allocated to prepaid card
programs. Third, many prepaid issuers
outsource almost all prepaid activity to
third-party processors that include fixed
costs and a mark-up in per-transaction
fees. Finally, the cost data reported to
the Board include information for both
non-exempt and exempt cards. Exempt
cards may have higher costs than nonexempt cards due to differences in the
functionality of exempt cards, such as
the need to verify the eligibility of
transactions under certain government
benefits programs. In light of the higher
reported prepaid card costs, the Board
specifically requests comment on
whether the Board should initially have
separate standards for debit card
transactions and prepaid card
transactions, and what those different
standards should be.60
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Safe Harbor
To further address the incentive and
administrative burden problems
discussed above, the Board proposes to
provide a safe harbor for issuers as an
alternative to the issuer-specific
determination. Alternative 1 provides
that, regardless of an issuer’s pertransaction allowable cost, an
interchange fee that is less than or equal
to 7 cents per transaction is deemed to
be reasonable and proportional to the
issuer’s cost of the electronic debit
transaction. Thus, issuers would have
an incentive to reduce their pertransaction costs below the safe harbor.
In determining the proposed safe
harbor amount, the Board considered
allowable issuer costs identified in
responses to its card issuer survey.
Using the issuer cost data described
above, the Board proposes that 7 cents
per transaction is an appropriate safe
harbor value for the interchange fee.
This value represents the approximate
median in the distribution of estimated
per-transaction variable costs. Like the
cap discussed above, the Board
proposes one safe harbor for all
electronic debit transactions (i.e.,
60 The Board notes that prepaid cards do not
currently have different interchange fees than other
debit cards despite any potential differences in
costs across the two types of cards.
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signature, PIN and prepaid). The Board
recognizes that issuers’ costs may
change over time, and the Board
proposes to re-examine the safe harbor
amount periodically in light of changing
issuer costs.
Overall, this approach reduces
administrative burden on those issuers
that choose to rely on the safe harbor,
rather than determine their allowable
costs, and allows issuers with costs
above the safe harbor to receive an
interchange fee directly linked to their
costs, up to the level of the cap. At the
same time, for an issuer with costs
below the safe harbor value, this
approach provides a reward for efficient
production while also encouraging cost
reductions to maximize the spread
between the issuer’s costs and the safe
harbor value.
2. Alternative 2—Stand-Alone Cap
Under Alternative 2, the Board would
use information about issuer costs to
determine an appropriate maximum
interchange fee, or a cap, that would
apply uniformly to all issuers. That is,
each issuer could receive interchange
fees up to the cap, regardless of that
specific issuer’s actual allowable costs.
Alternative 2 provides that an
interchange transaction fee is reasonable
and proportional to an issuer’s cost only
if it is no more than 12 cents per
transaction. As in Alternative 1, a
network would be permitted to set fees
that vary with the value of the
transaction (ad valorem fees) or with the
type of transaction or type of merchant,
but only such that the maximum
amount of the interchange fee for any
transaction was not more than the cap
of 12 cents. The Board proposes the
same cap of 12 cents per transaction in
Alternative 2 as in Alternative 1 for the
reasons stated in the discussion of
Alternative 1. Each issuer’s supervisor
would verify that an issuer does not
receive interchange revenue in excess of
the cap. The Board recognizes that
issuers’ costs may change over time, and
the Board proposes to conduct periodic
surveys of covered issuers and reexamine the cap amount periodically in
light of changing issuer costs.
As in Alternative 1, a stand-alone cap
would encourage high-cost issuers to
reduce their costs. In addition, an issuer
with costs below the cap would receive
a markup reflecting the spread between
its costs and the cap value. Because the
magnitude of the spread increases with
the difference between the issuer’s costs
and the cap, all issuers, including lowcost issuers, would have an incentive to
improve the efficiency of their
operations. Finally, a cap reduces
somewhat the incentive for an issuer to
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inflate its reported costs because no
issuer would receive direct
compensation for higher costs. These
incentives have motivated authorities in
other contexts to set price caps in many
regulated industries, including, for
example, the Reserve Bank of Australia
in its intervention in the Australian
credit and debit card markets.
In comparison to Alternative 1,
administration and implementation of
this approach places less administrative
burden on industry participants.
Although the issuer would have to
report its costs to the Board every two
years in accordance with § 235.8, an
issuer would not have to calculate or
report to the networks its maximum
allowable interchange transaction fee.
Similarly, a payment card network
would not need to incorporate issuerspecific fees into its fee schedule, as the
cap would apply uniformly to all
covered issuers in that network.
3. Application of the Interchange Fee
Standard
Under both Alternative 1 and
Alternative 2, the limitations on
interchange fees would apply on a pertransaction basis. Under both
alternatives, no electronic debit
transaction presented to an issuer could
carry an interchange fee that exceeds the
interchange fee standard for that
issuer.61 As noted above, supervisory
review would be necessary to verify that
an issuer does not receive interchange
fee payments in excess of the maximum
permitted by the rule.
This approach generally follows the
statutory provisions discussed above
that refer to ‘‘the’’ issuer and ‘‘the’’
transaction. The Board recognizes,
however, that this approach restricts
flexibility in setting interchange fees to
reflect differences in risk, among other
things. If the interchange fee standard
must hold strictly for all transactions,
then an issuer would be unable to
receive a higher interchange fee for
relatively high-risk transactions offset
by lower interchange fees on relatively
low-risk transactions.
The Board has identified two other
potential methods for implementing the
interchange fee standards and requests
comment on each. The first approach
would allow flexibility in interchange
fees with respect to a particular issuer.
Under this approach, the issuer could
comply with the rule as long as it meets
the interchange fee standard, on
average, for all of its electronic debit
61 In no case does the standard prevent a network
from setting interchange fees below the established
amount. Instead, the standard describes the
maximum appropriate interchange fee.
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transactions over a particular network
during a specified period. In other
words, some interchange fees above the
amount of the standard would be
permitted as long as those were offset by
other fees below the standard. The
second approach would allow an issuer
to comply with the rule with respect to
transactions received over a particular
network as long as, on average, over a
specified period, all covered issuers on
that network meet the fee standard
given the network’s mix of transactions.
In other words, compliance with the
interchange fee standard would be
evaluated at the network level, rather
than at the level of each individual
issuer.
Both of these approaches would
provide flexibility in setting interchange
fees to incorporate considerations such
as differences in risk across
transactions. However, both of these
approaches would introduce the
possibility that any particular set of fees,
set ex ante given assumptions about an
issuer’s or a network’s expected mix of
transactions, would result in an average
fee for the actual transactions
experienced that exceeded the
regulatory standard. Moreover, network
and issuer efforts to manage transactions
and fees to stay within established
limits could become very complex.
Therefore, if the Board were to adopt
either of these approaches, it may also
need to deem an issuer to be in
compliance with the standard as long as
the interchange fees were set based on
the issuer’s or the network’s transaction
mix over a previous, designated, period
of time, regardless of the actual
transaction experience during the time
period the fee is in effect.
The Board requests comment on
whether either of these approaches is
appropriate. If so, the Board requests
comment about whether and how it
should adopt standards with respect to
a permissible amount of variation from
the benchmark for any given
interchange transaction fee.
4. Proposed Regulatory Language
Proposed § 235.3(a) restates the
statutory requirement that the amount of
any interchange transaction an issuer
charges or receives with respect to a
transaction must be reasonable and
proportional to the cost incurred by the
issuer with respect to the transaction.
Proposed § 235.3(a) is the same for both
Alternatives 1 and 2.
Alternative 1. Alternative 1 is
contained in proposed §§ 235.3(b)
through (e) of the alternative.
Interchange fee determination.
Proposed § 235.3(b) sets forth the
exclusive standards for determining
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whether the amount of any interchange
fee is reasonable and proportional to the
issuer’s cost. Proposed § 235.3(b) sets
the safe harbor amount and the issuerspecific approach, up to the cap,
described above. Except during the
transition period, the amount of any
interchange fee must comply with the
standards from October 1 of any given
calendar year through September 30 of
the following calendar year. See
proposed comments 3(b)–1 through –4.
Proposed § 235.3(c) sets forth an
exclusive list of allowable costs for
purposes of the issuer-specific
approach. Specifically, as discussed
above, an issuer may include only those
costs that are attributable to the issuer’s
role in authorization, clearance, and
settlement of the transaction. Proposed
§ 235.3(c)(1) describes activities that
comprise the issuer’s role in
authorization, clearance, and settlement
and limits the types of costs that may be
included to those that vary with the
number of transactions sent to the
issuer. Proposed § 235.3(c)(2) specifies
that fees charged by a payment card
network with respect to an electronic
debit transaction are not included in the
allowable costs. See also proposed
comment 3(c)–1.
Proposed comment 3(c)–2 describes
in more detail the issuer’s role in
authorization, clearance, and settlement
of a transaction. Proposed comment
3(c)–2 also specifies the types of costs
that an issuer is considered to incur for
authorization, clearance, and settlement
of a transaction. With respect to
authorization, an issuer may include the
costs of activities such as data
processing, voice authorization
inquiries and referral requests. See
proposed comment 3(c)–2.i. With
respect to clearance, proposed
comments 3(c)–2.ii and 3(c)–2.iii clarify
that an issuer’s costs for clearance of
routine and non-routine transactions
include costs of data processing, to the
extent the issuer incurs additional such
costs for clearance. An issuer’s
clearance costs also include the costs of
reconciling clearing message
information, initiating the chargeback
message, and data processing and
reconciliation expenses specific to
receiving representments and error
adjustments. Finally, with respect to
settlement, an issuer may include costs
of interbank settlement through a net
settlement service, ACH, or Fedwire®
and the cost of posting the transactions
to the cardholders’ accounts. See
proposed comment 3(c)–2.iv.
Proposed § 235.3(c)(1) limits
allowable costs to those that vary with
the number of electronic debit
transactions sent to the issuer during a
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81739
calendar year. Proposed comment 3(c)–
3.i describes, and provides examples of,
the distinction between allowable,
variable costs (those costs that vary, up
to existing capacity limits, with the
number of transactions sent to the issuer
over the calendar year) and
unallowable, fixed costs (those costs
that do not vary, up to existing capacity
limits, with the number of transactions
sent to the issuer over the calendar
year).
Proposed § 235.3(c)(2) states that
allowable costs do not include the fees
an issuer pays to a network for
processing transactions. Proposed
comment 3(c)–3.ii clarifies that switch
fees are an example of fees that are not
an allowable cost. Proposed comment
3(c)–3.ii further explains that fees an
issuer pays to a network when the
network acts as the issuer’s third-party
processor are allowable costs.
As clarified in proposed comment
3(c)–3–iii, an issuer would not be
permitted to include costs that are
common to other products offered by
the issuer, except insofar as those costs
are allowable costs that are shared with
other payment card products and vary
with the number of debit transactions.
Proposed comment 3(c)–3–iv clarifies
that proposed § 235.3(c) sets forth an
exhaustive list of allowable costs, and
provides examples of costs that may not
be included, such as the costs of
rewards programs. The Board requests
comment on whether additional
clarification of allowable costs is
needed.
Disclosure to payment card network.
Each issuer must ensure that it is in
compliance with proposed § 235.3(a) by
receiving or charging interchange
transaction fees at or below the safe
harbor amount or as determined by its
allowable costs up to the cap. Because
payment card networks, not issuers,
establish interchange fees, issuers must
provide networks with information
sufficient to ensure the issuers’
compliance. Proposed § 235.3(d)
requires an issuer to report the
maximum amount of an interchange
transaction fee it may receive or charge
to a network, but only if the issuer will
be receiving or charging an interchange
fee above the safe harbor amount.
In establishing the conditions for
reporting, the Board recognizes that not
all networks likely will establish
individualized interchange transaction
fees. If a network does not establish
individualized interchange transaction
fees above the safe harbor amount, the
Board believes it is not necessary to
require an issuer to report its maximum
allowable interchange transaction fee to
networks through which it receives
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electronic debit transactions. See
proposed comment 3(d)–1. The Board
requests comment on whether this
reporting requirement is necessary to
enable networks to set issuer-specific
interchange fees.
The Board proposes that an issuer
report its maximum allowable
interchange fee to each payment card
network through which it processes
transactions by March 31 of each year
(based on the costs of the previous
calendar year) to ensure compliance
with the standard beginning on October
1 of that same year. See proposed
comment 3(d)–2. The Board specifically
requests comment on whether
prescribing the deadline by rule is
necessary. If necessary, the Board
requests comment on whether March 31
is an appropriate deadline or whether a
different deadline is appropriate.
Transition period. As noted above, the
Board is proposing to allow three
months after year-end for an issuer to
determine and report its maximum
allowable interchange transaction fee, if
its payment card networks establish
individualized interchange fees above
the safe harbor amount. The new
interchange fee standards will be
effective July 21, 2011, and are proposed
to be based on 2009 costs. The Board
believes that establishing new
interchange fees based on calendar year
2010 costs on September 30, 2011
(approximately two months after the
effective date) will impose an
unnecessary burden on issuers, payment
card networks, and acquirers.
Accordingly, the Board proposes to
allow issuers to rely on calendar year
2009 costs until September 30, 2012.
After that date, issuers must determine
compliance based on calendar year 2011
costs.
Alternative 2. Alternative 2 is
contained in proposed § 235.3(b). That
section prohibits an issuer from
receiving or charging any interchange
transaction fee greater than 12 cents. See
proposed comment 3(b)–1 under
Alternative 2.
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IV. Section 235.4 Adjustment for FraudPrevention Costs
Section 920(a)(5) of the statute
provides that the Board may allow for
an adjustment to the interchange fee
amount received or charged by an issuer
if (1) such adjustment is reasonably
necessary to make allowance for costs
incurred by the issuer in preventing
fraud in relation to electronic debit card
transactions involving that issuer, and
(2) the issuer complies with fraudprevention standards established by the
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Board.62 Those standards must be
designed to ensure that any adjustment
is limited to the issuer’s fraudprevention costs for electronic debit
transactions; takes into account any
fraud-related reimbursements received
from consumers, merchants, or payment
card networks in relation to electronic
debit transactions involving the issuer;
and requires issuers to take effective
steps to reduce the occurrence of, and
costs from, fraud in relation to
electronic debit transactions, including
through the development and
implementation of cost-effective fraudprevention technology.
In issuing the standards and
prescribing regulations for the
adjustment, the Board must consider (1)
The nature, type, and occurrence of
fraud in electronic debit transactions;
(2) the extent to which the occurrence
of fraud depends on whether the
authorization in an electronic debit
transaction is based on a signature, PIN,
or other means; (3) the available and
economical means by which fraud on
electronic debit transactions may be
reduced; (4) the fraud-prevention and
data-security costs expended by each
party involved in the electronic debit
transactions (including consumers,
persons who accept debit cards as a
form of payment, financial institutions,
retailers, and payment card networks);
(5) the costs of fraudulent transactions
absorbed by each party involved in such
transactions (including consumers,
persons who accept debit cards as a
form of payment, financial institutions,
retailers, and payment card networks);
(6) the extent to which interchange
transaction fees have in the past
reduced or increased incentives for
parties involved in electronic debit
transactions to reduce fraud on such
transactions; and (7) such other factors
as the Board considers appropriate.
For the reasons set forth below, the
Board has not proposed specific
regulatory provisions to implement an
adjustment for fraud-prevention costs to
the interchange transaction fee. The
Board, however, sets forth two
approaches—a technology-specific
approach and a non-prescriptive
approach—to designing the adjustment
framework and requests comment on
several questions related to these
approaches. The Board plans to
62 In describing Section 1075 of the Dodd-Frank
Act, Senator Durbin stated: ‘‘Further, any fraud
prevention cost adjustment would be made on an
issuer-specific basis, as each issuer must
individually demonstrates that it complies with the
standards established by the Board, and as the
adjustment would be limited to what is reasonably
necessary to make allowance for fraud-prevention
costs incurred by that particular issuer.’’ 156 Cong.
Rec. S5925 (July 15, 2010).
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consider the comments in developing a
specific proposal for further public
comment.
A. Background and Survey Results
Although the statute authorizes the
Board to allow an adjustment to an
interchange fee for fraud-prevention
costs, the statute does not define the
term ‘‘fraud.’’ In considering whether to
allow an adjustment, the Board believes
that fraud in the debit card context
should be defined as the use of a debit
card (or information associated with a
debit card) by a person, other than the
cardholder, to obtain goods, services, or
cash without authority for such use.63
Two primary steps are involved in
making fraudulent purchases using a
debit card. The first is stealing the
cardholder account data. The second is
using the stolen card or account data to
make the fraudulent transaction. A thief
may steal the card or the account
information in several ways. For
example, a card may be lost or stolen,
and a thief may simply use the card to
make purchases. Alternatively, a thief
could obtain card account data by
breaching the data-security systems of
any entity that maintains records of
debit card data. A thief might use the
card account data to create a counterfeit
card. The stolen card or account data
may also be used to make unauthorized
card-not-present transactions via the
Internet, phone, or mail-order
purchases.
As part of its survey of debit card
issuers, payment card networks, and
merchant acquirers, the Board gathered
information about the nature, type, and
occurrence of fraud in electronic debit
transactions at the point of sale, and the
losses due to fraudulent transactions
absorbed by parties involved in such
transactions.64 Respondents were asked
to report this information separately for
signature and PIN debit card
programs.65 From the surveys, the Board
estimates that industry-wide fraud
losses to all parties of a debit card
transaction were approximately $1.36
billion in 2009.66 About $1.15 billion of
these losses arose from signature debit
63 This definition derives from the EFTA’s
definition of ‘‘unauthorized electronic fund
transfer.’’ 15 U.S.C. 1693a(11).
64 Respondents were not asked to provide data on
ATM fraud.
65 For more information, see the previous
discussion regarding the survey process.
66 Industry-wide fraud losses were extrapolated
from data reported in the issuer and network
surveys. Of the 89 issuers who responded to the
issuer survey, 38 issuers provided data on total
fraud losses related to their electronic debit card
transactions. These issuers reported $719 million in
total fraud losses to all parties of card transactions
and represented 53 percent of the total transactions
reported by networks.
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card transactions and about $200
million arose from PIN debit card
transactions.67
The surveys also solicited information
about respondents’ fraud-prevention
and data-security activities and the costs
of these activities. The surveys did not
capture analogous activities and costs
for merchants (or cardholders). The data
presented below derive from the survey
of debit card issuers, which has the
most complete information about fraud
losses.68 The data are estimates given
the variability in reporting across
issuers about fraud types, associated
fraud losses, and fraud-prevention and
data-security activities and costs.
Issuers that provided data on total
fraud losses relating to their electronic
debit card transactions reported $719
million in total debit card fraud losses
to all parties, averaging 0.041 percent of
transaction volume and 9.4 basis points
of transaction value. These fraud losses
were generally associated with 10
different types of fraud. The most
commonly reported fraud types were
counterfeit card fraud, lost and stolen
card fraud, and card-not-present fraud.
Issuers reported that total signature
and PIN debit card fraud losses to all
parties averaged 13.1 and 3.5 basis
points, respectively. This represents, on
a per-dollar basis, signature debit fraud
losses 3.75 times PIN-debit fraud losses.
These different fraud rates reflect, in
part, differences in the ease of fraud
associated with the two authorization
methods. A signature debit card
transaction requires information that is
typically contained on the card itself in
order for card and cardholder
authentication to take place. Therefore,
a thief only needs to steal information
on the card in order to commit fraud.69
In contrast, a PIN debit card transaction
requires not only information contained
on the card itself, but also something
only the cardholder should know,
namely the PIN. In this case, a thief
needs both the information on the card
and the cardholder’s PIN to commit
fraud.
Signature debit card transactions
exhibit a higher fraud rate than that of
PIN debit card transactions. Debit cards
67 The higher losses for signature debit card
transactions result from both a higher rate of fraud
and higher transaction volume for signature debit
card transactions.
68 Networks’ information regarding fraud losses
may not be as complete as that of issuers because
fraud losses absorbed by the issuers would
generally not flow through the networks as
chargebacks and may not be fully reported to the
networks. Acquirers would generally not have
knowledge about issuer losses.
69 Among other things, information on the card
includes the card number, the cardholder’s name,
and the cardholder’s signature.
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used to make purchases over the
Internet and in other card-not-present
environments are routed almost
exclusively over signature debit card
networks.70 Although card-not-present
transactions have a higher fraud rate
than card-present transactions, the
average signature debit fraud loss for
card-present transactions is nonetheless
more than 4 times that for PIN debit
transactions.71
In terms of losses to the various
parties in a transaction, almost all of the
reported fraud losses associated with
debit card transactions fall on the
issuers and merchants. In particular,
across all types of transactions, 57
percent of reported fraud losses were
borne by issuers and 43 percent were
borne by merchants. In contrast, most
issuers reported that they offer zero or
very limited liability to cardholders, in
addition to regulatory protections
already afforded to consumers, such that
the fraud loss borne by cardholders is
negligible.72 Payment card networks
and merchant acquirers also reported
very limited fraud losses for themselves.
The distribution of fraud losses
between issuers and merchants
depends, in part, on the authorization
method used in a debit card transaction.
Issuers and payment card networks
reported that nearly all the fraud losses
associated with PIN debit card
transactions (96 percent) were borne by
issuers. In contrast, reported fraud
losses were distributed much more
evenly between issuers and merchants
for signature debit card transactions.
Specifically, issuers and merchants bore
55 percent and 45 percent of signature
debit fraud losses, respectively.
In general, merchants are subject to
greater liability for fraud in card-notpresent transactions than in cardpresent transactions. As noted above,
signature-based authorization is
currently the primary means to perform
such transactions. According to the
survey data, merchants assume
approximately 76 percent of signature
debit card fraud for card-not-present
transactions.
70 Although some recent innovations attempt to
facilitate PIN entry for Internet transactions, use of
these technologies is still very limited.
71 This comparison is based on survey responses
from those issuers that differentiated card-present
and card-not-present fraud losses for both signature
and PIN transactions. These respondents represent
about half of the transaction volume reported by all
issuer respondents. The ratio of card-present fraud
losses for signature and PIN debit networks is not
comparable to the ratio of total fraud losses noted
above because they are based on different subsets
of issuer respondents.
72 The EFTA limits consumer liability for
unauthorized electronic fund transfers. See 15
U.S.C. 1693g and 12 CFR 205.6.
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Based on the card issuer survey data,
issuers engage in a variety of fraudprevention activities. Issuers identified
approximately 130 fraud-prevention
activities and reported the costs
associated with these activities as they
relate to debit card transactions.73 Some
of these activities were broadly related
to fraud detection and included
activities such as transaction monitoring
and fraud risk scoring systems that may
trigger an alert or call to the cardholder
in order to confirm the legitimacy of a
transaction. Issuers also reported a
number of fraud mitigation activities,
such as merchant-blocking and accountblocking. Some issuers included costs
related to customer servicing associated
with fraudulent transactions and
personnel costs for fraud investigation
teams or other staffing costs. When all
fraud-prevention activities reported by
issuers are included, the overall amount
spent by respondents was
approximately 1.6 cents per transaction,
which also corresponds to the median
amount spent by those firms.
The survey also asked issuers to
report their data-security activities and
costs. Issuers identified approximately
50 data-security activities and reported
the allocated costs to debit card
programs.74 Many of these activities
were associated with information and
system security. For all data-security
costs reported by issuers in the card
issuer survey, the overall amount spent
by respondents was approximately 0.2
cents per transaction, which
corresponds to the median amount
spent by those firms.75
Merchants also have fraud-prevention
and data-security costs, including costs
related to compliance with payment
card industry data-security standards
(PCI–DSS) and other tools to prevent
fraud, such as address verification
services or internally developed fraud
screening models, particularly for cardnot-present transactions.76 The Board’s
73 The Board does not believe that the issuers
participated in 130 unique fraud-prevention
activities. Rather, the Board believes that the listed
activities refer to many of the same activities under
differing descriptions.
74 Similar to the fraud-prevention information,
the Board does not believe that issuers engaged in
a total of 50 unique activities.
75 On average, by transaction type, issuers
incurred 2.2¢ per signature-debit transaction for
fraud-prevention and data-security activities and
1.2¢ per PIN-debit transaction. Similarly, networks
incurred 0.7¢ per signature-debit transaction for
fraud-prevention and data-security activities and
0.6¢ per PIN-debit transaction. Finally, acquirers
incurred 0.4¢ per signature-debit transaction for
fraud-prevention and data-security activities and
0.3¢ per PIN-debit transaction.
76 The Payments Cards Industry (PCI) Security
Standards Council was founded in 2006 by five
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surveys were not comprehensive
enough to adequately capture merchant
activities nor did they provide a way to
determine whether issuers’ fraudprevention and data-security activities
directly benefit merchants by reducing
their debit card fraud losses.
B. Board’s Consideration of an
Adjustment for Fraud-Prevention Costs
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As previously described, issuers,
merchant acquirers, and networks listed
a variety of fraud-prevention and datasecurity activities in their survey
responses. In designing an adjustment
framework for fraud-prevention costs,
the Board is considering how an
adjustment should be implemented,
what fraud-prevention costs such an
adjustment should cover, and what
standards the Board should prescribe for
issuers to meet as a condition of
receiving the adjustment.
Technology-specific approach. One
approach to an adjustment for fraudprevention costs would be to allow
issuers to recover costs incurred for
implementing major innovations that
would likely result in substantial
reductions in fraud losses. This
approach would establish technologyspecific standards that an issuer must
meet to be eligible to receive the
adjustment to the interchange fee.
Under this approach, the Board would
identify the paradigm-shifting
technology(ies) that would reduce debit
card fraud in a cost-effective manner.
The adjustment would be set to
reimburse the issuer for some or all of
the costs associated with implementing
the new technology, perhaps up to a
cap; therefore, covered issuers and the
Board would need to estimate the costs
of implementing the new technology in
order to set the adjustment correctly.
Industry representatives have
highlighted several fraud-prevention
technologies or activities, such as endto-end encryption, tokenization, chip
and PIN, and the use of dynamic data
that they believe have the potential to
substantially reduce fraud losses. These
technologies are not broadly used in the
United States at this time.77
card networks—Visa, Inc., MasterCard Worldwide,
Discover Financial Services, American Express, and
JCB International. These card brands share equally
in the governance of the organization, which is
responsible for the development and management
of PCI Data Security Standards (PCI DSS). PCI DSS
is a set of security standards that all payment
system participants, including merchants and
processors, are required to meet in order to
participate in payment card systems.
77 The Board understands, however, that in
countries with broad chip and PIN adoption, fraud
levels are not necessarily lower than those
experienced in the U.S. because fraud has migrated
to less secure channels, for example to Internet
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This approach to implementing the
adjustment has the potential to spur
implementation of major security
enhancements in the debit card market
that have not yet gained substantial
market adoption. Specifically, the
adjustment could serve as an incentive
for debit card industry participants to
coordinate in the adoption of
technologies that the Board determines
would be effective in reducing fraud
losses. The drawback of adopting
technology-specific standards is the risk
that it would cause issuers to underinvest in other innovative new
technologies, not included in the
Board’s standards, that may be more
effective and less costly than those
identified in the standards.
Non-prescriptive approach. An
alternative approach is to establish a
more general standard that an issuer
must meet to be eligible to receive an
adjustment for fraud-prevention costs.
Such a standard could require issuers to
take steps reasonably necessary to
maintain an effective fraud-prevention
program but not prescribe specific
technologies that must be employed as
part of the program.78 This approach
would ensure that the Board’s standards
give flexibility in responding to
emerging and changing fraud risks.
Under this approach, the adjustment
would be set to reimburse the issuer for
some or all of the costs of its current
fraud-prevention and data-security
activities and of research and
development for new fraud-prevention
techniques, perhaps up to a cap. This
approach would shift some or all of the
issuers’ ongoing fraud-prevention costs
to merchants, even though many
merchants already bear substantial cardrelated fraud-prevention costs,
particularly for signature debit
transactions.79 Such a shift in cost
provides issuers with additional
transactions where PIN authentication is not yet a
common option.
78 For example, Section 615(e) of the Fair Credit
Reporting Act requires a number of federal agencies
to develop identity theft prevention guidelines and
regulations. The implementing regulations require
that covered institutions adopt an identity theft
prevention program designed to identify, detect,
and respond to relevant identity theft red flags, but
does not require consideration of specific red flags
or mandate the use of specific fraud-prevention
solutions. Rather, the accompanying guidelines
provide factors that institutions should ‘‘consider.’’
The supplement to the guidelines lists examples of
red flags. See e.g., Regulation V (Fair Credit
Reporting), 12 CFR 222.90(d).
79 An issuer’s fraud losses would not be
considered a cost that would be considered in
setting the fraud adjustment. EFTA limits any fraud
adjustment to an amount that ‘‘is reasonably
necessary to make allowance for costs incurred by
the issuer in preventing fraud in relation to
electronic debit transactions * * *’’ EFTA Section
920(a)(5)(A)(i) (emphasis added).
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incentives to invest in fraud-prevention
measures. Financial institutions make
investments today, however, to reduce
the risk of fraud in non-card forms of
payment, without reimbursement of
those costs from the counterparty to the
payment.
Request for Comment
The Board requests comment on how
to implement an adjustment to
interchange fees for fraud-prevention
costs. In particular, the Board is
interested in commenters’ input on the
following questions:
1. Should the Board adopt
technology-specific standards or nonprescriptive standards that an issuer
must meet in order to be eligible to
receive an adjustment to its interchange
fee? What are the benefits and
drawbacks of each approach? Are there
other approaches to establishing the
adjustment standards that the Board
should consider?
2. If the Board adopts technologyspecific standards, what technology or
technologies should be required? What
types of debit-card fraud would each
technology be effective at substantially
reducing? How should the Board assess
the likely effectiveness of each fraudprevention technology and its cost
effectiveness? How could the standards
be developed to encourage innovation
in future technologies that are not
specifically mentioned?
3. If the Board adopts nonprescriptive standards, how should they
be set? What type of framework should
be used to determine whether a fraudprevention activity of an issuer is
effective at reducing fraud and is costeffective? Should the fraud-prevention
activities that would be subject to
reimbursement in the adjustment
include activities that are not specific to
debit-card transactions (or to card
transactions more broadly)? For
example, should know-your-customer
due diligence performed at account
opening be subject to reimbursement
under the adjustment? If so, why? Are
there industry-standard definitions for
the types of fraud-prevention and datasecurity activities that could be
reimbursed through the adjustment?
How should the standard differ for
signature- and PIN-based debit card
programs?
4. Should the Board consider
adopting an adjustment for fraudprevention costs for only PIN-based
debit card transactions, but not
signature-based debit card transactions,
at least for an initial adjustment,
particularly given the lower incidence
of fraud and lower chargeback rate for
PIN-debit transactions? To what extent
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would an adjustment applied to only
PIN-based debit card transactions (1)
satisfy the criteria set forth in the statute
for establishing issuer fraud-prevention
standards, and (2) give appropriate
weight to the factors for consideration
set forth in the statute? 80
5. Should the adjustment include only
the costs of fraud-prevention activities
that benefit merchants by, for example,
reducing fraud losses that would be
eligible for chargeback to the
merchants? If not, why should
merchants bear the cost of activities that
do not directly benefit them? If the
adjustment were limited in this manner,
is there a risk that networks would
change their rules to make more types
of fraudulent transactions subject to
chargeback?
6. To what extent, if at all, would
issuers scale back their fraud-prevention
and data-security activities if the cost of
those activities were not reimbursed
through an adjustment to the
interchange fee?
7. How should allowable costs that
would be recovered through an
adjustment be measured? Do covered
issuers’ cost accounting systems track
costs at a sufficiently detailed level to
determine the costs associated with
individual fraud-prevention or datasecurity activities? How would the
Board determine the allowable costs for
prospective investments in major new
technologies?
8. Should the Board adopt the same
implementation approach for the
adjustment that it adopts for the
interchange fee standard, that is, either
(1) an issuer-specific adjustment, with a
safe harbor and cap, or (2) a cap?
9. How frequently should the Board
review and update, if necessary, the
adjustment standards?
10. EFTA Section 920 requires that, in
setting the adjustment for fraudprevention costs and the standards that
an issuer must meet to be eligible to
receive the adjustment, the Board
should consider the fraud-prevention
and data-security costs of each party to
the transaction and the cost of
fraudulent transactions absorbed by
each party to the transaction. How
80 Some merchant representatives have advocated
that the fraud adjustment not be used to perpetuate
signature-based networks, which they believe are
inherently less secure than PIN networks and for
which they incur significantly more chargebacks.
These merchants believe that, if the Board allows
a fraud adjustment, it should be designed to steer
the industry from signature debit to PIN debit, or
possibly to other more secure means of authorizing
transactions. As noted earlier, the survey data
indicate that signature debit fraud losses are higher
than PIN debit fraud losses and that merchants bear
a very small proportion of loss associated with PIN
debit transactions.
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should the Board factor these
considerations into its rule? How can
the Board effectively measure fraudprevention and data-security costs of the
8 million merchants that accept debit
cards in the United States?
V. Sec. 235.5 Exemptions
EFTA Section 920(a) sets forth several
exemptions to the applicability of the
interchange fee restriction provisions.
Specifically, the statute contains
exemptions for small issuers as well as
government-administered payment
programs and certain reloadable prepaid
cards.81 The Board proposes to
implement these exemptions in § 235.5,
as discussed below.
Under the proposed rule, an
electronic debit transaction may qualify
for more than one exemption. For
example, an electronic debit transaction
made using a debit card that has been
provided to a person pursuant to a
Federal, State, or local governmentadministered payment program may be
issued by an issuer that, together with
its affiliates, has assets of less than $10
billion as of the end of the previous
calendar year. Proposed comment 5–1
clarifies that an issuer only needs to
qualify for one of the exemptions in
order to exempt an electronic debit
transaction from the interchange
provisions in §§ 235.3, 235.4, and 235.6
of the proposed rules. The proposed
comment further clarifies that a
payment card network establishing
interchange fees need only satisfy itself
that the issuer’s transactions qualify for
at least one of the exemptions in order
to exempt the electronic debit
transaction from the interchange fee
restrictions.
A. Sec. 235.5(a) Exemption for Small
Issuers
Section 920(a)(6)(A) of the EFTA
provides that EFTA Section 920(a) does
not apply to any issuer that, together
with its affiliates, has assets of less than
$10 billion. For purposes of this
provision, the term ‘‘issuer’’ is limited to
the person holding the asset account
that is debited through an electronic
debit transaction.82
Proposed § 235.5(a)(1) combines the
statutory language in EFTA Sections
920(a)(6)(A) and (B) to implement the
81 EFTA Section 920(a)(6) and (7) (15 U.S.C.
1693r(a)(6) and 7).
82 EFTA Section 920(a)(6)(B) (15 U.S.C.
1693r(a)(6)(B)). The Board notes that an issuer of
decoupled debit cards, which are debit cards where
the issuer is not the institution holding the
consumer’s asset account from which funds are
debited when the card is used, would not qualify
for the exemption under EFTA Section 920(a)(6)(A)
given the definition of ‘‘issuer’’ under EFTA Section
920(a)(6)(B), regardless of the issuer’s asset size.
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81743
exemption with some minor
adjustments for clarity and consistency.
Therefore, § 235.5(a)(1) provides that
§§ 235.3, 235.4, and 235.6 do not apply
to an interchange transaction fee
received or charged by an issuer with
respect to an electronic debit transaction
if (i) the issuer holds the account that is
debited; and (ii) the issuer, together
with its affiliates, has assets of less than
$10 billion as of the end of the previous
calendar year. Proposed comment 5(a)–
1 clarifies that an issuer would qualify
for this exemption if its total worldwide
banking and nonbanking assets,
including assets of affiliates, are less
than $10 billion.
For consistency, the proposed rule
assesses an issuer’s asset size for
purposes of the small issuer exemption
at a single point in time. Although the
asset size of an issuer and its affiliates
will fluctuate over time, for purposes of
determining an issuer’s eligibility for
this exemption, the Board believes the
relevant time for determining the asset
size of the issuer and its affiliates for
purposes of this exemption should be
the end of the previous calendar year.
The Board has used the calendar yearend time frame in other contexts for
determining whether entities meet
certain dollar thresholds.83
To the extent that a payment card
network permits issuers meeting the
small issuer exemption to receive higher
interchange fees than allowed under
§§ 235.3 and 235.4, payment card
networks, as well as merchant acquirers
and processors, may need a process in
place to identify such issuers. Thus, the
Board requests comment on whether the
rule should establish a consistent
certification process and reporting
period for an issuer to notify a payment
card network and other parties that the
issuer qualifies for the small issuer
exemption. For example, the rule could
require an issuer to notify the payment
card network within 90 days of the end
of the preceding calendar year in order
to be eligible for an exemption for the
next rate period. The Board also
requests comment on whether it should
permit payment card networks to
develop their own processes for making
this determination.
B. Sec. 235.5(b) Exemption for
Government-Administered Programs
Under EFTA Section 920(a)(7)(A)(i),
an interchange transaction fee charged
or received with respect to an electronic
debit transaction made using a debit or
general-use prepaid card that has been
provided to a person pursuant to a
83 See, e.g., 12 CFR 203.2(e)(1)(i) and 12 CFR
228.20(u).
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Federal, State, or local governmentadministered payment program is
generally exempt from the interchange
fee restrictions. However, the exemption
applies as long as a person may only use
the debit or general-use prepaid card to
transfer or debit funds, monetary value,
or other assets that have been provided
pursuant to such program. The Board
proposes to implement this provision in
§ 235.5(b)(1) with minor nonsubstantive changes to the statutory
language.
Proposed comment 5(b)–1 clarifies the
meaning of a government-administered
program. The proposed comment states
that a program is considered
government-administered regardless of
whether a Federal, State, or local
government agency operates the
program or outsources some or all
functions to service providers that act
on behalf of the government agency. The
Board understands that for many
government-administered programs, the
government agency outsources the
administration of the card program to
third parties. The proposed comment
makes clear that a governmentadministered program will still be
deemed government-administered
regardless of the government agency’s
choice to use a third party for any and
all aspects of the program.
Furthermore, proposed comment
5(b)–1 provides that a program may be
government-administered even if a
Federal, State, or local government
agency is not the source of funds for the
program it administers. For example,
the Board understands that for child
support programs, a Federal, State, or
local government agency is not the
source of funds, but such programs are
nevertheless administered by State
governments. As such, the Board
believes that cards distributed in
connection with such programs would
fall under the exemption.
The Board notes that Section 1075(b)
of the Dodd-Frank Act amends the Food
and Nutrition Act of 2008, the Farm
Security and Rural Investment Act of
2002, and the Child Nutrition of 1966 to
clarify that the electronic benefit
transfer or reimbursement systems
established under these acts are not
subject to EFTA Section 920. These
amendments are consistent with the
exemption under EFTA Section
920(a)(7)(i). Because proposed
§ 235.5(b)(1), which implements EFTA
Section 920(a)(7)(i), covers these and
other government-administered systems,
neither the proposed regulation nor
commentary specifically references such
programs.
Payment card networks that allow
issuers to charge higher interchange fees
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than permitted under §§ 235.3 and 235.4
for transactions made using a debit card
that meets the exemption for
government-administered payment
programs will need a means to identify
the card accounts that meet the
exemption. As with the small issuer
exemption in § 235.5(a), the Board
requests comment on whether it should
establish a certification process or
whether it should permit payment card
networks to develop their own
processes.
The operational aspects of certifying
on an account-by-account basis may be
more complex than certifying on an
issuer-by-issuer basis. Therefore, if the
Board is to establish a certification
process, the Board requests comment on
how to structure this process, including
the time periods for reporting and what
information may be needed to identify
accounts to which the exemption
applies. For example, the Board
understands that certain cards issued
under a government-administered
payment program may be distinguished
by the BIN or BIN range.
C. Sec. 235.5(c) Exemption for Certain
Reloadable Prepaid Cards
EFTA Section 920(a)(7)(A)(ii)
establishes an exemption for an
interchange transaction fee charged or
received with respect to an electronic
debit transaction for a plastic card, or
other payment code or device, that is: (i)
Linked to funds, monetary value, or
assets purchased or loaded on a prepaid
basis; (ii) not issued or approved for use
to access or debit any account held by
or for the benefit of the cardholder
(other than a subaccount or other
method of recording or tracking funds
purchased or loaded on the card on a
prepaid basis); (iii) redeemable at
multiple, unaffiliated merchants or
service providers, or automated teller
machines; (iv) used to transfer or debit
funds, monetary value, or other assets;
and (v) reloadable and not marketed or
labeled as a gift card or gift certificate.
For clarity, the proposed rule refers to
‘‘general-use prepaid card,’’ which
incorporates certain of the conditions
for obtaining the exemption in EFTA
Section 920(a)(7)(A)(ii). See proposed
§ 235.2(i). Proposed § 235.5(c)(1) thus
implements the remaining conditions
concerning the ability of the card to be
used to access an account held by or for
the benefit of the cardholder (other than
a subaccount or other method of
recording or tracking funds purchased
or loaded on the card on a prepaid
basis) and whether the card is
reloadable and not marketed or labeled
as a gift card or gift certificate.
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Typically, issuers structure prepaid
card programs so that the funds
underlying each prepaid card in the
program are held in an omnibus
account, and the amount attributable to
each prepaid card is tracked by
establishing subaccounts or by other
recordkeeping means. However, certain
issuers structure prepaid card programs
differently such that the funds
underlying each card are attributed to
separate accounts established by the
issuer.
The condition in EFTA Section
920(a)(7)(A)(ii)(II) makes clear that an
exempt card may not be issued or
approved for use to access or debit an
account held by or for the benefit of the
cardholder (other than a subaccount or
other method recording or tracking
funds purchased or loaded on the card
on a prepaid basis). Therefore, issuers
that structure prepaid card programs
such that the funds underlying each
card are attributed to separate accounts
do not qualify for the exemption based
on the conditions set forth under the
statute. These issuers may argue that
there is little difference between their
prepaid programs and others that are
constructed so that the funds are part of
an omnibus account. However, an
argument can be made that prepaid
cards that access separate accounts are
not significantly different from debit
cards that access demand deposit
accounts, which are covered by the
interchange fee restrictions in EFTA
Section 920(a). The Board’s proposal is
based on the view that prepaid cards
where the underlying funds are held in
separate accounts do not qualify for the
exemption.
Reloadable and Not Marketed or
Labeled as a Gift Card or Gift Certificate
The Board has previously defined and
clarified the meaning of ‘‘reloadable and
not marketed or labeled as a gift card or
gift certificate’’ in the context of a rule
restricting the fees and expiration dates
for gift cards under 12 CFR 205.20 (‘‘Gift
Card Rule’’). In order to maintain
consistency, the Board proposes to
import commentary related to the
meaning of reloadable and not marketed
or labeled as a gift card or gift certificate
from the Gift Card Rule.
Proposed comment 5(c)–1 provides
that a general-use prepaid card is
‘‘reloadable’’ if the terms and conditions
of the agreement permit funds to be
added to the general-use prepaid card
after the initial purchase or issuance.
The comment further states that a
general-use prepaid card is not
‘‘reloadable’’ merely because the issuer
or processor is technically able to add
functionality that would otherwise
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enable the general-use prepaid card to
be reloaded. The comment is similar to
comment 20(b)(2)–1 under the Gift Card
Rule.
Proposed comment 5(c)–2, which has
been adapted from comment 20(b)(2)–2
under the Gift Card Rule, clarifies the
meaning of the term ‘‘marketed or
labeled as a gift card or gift certificate.’’
The proposed comment provides that
the term means directly or indirectly
offering, advertising, or otherwise
suggesting the potential use of a generaluse prepaid card as a gift for another
person. The proposed comment also
states that whether the exclusion
applies does not depend on the type of
entity that is making the promotional
message. Therefore, under the proposed
comment, a general-use prepaid card is
deemed to be marketed or labeled as a
gift card or gift certificate if anyone
(other than the consumer-purchaser of
the card), including the issuer, the
retailer, the program manager that may
distribute the card, or the payment
network on which a card is used,
promotes the use of the card as a gift
card or gift certificate.84
The proposed comment also states
that a certificate or card could be
deemed to be marketed or labeled as a
gift card or gift certificate even if it is
primarily marketed for another purpose.
Thus, for example, a reloadable
network-branded card would be
considered to be marketed or labeled as
a gift card or gift certificate even if the
issuer principally advertises the card as
a less costly alternative to a bank
account but promotes the card in a
television, radio, newspaper, or Internet
advertisement, or on signage as ‘‘the
perfect gift’’ during the holiday season.
Proposed comment 5(c)–2 further
clarifies that the mere mention that gift
cards or gift certificates are available in
an advertisement or on a sign that also
indicates the availability of exempted
general-use prepaid cards does not by
itself cause the general-use prepaid card
to be marketed as a gift card or a gift
certificate.
The Board also proposes examples of
what the term ‘‘marketed or labeled as
a gift card or gift certificate’’ includes
and does not include in proposed
comment 5(c)–3; these examples are
similar to those in comment 20(b)(2)–3
under the Gift Card Rule. Thus, under
84 As the Board discussed in connection with the
issuance of the Gift Card Rule, a card is not deemed
to be marketed or labeled as a gift card or gift
certificate as a result of actions by the consumerpurchaser. For example, if the purchaser gives the
card to another consumer as a ‘‘gift,’’ or if the
primary cardholder contacts the issuer and requests
a secondary card to be given to another person for
his or her use, such actions do not cause the card
to be marketed as a gift card or gift certificate.
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the proposed comment, examples of
marketing or labeling as a gift card or
gift certificate include displaying the
word ‘‘gift’’ or ‘‘present,’’ displaying a
holiday or congratulatory message, and
incorporating gift-giving or celebratory
imagery or motifs on the card, certificate
or accompanying material, such as
documentation, packaging and
promotional displays. See proposed
comment 5(c)–3.i.
The proposed comment further states
that a general-use prepaid card is not
marketed or labeled as a gift card or gift
certificate if the issuer, seller, or other
person represents that the card can be
used as a substitute for a checking,
savings, or deposit account, as a
budgetary tool, or to cover emergency
expenses. Similarly, the proposed
comment provides that a card is not
marketed as a gift card or gift certificate
if it is promoted as a substitute for
travelers checks or cash for personal
use, or promoted as a means of paying
for a consumer’s health-related
expenses. See proposed comment 5(c)–
3.ii.
As the Board discussed in connection
with the issuance of the Gift Card Rule,
there are several different models for
how prepaid cards may be distributed
from issuers to consumers.85 These
models vary in the amount of control
the issuer has in terms of how these
products may be marketed to
consumers. Therefore, an issuer that
does not intend to market a particular
general-use prepaid card as a gift card
or gift certificate could find its intent
thwarted by the manner in which a
retailer displays the card in its retail
outlets.
The Board issued comment 20(b)(2)–
4 under the Gift Card Rule to address
these issues. Specifically, comment
20(b)(2)–4 provides that a product is not
marketed or labeled as a gift card or gift
certificate if persons subject to the Gift
Card Rule, including issuers, program
managers, and retailers, maintain
policies and procedures reasonably
designed to avoid such marketing. Such
policies and procedures may include
contractual provisions prohibiting a
card, or other payment code or device,
from being marketed or labeled as a gift
card or gift certificate; merchandising
guidelines or plans regarding how the
product must be displayed in a retail
outlet; and controls to regularly monitor
or otherwise verify that the card, or
other payment code or device, is not
being marketed as a gift card or gift
certificate. The comment further states
that whether a person has marketed a
reloadable card, or other payment code
85 See
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81745
or device, as a gift card or gift certificate
will depend on the facts and
circumstances, including whether a
reasonable consumer would be led to
believe that the card, or other payment
code or device, is a gift card or gift
certificate. The comment also included
examples. The Board is proposing a
similar comment 5(c)–4 to address
issues related to maintaining proper
policies and procedures to prevent a
general-use prepaid card from being
marketed as a gift card or gift certificate.
Proposed comment 5(c)–4 also contains
similar examples as set forth in
comment 20(b)(2)–4 under the Gift Card
Rule.
Proposed comment 5(c)–5 provides
guidance relating to online sales of gift
cards that is substantially the same as in
comment 20(b)(2)–5 under the Gift Card
Rule. As discussed in connection with
the issuance of the Gift Card Rule, the
Board believes that a Web site’s display
of a banner advertisement or a graphic
on its home page that prominently
displays ‘‘Gift Cards,’’ ‘‘Gift Giving,’’ or
similar language without mention of
other available products, or inclusion of
the terms ‘‘gift card’’ or ‘‘gift certificate’’
in its web address, creates the same
potential for consumer confusion as a
sign stating ‘‘Gift Cards’’ at the top of a
prepaid card display. Because a
consumer acting reasonably under these
circumstances may be led to believe that
all prepaid products sold on the Web
site are gift cards or gift certificates, the
Web site is deemed to have marketed all
such products, including any generalpurpose reloadable cards that may be
sold on the Web site, as gift cards or gift
certificates. Proposed comment 5(c)–5
provides that products sold by such
Web sites would not be eligible for the
exemption.
Certification
As with the exemption for
government-administered payment
programs, payment card networks, as
well as merchant acquirers and
processors, will need a process to
identify accounts accessed by reloadable
general-use prepaid cards that are not
marketed or labeled as a gift card or gift
certificate if such networks permit
issuers of such accounts to charge
interchange fees in excess of the amount
permitted under §§ 235.3 and 235.4. The
Board seeks comment on whether it
should establish a certification process
for the reloadable prepaid cards
exemption or whether it should permit
payment card networks to develop their
own processes. The Board also requests
comment on how it should structure the
certification process if it were to
establish a process, including the time
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periods for reporting and what
information may be needed to identify
accounts to which the exemption
applies.
Temporary Cards Issued in Connection
With a General-Purpose Reloadable
Card
As the Board discussed in connection
with the Gift Card Rule, some generalpurpose reloadable cards may be sold
initially as a temporary non-reloadable
card. These cards are usually marketed
as an alternative to a bank account (or
account substitute). After the card is
purchased, the cardholder may call the
issuer to register the card. Once the
issuer has obtained the cardholder’s
personal information, a new
personalized, reloadable card is sent to
the cardholder to replace the temporary
card.
The Board decided to permit
temporary non-reloadable cards issued
solely in connection with a generalpurpose reloadable card to be treated as
general-purpose reloadable cards under
the Gift Card Rule despite the fact that
such cards are not reloadable. As it
discussed in connection with the Gift
Card Rule, the Board was concerned
that covering temporary non-reloadable
cards under the Gift Card Rule would
create regulatory incentives that would
unduly restrict issuers’ ability to
address potential fraud. Some issuers
issue temporary cards in non-reloadable
form to encourage consumers to register
the card and provide customer
identification information for Bank
Secrecy Act purposes. A rule that
provides that the exemption is only
available if the temporary card is
reloadable would therefore limit issuers’
options without a corresponding
benefit.86
For similar reasons, the Board is
proposing that interchange fees charged
or received with respect to transactions
using a temporary non-reloadable card
issued solely in connection with a
general-purpose reloadable card would
also qualify for the exemption under
EFTA Section 920(a)(7)(A)(ii), provided
such cards are not marketed or labeled
as a gift card or gift certificate.
Therefore, proposed § 235.5(c)(2)
provides that the term ‘‘reloadable’’ also
includes a temporary non-reloadable
card if it is issued solely in connection
with a reloadable general-use prepaid
card. Proposed comment 5(c)–6, similar
to comment 20(b)(2)–6 under the Gift
Card Rule, provides additional guidance
regarding temporary non-reloadable
cards issued solely in connection with
a general-purpose reloadable card.
86 See
75 FR 16580 at 16596 (April 1, 2010).
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D. Sec. 235.5(d) Exception
EFTA Section 920(a)(7)(B) provides
that after the end of the one-year period
beginning on the effective date of the
statute, the exemptions available under
EFTA Sections 920(a)(7)(A)(i) and (ii)
become subject to an exception. The
statute provides that the exemptions are
not available if any of the following fees
may be charged to a person with respect
to the card: (i) An overdraft fee,
including a shortage of funds or a
transaction processed for an amount
exceeding the account balance; and (ii)
a fee charged by the issuer for the first
withdrawal per month from an ATM
that is part of the issuer’s designated
ATM network. The Board proposes to
implement this exception to the
exemptions in § 235.5(d), substantially
as presented in the statute with one
minor clarification.
Specifically, the Board proposes to
clarify that the fee described in
§ 235.5(d)(1) does not include a fee or
charge charged for transferring funds
from another asset account to cover a
shortfall in the account accessed by the
card. Such a fee is not an ‘‘overdraft’’ fee
because the cardholder has a means of
covering a shortfall in the account
connected to the card with funds
transferred from another asset account,
and the fee is charged for making such
a transfer.
VI. Sec. 235.6 Prohibition on
Circumvention or Evasion
EFTA Section 920 contains two
separate grants of authority to the Board
to address circumvention or evasion of
the restrictions on interchange
transaction fees. First, EFTA Section
920(a)(8) authorizes the Board to
prescribe rules to ensure that network
fees are not used ‘‘to directly or
indirectly compensate an issuer with
respect to an electronic debit
transaction’’ and ‘‘to circumvent or
evade’’ the interchange transaction fee
restrictions under the statute and this
proposed rule.87 In addition, EFTA
Section 920(a)(1) provides the Board
authority to prescribe rules to prevent
other forms of circumvention or
evasion. Pursuant to both of these
authorities, the Board is proposing to
prohibit circumvention or evasion of the
interchange transaction fee restrictions
in §§ 235.3 and 235.4. Circumvention or
evasion would occur under the
proposed rule if an issuer receives net
compensation from a payment card
87 Under EFTA Section 920(a)(1), a network fee is
defined as ‘‘any fee charged and received by a
payment card network with respect to an electronic
debit transaction, other than an interchange
transaction fee.’’
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network, not considering interchange
transaction fees received from acquirers.
Payment card networks charge
network participants a variety of fees in
connection with electronic debit
transactions. On the issuer side, fees
charged by the network include access
fees for connectivity and fees for
authorizing, clearing, and settling debit
card transactions through the network.88
Issuers also pay fees to the network for
the costs of administering the network,
such as service fees for supporting the
network infrastructure, and membership
and licensing fees. In addition, a
network may charge fees to issuers for
optional services, such as for transaction
routing and processing services
provided by the network or its affiliates
or for fraud detection and risk
mitigation services.
On the acquirer and merchant side, a
network similarly charges fees for
accessing the network, as well as fees
for authorizing, clearing, and settling
debit card transactions through the
network. Likewise, networks charge
network administration fees,
membership or merchant acceptance
fees, and licensing or member
registration fees on acquirers and/or
merchants. There are also fees for
various optional services offered by the
network to acquirers or merchants,
including fees for fraud detection and
risk mitigation services. For a closedloop or three-party payment network,
network fees are bundled into the
merchant discount rate charged by the
network in its capacity as the merchant
acquirer.
A fee charged by the network can be
assessed as a flat fee or on a per
transaction basis, and may also vary
based on transaction size, transaction
type or other network-established
criteria. While interchange fee rates
generally do not vary across issuers or
acquirers for the same types of debit
card transactions, fees charged by the
network are often set on an issuer-byissuer or merchant-by-merchant basis.
For example, issuers and merchants
may be given individualized discounts
relative to a published network fee or
rate based on their transaction volume
increases.
In addition to discounts, issuers and
merchants may receive incentive
payments or rebates from a network.
These incentives may include upfront
payments to encourage issuers to shift
some or all of their debit card volume
to the network, such as signing bonuses
88 Network fees associated with authorizing,
clearing, and settling debit card transactions are not
included in the allowable costs under the
interchange standard.
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upon contract execution or renewal.
Such payments may help issuers defray
the conversion cost of issuing new cards
or of marketing the network brand. In
addition, issuers may receive incentive
payments upon reaching or exceeding
debit card transaction, percentage share,
or dollar volume threshold amounts.
Discounts and incentives enable
networks to compete for business among
issuers and merchants. Among other
things, these pricing tools help networks
attract new issuers and retain existing
issuers, as well as expand merchant
acceptance to increase the attractiveness
of the network brand. Discounts and
incentives also help the network to
encourage specific processing behavior,
such as the use of enhanced
authorization methods or the
deployment of additional merchant
terminals.
There are a number of factors that a
network may consider in calibrating the
appropriate level of network fees,
discounts, and incentives in order to
achieve network objectives. However,
EFTA Section 920(a) authorizes the
Board to prescribe rules to ensure that
such pricing mechanisms are not used
to circumvent or evade the interchange
transaction fee restrictions. This
authority is both specific with respect to
the use of network fees under EFTA
Section 920(a)(8), as well as general
with respect to the Board’s
implementation of the interchange
transaction fee restrictions under EFTA
Section 920(a)(1).
As an initial matter, the Board notes
that the statute does not directly
regulate the amount of network fees that
a network may charge for any of its
services. Thus, the proposed rule does
not seek to set or establish the level of
network fees that a network may
permissibly impose on any network
participant for its services. Instead, the
proposed rule is intended to ensure that
network fees, discounts, and incentives
do not, in effect, circumvent the
interchange transaction fee restrictions.
Accordingly, proposed § 235.6 contains
a general prohibition against
circumventing or evading the
interchange transaction fee restrictions
in §§ 235.3 and 235.4. In addition,
proposed § 235.6 would expressly
prohibit an issuer from receiving net
compensation from a payment card
network with respect to electronic debit
transactions. The Board believes that
such compensation would effectively
serve as a transfer to issuers in excess
of the amount of interchange transaction
fee revenue allowed under the standards
in §§ 235.3 and 235.4.
The Board also considered whether
increases in fees charged by the network
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on merchants or acquirers coupled with
corresponding decreases in fees charged
by the network on issuers should also be
considered circumvention or evasion of
the interchange fee standards in
§§ 235.3 and 235.4. For example,
following the effective date of this rule,
a network might increase network
switch fees charged to merchants,
acquirers, or processors while
decreasing switch fees paid by issuers
for the same types of electronic debit
transactions. Under these
circumstances, the increase in network
processing fees charged to merchants is
arguably ‘‘passed through’’ to issuers
through corresponding decreases in
processing fees paid by issuers.
The Board recognizes that such
decreases in issuer fees could have the
effect of offsetting reductions in
interchange transaction fee revenue that
will occur under the proposed
restrictions in §§ 235.3 and 235.4.
Nonetheless, the Board believes that
such circumstances would not
necessarily indicate circumvention or
evasion of the interchange transaction
fee restrictions because, absent net
payments to the issuer from the
network, an issuer would not receive
net compensation from the network for
electronic debit transactions. Moreover,
the Board is concerned that prohibiting
such shifts in the allocation of network
fees would effectively lock in the
current distribution of network fees
between issuers and merchants, thereby
constraining the ability of networks to
adjust their own sources of revenue in
response to changing market conditions.
The Board requests comment on the
proposed approach, as well as on any
other approaches that may be necessary
and appropriate to address concerns
about circumvention or evasion of the
interchange fee standards.
Proposed comment 6–1 provides that
any finding of circumvention or evasion
of the interchange transaction fee
restrictions will depend on the relevant
facts or circumstances. The proposed
comment also provides an example of a
circumstance indicating circumvention
or evasion. In the example,
circumvention or evasion occurs if the
total amount of payments or incentives
received by an issuer from a payment
card network during a calendar year in
connection with electronic debit
transactions, excluding interchange
transaction fees that are passed through
to the issuer by the network, exceeds the
total of all fees paid by the issuer to the
network for electronic debit transactions
during that year. In this circumstance,
an issuer impermissibly receives net
compensation from the payment card
network in addition to the interchange
PO 00000
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81747
transaction fees permitted under
§§ 235.3 and 234.4. See proposed
comment 6–1.i.
Proposed comment 6–1.ii clarifies
that payments or incentives paid by a
payment card network include, but are
not limited to, marketing incentives,
payments or rebates for meeting or
exceeding a specific transaction volume,
percentage share or dollar amount of
transactions processed, or other fixed
payments for debit card related
activities. Payments or incentives paid
by a payment card network to an issuer
do not include any interchange
transaction fees that are passed through
to the issuer by the network. Incentives
paid by a payment card network also do
not include funds received by an issuer
from a payment card network as a result
of chargebacks or violations of network
rules or requirements by a third party.
The proposed comment further clarifies
that fees paid by an issuer to a payment
card network include, but are not
limited to, network processing, or
switch, fees paid for each transaction, as
well as fees charged to issuers that are
not particular to a transaction, such as
membership or licensing fees and
network administration fees. Fees paid
by an issuer could also include fees for
optional services provided by the
network.
Proposed comment 6–2 provides
examples of circumstances that do not
evade or circumvent the interchange
transaction fee restrictions. In the first
proposed example, an issuer receives an
additional incentive payment from the
network as a result of increased debit
card transaction volume over the
network during a particular year.
However, because of the additional
debit card activity, the aggregate switch
fees paid by the issuer to the network
also increase. Assuming the total
amount of fees paid by the issuer to the
network continues to exceed the total
amount of incentive payments received
by the issuer from the network during
that calendar year, no circumvention or
evasion of the interchange transaction
fee restrictions has occurred. See
proposed comment 6–2.i.
In the second example, an issuer
receives a rate reduction for network
processing fees due to an increase in
debit card transactions during a
calendar year that reduces the total
amount of network processing fees paid
by the issuer during the year. However,
the total amount of all fees paid to the
network by the issuer continues to
exceed the total amount of incentive
payments received by the issuer from
the network. Under these
circumstances, the issuer does not
circumvent or evade the interchange
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transaction fee restrictions. See
proposed comment 6–2.ii.
Proposed comment 6–3 clarifies that
the prohibition in § 235.6 against
circumventing or evading the
interchange transaction fee restrictions
does not apply to issuers or products
that qualify for an exemption under
§ 235.5. Thus, for example, § 235.6 does
not apply to an issuer with consolidated
assets below $10 billion holding the
account that is debited in an electronic
debit transaction.
Comment is requested regarding how
the rule should address signing bonuses
that a network may provide to attract
new issuers or to retain existing issuers
upon the execution of a new agreement
between the network and the issuer.
Such bonuses arguably do not
circumvent or evade the interchange
transaction fee restrictions because they
do not serve to compensate issuers for
electronic debit transactions that have
been processed over the network.
Moreover, if such payments were
considered in assessing whether
network-provided incentives during a
calendar year impermissibly exceeded
the fees paid by an issuer during that
year, it could constrain a network’s
ability to grow the network and achieve
greater network efficiencies by
potentially removing a significant tool
for attracting new issuers. However, if
such signing bonuses are not taken into
account in determining whether an
issuer receives net compensation for
electronic debit transactions, a network
could provide significant upfront
incentive payments during the first year
of a contract or space out incentive
payments over several years to offset the
limitations on interchange transaction
fees that could be received by the issuer
over the course of the contract.
The Board also requests comment on
all aspects of the proposed prohibition
against circumvention or evasion,
including whether the rule should
provide any additional examples to
illustrate the prohibition against
circumvention or evasion of the
interchange transaction fee restrictions.
VII. Sec. 235.7 Limitations on
Payment Card Restrictions
EFTA Section 920(b) sets forth
provisions limiting the ability of issuers
and payment card networks to restrict
merchants and other persons from
establishing the terms and conditions
under which they may accept payment
cards. For example, EFTA Section
920(b) prohibits an issuer or payment
card network from establishing rules
that prevent merchants from offering
discounts based on the method of
payment tendered. In addition, the
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statute prohibits an issuer or payment
card network from establishing rules
preventing merchants from setting
minimum and maximum transaction
amounts for accepting credit cards.
These two statutory provisions are selfexecuting and are not subject to the
Board’s rulemaking authority.89
However, the Board is directed to
prescribe implementing regulations
with respect to two additional
limitations set forth in the statute. First,
the Board must issue rules prohibiting
an issuer or payment card network from
restricting the number of payment card
networks on which an electronic debit
transaction may be processed (network
exclusivity restrictions).90 Second, the
Board must issue rules that prohibit an
issuer or payment card network from
directly or indirectly inhibiting any
person that accepts debit cards for
payment from directing the routing of
an electronic debit transaction through
any network that may process that
transaction (merchant routing
restrictions).91 Proposed § 235.7
implements these additional limitations
on payment card network restrictions.
The statutory exemptions for small
issuers, government-administered
payment cards, and certain reloadable
prepaid cards under EFTA Section 920
apply only to the restrictions on
interchange transaction fees in EFTA
Section 920(a). See proposed § 235.5,
discussed above. Thus, these
exemptions do not apply to the
limitations on payment card network
restrictions under EFTA Section 920(b),
including the prohibitions on network
exclusivity arrangements and merchant
routing restrictions implemented in
proposed § 235.7. See proposed
comment 7–1.
A. Sec. 235.7(a) Prohibition on Network
Exclusivity
EFTA Section 920(b)(1)(A) directs the
Board to prescribe rules prohibiting an
issuer or a payment card network from
directly or indirectly restricting, through
any agent, processor, or licensed
member of a payment card network, the
number of payment card networks on
which an electronic debit transaction
may be processed to fewer than two
unaffiliated payment card networks.
Proposed § 235.7(a) implements the new
requirement.
In recent years, payment card
networks have increasingly offered
issuers financial incentives in exchange
89 The Board may, however, increase from $10 the
minimum value amount that a merchant may set for
credit card acceptance. EFTA Section 920(b)(3)(B).
90 See EFTA Section 920(b)(1)(A).
91 See EFTA Section 920(b)(1)(B).
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for committing a substantial portion of
their debit card transaction volume to
the network. For example, some issuers
may agree to shift some or all of their
debit card transaction volume to the
network in exchange for higher
incentive payments (such as volumebased payments or marketing support)
or volume-based discounts on network
fees charged to the issuer. In many
cases, issuers have agreed to make the
payment card network, or affiliated
networks, the exclusive network(s)
associated with the issuer’s debit cards.
For example, some issuers have agreed
to restrict their cards’ signature debit
functionality to a single signature debit
network and PIN debit functionality to
the PIN debit network that is affiliated
with the signature debit network.
Certain signature debit network rules
also prohibit issuers of debit cards
carrying the signature network brand
from offering other signature debit
networks or certain competing PIN debit
networks on the same card. See
proposed comments 7(a)–1 and –2
describing the terms PIN and signature
debit.
Some issuers also negotiate or enroll
in ‘‘exclusivity arrangements’’ with
payment card networks for other
business purposes. For example, an
issuer may want to shift a substantial
portion or all of its debit card volume
to a particular network to reduce core
processing costs through economies of
scale; to control fraud and enhance data
security by limiting the points for
potential compromise; or to eliminate or
reduce the membership and compliance
costs associated with connecting to
multiple networks.
From the merchant perspective, the
availability of multiple card networks
on a debit card is attractive because it
gives merchants the flexibility to route
transactions over the network that will
result in the lowest cost to the
merchant. This flexibility may promote
direct price competition among the
debit card networks that are enabled on
the debit card. Thus, debit card network
exclusivity arrangements limit
merchants’ ability to route transactions
over lower-cost networks and may
reduce price competition.
From the cardholder perspective,
however, requiring multiple payment
card networks could have adverse
effects. In particular, such a requirement
could limit the cardholder’s ability to
obtain certain card benefits. For
example, a cardholder may receive zero
liability protection or enhanced
chargeback rights only if a transaction is
carried over a specific card network.
Similarly, insurance benefits for certain
types of transactions or purchases or the
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ability to receive text alerts regarding
possible fraudulent activity may be tied
to the use of a specific network.92
Requiring multiple unaffiliated payment
card networks, coupled with a
merchant’s ability to route electronic
debit transactions over any of the
networks, could reduce the ability of a
cardholder to control, and perhaps even
to know, over which network a
transaction would be routed.
Consequently, such a requirement could
reduce the likelihood that the
cardholder would be able to obtain
benefits that are specific to a particular
card network. Moreover, it may be
challenging for issuers or networks to
explain to the cardholders that they will
receive certain benefits only if a
merchant chooses to route their
transaction over that particular network.
In the proposed rule, the Board
requests comment on two alternative
approaches for implementing the
restrictions on debit card network
exclusivity. The first alternative
(Alternative A) would require a debit
card to have at least two unaffiliated
payment card networks available for
processing an electronic debit
transaction. Under this alternative, an
issuer could comply, for example, by
having one payment card network
available for signature debit transactions
and a second, unaffiliated payment card
network available for PIN debit
transactions. The second alternative
(Alternative B) would require a debit
card to have at least two unaffiliated
payment card networks available for
processing an electronic debit
transaction for each method of
authorization available to the
cardholder. For example, a debit card
that can be used for both signature and
PIN debit transactions would be
required to offer at least two unaffiliated
signature debit payment card networks
and at least two unaffiliated PIN debit
payment card networks.
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Alternative A
EFTA Section 920(b)(1)(A) provides
that an issuer and payment card
network do not violate the prohibition
against network exclusivity
arrangements as long as the number of
payment card networks on which an
electronic debit transaction may be
processed is not limited to less than two
unaffiliated payment card networks.
Nothing in EFTA Section 920(b)(1)(A)
specifically requires that there must be
two unaffiliated payment card networks
92 These benefits are often provided for
transactions routed over signature debit networks;
they are less commonly available for PIN-debit
transactions.
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available to the merchant once the
method of debit card authorization has
been determined. In other words, the
statute does not expressly require
issuers to offer multiple unaffiliated
signature and multiple unaffiliated PIN
debit card network choices on each
card.
In addition, requiring multiple
unaffiliated payment card networks on
a debit card for each method of card
authorization could potentially limit the
development and innovation of new
authorization methods. Although PIN
and signature are the primary methods
of debit card transaction authorization
today, new authentication measures
involving biometrics or other
technologies may, in the future, be more
effective in reducing fraud. However, an
issuer may be unable to implement
these new methods of card
authorization if the rule requires that
such transactions be capable of being
processed on multiple unaffiliated
networks. Moreover, the Board
understands that enabling the ability to
process a debit card transaction over
multiple signature debit networks may
not be feasible in the near term.
Specifically, enabling multiple signature
debit networks on a debit card could
require the replacement or
reprogramming of millions of merchant
terminals as well as substantial changes
to software and hardware for networks,
issuers, acquirers, and processors in
order to build the necessary systems
capability to support multiple signature
debit networks for a particular debit
card transaction.
Finally, the Board recognizes that
small debit card issuers could be
disproportionately affected by a
requirement to have multiple networks
for each method of debit card
authorization. See proposed comment
7(a)–7, discussed below. Alternative A
would minimize the overall compliance
costs for these issuers.
For these reasons, Alternative A
would provide that the network
exclusivity prohibition could be
satisfied as long as an electronic debit
transaction may be processed on at least
two unaffiliated payment card networks.
See § 235.7(a)(1) (Alternative A).
Proposed comment 7(a)–3 under
Alternative A clarifies that Alternative
A does not require an issuer to have
multiple, unaffiliated networks
available for each method of cardholder
authorization. Under Alternative A, it
would be sufficient, for example, for an
issuer to issue a debit card that operates
on one signature-based card network
and on one PIN-based card network, as
long as the two card networks are not
affiliated. Alternatively, an issuer could
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81749
issue a debit card that operates on two
or more unaffiliated signature-based
card networks, but is not enabled for
PIN debit transactions, or that operates
on two or more unaffiliated PIN-based
card networks, but is not enabled for
signature debit transactions.
Alternative B
The Board also recognizes that the
effectiveness of the rule promoting
network competition could be limited in
some circumstances if an issuer can
satisfy the requirement simply by
having one payment card network for
signature debit transactions and a
second unaffiliated payment card
network for PIN debit transactions. In
particular, the Board understands that
only about 2 million of the 8 million
merchant locations in the United States
that accept debit cards have the
capability to accept PIN debit
transactions. Thus, in those locations
that accept only signature debit,
potentially under Alternative A only a
single payment card network would be
available to process electronic debit
transactions.
In addition, PIN debit functionality
generally is not available in certain
merchant categories or for certain types
of transactions. For example, the Board
understands that PIN debit typically
cannot be used for hotel stays or car
rentals for which a merchant obtains an
authorization for an estimated
transaction amount, but the actual
transaction amount is not known until
later, when the cardholder checks out of
the hotel or returns the rental car.
Because PIN debit transactions are
single-message transactions that
combine the authorization and clearing
instructions, the Board understands that
it is currently not feasible to use PIN
debit in circumstances where the final
transaction amount differs from the
authorized transaction amount. PIN
debit is also not currently available for
Internet purchase transactions in most
cases. Thus, for these transaction types,
the unavailability of PIN debit as an
alternative method of authorization
effectively means that only a single card
network would be available to process
an electronic debit transaction if
Alternative A is adopted in the final
rule.
Finally, the Board notes that
Alternative A could limit the
effectiveness of the separate prohibition
on merchant routing restrictions under
new EFTA Section 920(b)(1)(B),
discussed below, if an issuer elected to
enable only one signature debit network
and one unaffiliated PIN network on a
particular debit card. This is because
once the cardholder has authorized the
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transaction using either a signature or
PIN entry, the merchant would have
only a single network available for
routing the transaction.
Under Alternative B, an issuer or
payment card network would be
prohibited from directly or indirectly
restricting the number of payment card
networks on which an electronic debit
transaction may be processed to less
than two unaffiliated networks ‘‘for each
method of authorization that may be
used by the cardholder.’’ This means
that an issuer would not comply with
the proposed rule for a signature and
PIN-enabled debit card unless there
were at least two unaffiliated signature
debit networks and at least two
unaffiliated PIN debit networks enabled
on the card.
Proposed comment 7(a)–3 under
Alternative B clarifies that under this
alternative, each electronic debit
transaction, regardless of the method of
authorization, must be able to be
processed on at least two unaffiliated
payment card networks. For example, if
a cardholder authorizes an electronic
debit transaction using a signature, that
transaction must be capable of being
processed on at least two unaffiliated
signature-based payment card networks.
Similarly, if a cardholder authorizes an
electronic debit transaction using a PIN,
that transaction must be capable of
being processed on at least two
unaffiliated PIN-based payment card
networks. This comment would also
clarify that the use of contactless or
radio-frequency identification (RFID)
technology would not constitute a
separate method of authorization as the
Board understands that such
transactions are generally processed
over either a signature debit network or
a PIN debit network.
The Board requests comment on both
proposed alternatives for implementing
the prohibition on network exclusivity
arrangements under EFTA Section
920(b)(1)(A). Comment is requested on
the cost and benefits of each alternative,
including for issuers, merchants,
cardholders, and the payments system
overall. In particular, the Board requests
comment on the cost of requiring
multiple payment card networks for
signature-based debit card transactions,
and the time frame necessary to
implement such a requirement.
Proposed § 235.7(a)(2) describes three
circumstances in which an issuer or
payment card network would not satisfy
the general requirement to have at least
two unaffiliated payment networks on
which an electronic debit transaction
may be processed, regardless of which
of the alternatives is adopted.
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First, proposed § 235.7(a)(2)(i)
addresses payment card networks that
operate in a limited geographic
acceptance area. Specifically, the
proposed rule provides that adding an
unaffiliated payment card network that
is not accepted throughout the United
States would not satisfy the requirement
to have at least two unaffiliated
payment card networks enabled on a
debit card. For example, an issuer could
not comply with the network
exclusivity provision by having a
second unaffiliated payment card
network that is accepted in only a
limited geographic region of the
country. However, an issuer would be in
compliance with proposed § 235.7(a)(1)
if, for example, the debit card operates
on one national network and multiple
geographically limited networks that are
unaffiliated with the first network and
that, taken together, provide nationwide
coverage. Proposed comment 7(a)–4.i
provides an example to illustrate the
provision regarding limited geographic
acceptance networks. The proposed
comment also clarifies that a payment
card network is considered to have
sufficient geographic reach even though
there may be limited areas in the United
States that it does not serve. For
example, a national network that has no
merchant acceptance in Guam or
American Samoa may nonetheless meet
the geographic reach requirement.
The Board requests comment on the
impact of the proposed approach to
networks with limited geographic
acceptance on the viability of regional
payment card networks, and whether
other approaches may be appropriate,
including, but not limited to, requiring
that a particular debit card be accepted
on at least two unaffiliated payment
card networks (under either alternative)
in States where cardholders generally
use the card. If the Board permitted a
regional network by itself to satisfy the
requirement, what standard should be
used for determining whether that
network provides sufficient coverage for
the issuer’s cardholders’ transactions?
The Board also requests comment on the
potential impact, and particularly the
cost impact, on small issuers from
adding multiple payment card networks
in order to ensure that a debit card is
accepted on a nationwide basis on at
least two unaffiliated payment card
networks.
Second, proposed § 235.7(a)(2)(ii)
provides that adding an unaffiliated
payment card network that is accepted
only at a limited number of merchant
locations or for limited merchant types
or transaction types would not comply
with the requirement to have at least
two unaffiliated payment card networks
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on a debit card. For example, an issuer
could not solely add as an unaffiliated
payment card network, a network that is
only accepted at a limited category of
merchants (for example, at a particular
supermarket chain or at merchants
located in a particular shopping mall).
See proposed comment 7(a)–4.ii. The
Board requests comment on whether
additional guidance regarding networks
that have limited merchant acceptance
is necessary.
Third, the proposed rule would
prohibit a payment card network from
restricting or otherwise limiting an
issuer’s ability to contract with any
other payment card network that may
process an electronic debit transaction
involving the issuer’s debit cards. See
proposed § 235.7(a)(2)(iii). Proposed
comment 7(a)–5 provides examples of
prohibited restrictions on an issuer’s
ability to contract with other payment
card networks. For example, a payment
card network would be prohibited from
limiting or otherwise restricting, by rule,
contract, or otherwise, the other
payment card networks that may be
enabled on a particular debit card, such
as by expressly prohibiting an issuer
from offering certain specified payment
card networks on the debit card or by
limiting the payment card networks that
may be offered on a card to specified
networks. See proposed comment 7(a)–
5.i.
Proposed § 235.7(a)(2)(iii) would also
prohibit network rules or guidelines that
allow only that network’s (or its
affiliated network’s) brand, mark, or
logo to be displayed on a particular
debit card, or that otherwise limit the
number or location of network brands,
marks, or logos that may appear on the
debit card. See proposed comment 7(a)–
5.ii. Such rules or guidelines may
inhibit an issuer’s ability to add other
payment card networks to a debit card,
particularly if the other networks also
require that their brand, mark, or logo
appear on a debit card in order for a
card to be offered on that network.
Proposed comment 7(a)–6 provides,
however, that nothing in the rule
requires that a debit card identify the
brand, mark, or logo of each payment
card network over which an electronic
debit transaction may be processed. For
example, a debit card that operates on
two or more different unaffiliated
payment card networks need not bear
the brand, mark, or logo for each card
network. The Board believes that this
flexibility is necessary to facilitate an
issuer’s ability to add (or remove)
payment card networks to a debit card
without being required to incur the
additional costs associated with the
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reissuance of debit cards as networks
are added (or removed).
Proposed § 235.7(a) does not
expressly prohibit debit card issuers
from committing to a certain volume,
percentage share, or dollar amount of
transactions to be processed over a
particular network. However, these
volume, percentage share, or dollar
amount commitments could only be
given effect through issuer or payment
card network priorities that direct how
a particular debit card transaction
should be routed by a merchant. As
discussed below under proposed
§ 235.7(b), these issuer or payment card
network routing priorities would be
prohibited by the proposed limitations
on merchant routing restrictions. The
Board requests comment on whether it
is necessary to address volume,
percentage share, or dollar amount
requirements in the exclusivity
provisions, and whether other types of
arrangements should be addressed
under the rule.
Proposed comment 7(a)–7 clarifies
that the requirements of § 235.7(a) apply
equally to voluntary arrangements in
which a debit card issuer participates
exclusively in a single payment card
network or affiliated group of payment
card networks by choice, rather than
due to a specific network rule or
contractual commitment. For example,
although an issuer may prefer to offer a
single payment card network (or the
network’s affiliates) on its debit cards to
reduce its processing costs or for
operational simplicity, the statute’s
exclusivity provisions do not allow that.
Thus, the proposed comment clarifies
that all issuers must issue cards enabled
with at least two unaffiliated payment
card networks, even if the issuer is not
subject to any rule of, or contract,
arrangement, or any other agreement
with, a payment card network requiring
that all or a specified minimum
percentage of electronic debit
transactions be processed on the
network or its affiliated networks.
Proposed comment 7(a)–8 clarifies
that the network exclusivity rule does
not prevent an issuer from including an
affiliated payment card network among
the networks that may process an
electronic debit transaction for a
particular debit card, as long as at least
two of the networks that accept the card
are unaffiliated. The proposed comment
under Alternative A clarifies that an
issuer is permitted to offer debit cards
that operate on both a signature debit
network as well as an affiliated PIN
debit network, as long as at least one
other payment card network that is
unaffiliated with either the signature or
PIN debit networks also accepts the
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card. The Board is also proposing a
corresponding comment that would
apply to Alternative B.
Proposed § 235.7(a)(3) addresses
circumstances where previously
unaffiliated payment card networks
subsequently become affiliated as a
result of a merger or acquisition. Under
these circumstances, an issuer that
issues cards with only the two
previously unaffiliated networks
enabled would no longer comply with
§ 235.7(a)(1) until the issuer is able to
add an additional unaffiliated payment
card network to the debit card. The
proposed rule requires issuers in these
circumstances to add an additional
unaffiliated debit card network no later
than 90 days after the date on which the
prior unaffiliated payment card
networks become affiliated. The Board
requests comment on whether 90 days
provides sufficient time for issuers to
negotiate new agreements and add
connectivity with the additional
networks in order to comply with the
rule.
potential money laundering or other
regulatory concerns. In addition, in the
case of debit cards issued in connection
with health flexible spending accounts
and health reimbursement accounts,
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) rules
require the use of certain sophisticated
technology at the point-of-sale to ensure
that the eligibility of a medical expense
claim can be substantiated at the time of
the transaction. However, PIN-debit
networks may not currently offer the
functionality or capability to support
the required technology. Thus, applying
the network exclusivity prohibition to
these health benefit cards in particular
could require an issuer or plan
administrator to add a second signature
debit network to comply with IRS
regulations if PIN networks do not add
the necessary functionality to comply
with those regulations. The Board
requests comment on any alternatives,
consistent with EFTA Section 920, that
could minimize the impact of the
proposed requirements on these prepaid
products.
Additional Requests for Comment
The Board understands that some
institutions may wish to issue a card, or
other payment code or device, that
meets the proposed definition of ‘‘debit
card,’’ but that may be capable of being
processed using only a single
authorization method. For example, a
key fob or mobile phone embedded with
a contactless chip may be able to be
processed only as a signature debit
transaction or only on certain networks.
Under the proposed rule (under either
alternative), the issuer would be
required to add at least a second
unaffiliated signature debit network to
the device to comply with the
requirements of § 235.7(a). The Board
requests comment on whether this
could inhibit the development of these
devices in the future and what steps, if
any, the Board should take to avoid any
such impediments to innovation.
As noted above under proposed
comment 7–1, the statutory exemptions
for small issuers, governmentadministered payment cards, and
certain reloadable prepaid cards do not
apply to the limitations on payment
card network restrictions under EFTA
Section 920(b). Thus, for example,
government-administered payment
cards and reloadable prepaid cards,
including health care and other
employee benefit cards, would be
subject to the prohibition on the use of
exclusive networks under EFTA Section
920(b)(1). The Board understands that in
many cases, issuers do not permit PIN
functionality on prepaid cards in order
to prevent cash access in response to
B. Sec. 235.7(b) Prohibition on Merchant
Routing Restrictions
EFTA Section 920(b)(1)(B) requires
the Board to prescribe rules prohibiting
an issuer or payment card network from
directly or indirectly ‘‘inhibit[ing] the
ability of any person that accepts debit
cards for payments to direct the routing
of electronic debit transactions for
processing over any payment card
network that may process such
transactions.’’ The Board is proposing to
implement this restriction in § 235.7(b).
Specifically, proposed § 235.7(b) would
prohibit both issuers and payment card
networks from inhibiting, directly, or
through any agent, processor, or
licensed member of the network, by
contract, requirement, condition,
penalty, or otherwise, a merchant’s
ability to route electronic debit
transactions over any payment card
network that may process such
transactions.
In practice, this means that
merchants, not issuers or networks,
must be able to designate preferences for
the routing of transactions, and that the
merchant’s preference must take priority
over the issuer’s or network’s
preference. The rules of certain PIN
debit payment card networks today
require merchants to route PIN debit
transactions based on the card issuer’s
designated preferences. This is the case
even where multiple PIN debit networks
are available to process a particular
debit card transaction. In other cases,
the PIN debit network itself may
require, by rule or contract, that the
particular PIN debit transaction be
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routed over that network when there are
multiple PIN networks available.93 Such
rules or requirements prevent merchants
from applying their own preferences
with respect to routing the particular
debit card transaction to the PIN debit
network that will result in the lowest
cost to the merchant. Neither of these
practices would be permitted under the
proposed rule.
The Board does not interpret EFTA
Section 920(b)(1)(B) to grant a person
that accepts debit cards the ability to
process an electronic debit transaction
over any payment card network of the
person’s choosing. Rather, the Board
interprets the phrase ‘‘any payment card
network that may process such
transactions’’ to mean that a merchant’s
choice is limited to the payment card
networks that have been enabled on a
particular debit card. Moreover,
allowing merchants to route
transactions over any network,
regardless of the networks enabled on
the debit card, would render
superfluous the requirement to have at
least two unaffiliated payment cards
enabled on a particular debit card.
Accordingly, proposed comment 7(b)–1
clarifies that the prohibition on
merchant routing restrictions applies
solely to the payment card networks on
which an electronic debit transaction
may be processed with respect to a
particular debit card.
Proposed comment 7(b)–2 provides
examples of issuer or payment card
network practices that would inhibit a
merchant’s ability to direct the routing
of an electronic debit transaction in
violation of § 235.7(b). Although routing
generally refers to sending the
transaction information to the issuer,
the Board notes that the statute broadly
directs the Board to prescribe the rules
that prohibit issuer or payment card
network practices that ‘‘inhibit’’ a
person’s ability to direct the routing of
the transaction. Accordingly, the Board
believes it is appropriate also to address
certain practices that may affect the
network choices available to the
merchant at the time the transaction is
processed.
The first example addresses issuer or
card network rules or requirements that
prohibit a merchant from ‘‘steering,’’ or
encouraging or discouraging, a
cardholder’s use of a particular method
of debit card authorization. For
example, merchants may want to
encourage cardholders to authorize a
debit card transaction by entering their
93 These issuer- or network-directed priority rules
are generally unnecessary for signature debit
networks as there is only a single payment card
network available for processing a signature debit
transaction.
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PIN, rather than by providing a
signature, if PIN debit carries a lower
interchange rate than signature debit.
Under proposed § 235.7(b) and
comment 7(b)–2.i, merchants may not
be inhibited from encouraging the use of
PIN debit by, for example, setting PIN
debit as a default payment method or
blocking the use of signature debit
altogether.
The second example of a prohibited
routing restriction is network rules or
issuer designated priorities that direct
the processing of an electronic debit
transaction over a specified payment
card network or its affiliated networks.
See proposed comment 7(b)–2.ii. Thus,
for example, if multiple networks are
available to process a particular debit
transaction, neither the issuer nor the
networks could specify the network
over which a merchant would be
required to route the transaction.
Nothing in proposed comment 7(b)–2.ii,
however, is intended to prevent an
issuer or payment card network from
designating a default network for
routing an electronic debit transaction
in the event a merchant or its acquirer
or processor does not indicate a routing
preference. In addition, proposed
comment 7(b)–2.ii does not prohibit an
issuer or payment card network from
directing that an electronic debit
transaction be processed over a
particular network if required to do so
by state law. See, e.g., Iowa Code Sec.
527.5.
As noted above, if issuer- or networkdirected priorities are prohibited,
issuers will, as a practical matter, be
unable to guarantee or otherwise agree
to commit a specified volume,
percentage share, or dollar amount of
debit card transactions to a particular
debit card network. Accordingly, the
Board believes it is unnecessary to
separately address volume, percentage
share, or dollar amount commitments of
debit card transactions as prohibited
forms of network exclusivity
arrangements under proposed § 235.7(a).
Under the third example, a payment
card network could not require a
particular method of debit card
authorization based on the type of
access device provided by the
cardholder. See proposed comment
7(b)–2.iii. For example, a payment card
network would be prohibited from
requiring that an electronic debit
transaction that is initiated using
‘‘contactless’’ or radio frequency
identification device (RFID) technology
may only be processed over a signature
debit network. The Board requests
comment on whether there are other
circumstances that the commentary
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should include as examples of
prohibited routing restrictions.
Although proposed § 235.7 provides
merchants control over how an
electronic debit transaction is routed to
the issuer, the proposed rule does not
impose a requirement that a merchant
be able to select the payment card
network over which to route or direct a
particular electronic debit transaction in
real time, that is, at the time of the
transaction. The Board believes that
requiring real-time merchant routing
decision-making could be operationally
infeasible and cost-prohibitive in the
short term as it would require
systematic programming changes and
equipment upgrades. Today, for
example, transaction routing is
relatively straightforward once the
cardholder has chosen to authorize a
debit card transaction using his or her
PIN. Once the PIN is entered, card
information for the transaction is
transmitted to the merchant’s acquirer
or processor and the transaction is then
generally routed over a pre-determined
network based upon issuer or payment
network routing priorities for that card.
Under proposed § 235.7(b), however,
issuer and network routing priorities
would no longer be permitted, except
under limited circumstances. See
proposed comment 7(b)–2.ii, discussed
above. Instead, merchants would be free
to make the routing decision. Although
merchant-directed routing tables
administered by the acquirer or
processor could be somewhat more
complex than issuer-directed routing
tables given the larger number of
merchants, such a system could still be
administered in the straightforward
manner they are administered today
with the routing decisions determined
in advance for a particular merchant.
Accordingly, proposed comment 7(b)–3
provides that it is sufficient for a
merchant and its acquirer or processor
to agree to a pre-determined set of
routing choices that apply to all
electronic debit transactions that are
processed by the acquirer on behalf of
the merchant.
C. Effective Date
Although EFTA Section 920 requires
that the restrictions on the amount of
interchange transaction fees become
effective on July 21, 2011, the statute
does not specify an effective date for the
separate provisions on network
exclusivity and merchant routing
restrictions. As discussed above, the
new provisions provide that at least two
unaffiliated payment card networks
must be available for processing any
electronic debit transaction, and
prohibit issuers and payment card
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networks from inhibiting merchants
from directing how electronic debit
transactions may be routed based upon
the available choices. In order to
implement these new requirements,
certain system changes will be required.
For example, before a debit card may be
enabled for an additional payment card
network, connectivity will have to be
established with the new network and
internal processing systems upgraded to
support that network. In some cases,
new cards may have to be issued to
cardholders. Acquirers and processors
will have to be notified of the new
network assignments for each debit card
program and their routing tables
updated for each issuer and card
program. Payment card networks will
have to ensure that they have sufficient
processing capacity to support any
necessary changes.
If Alternative B is adopted in the final
rule and multiple signature debit
networks are required for each debit
card, the Board anticipates that
significantly more time will be needed
to enable issuers and networks to
comply with the rule. The Board
requests comment on a potential
effective date of October 1, 2011, for the
provisions under § 235.7 if the Board
were to adopt Alternative A under the
network exclusivity provisions, or
alternatively, an effective date of
January 1, 2013 if Alternative B were
adopted in the final rule.
The Board requests comment on all
aspects of implementing the proposed
limitations on network exclusivity and
merchant routing restrictions under
§ 235.7, including the specific changes
that will be required and the entities
affected. The Board also requests
comment on other, less burdensome
alternatives that may be available to
carry out the proposed restrictions
under § 235.7 to reduce the necessary
cost and implementation time period.
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Sec. 235.8
Reporting Requirements
Section 920 authorizes the Board to
collect from issuers and payment card
networks information that is necessary
to carry out the provisions of this
section and requires the Board to
publish, if appropriate, summary
information about costs and interchange
transaction fees every two years.
Summary information from information
collections conducted prior to this
proposed rulemaking is discussed
above. The Board anticipates using
forms derived from the Interchange
Transaction Fee Surveys (FR 3062; OMB
No. 7100), but with a narrower scope,
for purposes of these proposed reporting
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requirements.94 At this time, however,
the Board is not publishing specific
forms for comment. The Board does not
anticipate requiring the first report to be
submitted before March 31, 2012. Prior
to that time, the Board will provide an
opportunity for comment on the specific
reporting forms and reporting burden.
The Board, however, is seeking
comment on the reporting requirements
as laid out generally in proposed
§ 235.8.
Consistent with the statutory
information collection authority, the
Board proposes to require issuers that
are subject to §§ 235.3 and 235.4 and
payment card networks to submit
reports to the Board. Each entity
required to submit a report would
submit the form prescribed by the
Board. The forms would request
information regarding costs incurred
with respect to electronic debit
transactions, interchange transaction
fees, network fees, and fraud-prevention
costs. Similar to the surveys conducted
in connection with this proposed
rulemaking, the Board may publish
summary or aggregate information.
The Board proposes that each entity
would be required to report biennially,
consistent with the Board’s statutory
publication requirement. The Board
anticipates that circumstances may
develop that require more frequent
reporting. Accordingly, under proposed
§ 235.8(c), the Board reserves the
discretion to require more frequent
reporting.
For the years an entity is required to
report, the Board proposes that such
entity must submit the report to the
Board by March 31 of that year. The
Board believes that permitting three
months following the end of the
calendar-year reporting period provides
a reasonable time to determine the costs
that need to be reported and complete
the report. The Board is requesting
comment on whether the three-month
time frame is appropriate.
Proposed § 235.8(e) would require
entities that are required to report under
this section to retain records of reports
submitted to the Board for five years.
Further, such entities would be required
to make each report available upon
request to the Board or the entity’s
primary supervisors. The Board believes
that the record retention requirement
will facilitate administrative
enforcement.
94 Copies of the survey forms are available on the
Board’s Web site at https://www.federalreserve.gov/
newsevents/reform_meetings.htm.
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81753
Sec. 235.9 Administrative
Enforcement
The interchange transaction fee
requirements and the network
exclusivity and routing rules are
enforced under EFTA Section 918 (15
U.S.C. 1693o), which sets forth the
administrative agencies that enforce the
requirements of the EFTA. Unlike other
provisions in the EFTA, the
requirements of Section 920 are not
subject to EFTA Section 916 (civil
liability) and Section 917 (criminal
liability). Further, the Dodd-Frank Act
amends the current administrative
enforcement provision of the EFTA.
Therefore, proposed § 235.9 sets forth
the administrative enforcement agencies
under EFTA Section 918 as amended by
the Dodd-Frank Act.
Form of Comment Letters
Comment letters should refer to
Docket No. R–1404 and, when possible,
should use a standard typeface with a
font size of 10 or 12; this will enable the
Board to convert text submitted in paper
form to machine-readable form through
electronic scanning, and will facilitate
automated retrieval of comments for
review. Comments may be mailed
electronically to
regs.comments@federalreserve.gov.
Solicitation of Comments Regarding Use
of ‘‘Plain Language’’
Section 772 of the Gramm-LeachBliley Act of 1999 (12 U.S.C. 4809)
requires the Board to use ‘‘plain
language’’ in all proposed and final rules
published after January 1, 2000. The
Board invites comment on whether the
proposed rule is clearly stated and
effectively organized, and how the
Board might make the text of the rule
easier to understand.
Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
3506; 5 CFR part 1320 Appendix A.1),
the Board reviewed this proposed rule
under the authority delegated to the
Board by the Office of Management and
Budget. The Board will conduct an
analysis under the Paperwork Reduction
Act and seek public comment when it
develops surveys to obtain information
under § 235.8. Any additional burden
associated with the reporting
requirement in proposed § 235.3(d)
(under Alternative 1) for issuers that
wish to receive an interchange fee in
excess of the safe harbor is considered
negligible. Thus no new collections of
information pursuant to the PRA are
contained in the proposed rule.
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emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Regulatory Flexibility Act
In accordance with Section 3(a) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601
et. seq. (RFA), the Board is publishing
an initial regulatory flexibility analysis
for the proposed new Regulation II
(Debit Card Interchange Fees and
Routing). The RFA requires an agency to
provide an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis with the proposed rule or to
certify that the proposed rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
The Board welcomes comment on all
aspects of the initial regulatory
flexibility analysis. A final regulatory
flexibility analysis will be conducted
after consideration of comments
received during the public comment
period.
1. Statement of the objectives of the
proposal. As required by Section 920 of
the EFTA (15 U.S.C. 1693r), the Board
is proposing new Regulation II to
establish standards for assessing
whether an interchange transaction fee
received or charged by an issuer (and
charged to the merchant or acquirer) is
reasonable and proportional to the cost
incurred by the issuer with respect to
the transaction. Additionally, proposed
new Regulation II prohibits issuers and
payment card networks from both
restricting the number of payment card
networks over which an electronic debit
transaction may be processed and
inhibiting the ability of a merchant to
direct the routing of an electronic debit
transaction over a particular payment
card network.
2. Small entities affected by the
proposal. This proposal may have an
effect predominantly on two types of
small entities—financial institutions
that either issue debit cards or acquire
transactions from merchants and the
merchants themselves. A financial
institution generally is considered small
if it has assets of $175 million or less.95
Based on 2010 Call Report data,
approximately 11,000 depository
institutions had total domestic assets of
$175 million or less. Of this number,
however, it is unknown how many of
these institutions issue debit cards.
Whether a merchant is a small entity is
determined by the asset size or the
number of employees.96 Of the 8 million
merchant locations that accept debit
cards, the number of merchants that are
considered small entities is unknown.
95 U.S. Small Business Administration, Table of
Small Business Size Standards Matched to North
American Industry Classification System Codes,
available at https://www.sba.gov/idc/groups/public/
documents/sba_homepage/serv_sstd_tablepdf.pdf.
96 Id.
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3. Compliance requirements. With
respect to the limitations on interchange
transaction fees, the Board’s proposed
rule does not affect most such entities
directly.97 In accordance with Section
920 of the EFTA, the Board’s proposed
rule exempts from the limitations on
interchange transaction fees all issuers
that, together with affiliates, have assets
of less than $10 billion. The Board’s
proposed rule does not require payment
card networks to distinguish between
issuers with assets of more than $10
billion and smaller issuers. If a payment
card network decides to distinguish
between large and small issuers, a
payment card network may require a
smaller issuer to submit information to
it. The proposed rule, however, does not
impose reporting requirements on
smaller issuers. As discussed in other
sections of the preamble, the proposed
interchange transaction fee standards
are expected to reduce the amount of
interchange transaction fees charged to
merchants and acquirers. Accordingly,
the Board expects any economic impact
on small merchants and acquirers to be
positive.
The proposed rule prohibiting
network exclusivity arrangements may
affect small financial institutions that
issue debit cards if such institutions do
not currently comply with the Board’s
proposed standards. Under one
alternative, a small issuer, like other
issuers, would be required to have at
least two unaffiliated payment card
networks on each debit card it issues. If
the issuer does not do so already, it
would be required to add an additional
network. This process may require
making a decision as to which
additional network to put on a card,
establishing a connection to the new
network, or updating internal processes
and procedures. Under the second
alternative, a small issuer, like all
issuers, would be required to issue debit
cards with at least two unaffiliated
networks for each method of
authorization a cardholder could select.
The actions that may be necessary to
add additional networks under the
second alternative are the same as those
under the first alternative. An issuer,
however, would incur greater costs as
the number of networks it adds
increases. In contrast, like all merchants
that accept debit cards, smaller
merchants will be provided with greater
routing choice. Therefore, the smaller
merchants will be able to route
electronic debit transactions over the
97 There may be some small financial institutions
that have very large affiliates such that the
institution does not qualify for the small issuer
exemption.
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lowest-cost path. Accordingly, the
Board expects any economic impact on
merchants to be positive.
4. Other Federal rules. The Board
believes that no Federal rules duplicate,
overlap, or conflict with proposed
Regulation II.
5. Significant alternatives to the
proposed rule. As discussed above, the
Board has requested comment on the
impact of the network exclusivity and
routing alternatives (the provisions of
the proposal that apply to small issuers)
on small entities and has solicited
comment on any approaches, other than
the proposed alternatives, that would
reduce the burden on all entities,
including small issuers. The Board
welcomes comment on any significant
alternatives that would minimize the
impact of the proposal on small entities.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 235
Electronic debit transactions,
interchange transaction fees, and debit
card routing.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Board is proposing to add
new 12 CFR part 235 to read as follows:
PART 235—DEBIT CARD
INTERCHANGE FEES AND ROUTING
Sec.
235.1 Authority and purpose.
235.2 Definitions.
235.3 Reasonable and proportional
interchange transaction fees.
235.4 [Reserved]
235.5 Exemptions.
235.6 Prohibition on circumvention or
evasion.
235.7 Limitations on payment card
restrictions.
235.8 Reporting requirements.
235.9 Administrative enforcement.
Appendix A—Official Board
Commentary on Regulation II
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 1693r.
§ 235.1
Authority and purpose.
(a) Authority. This part is issued by
the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (Board) under section
920 of the Electronic Fund Transfer Act
(EFTA) (15 U.S.C. 1693r, as added by
section 1075 of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act, Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376
(2010)).
(b) Purpose. This part implements the
provisions of section 920 of the EFTA,
including standards for reasonable and
proportional interchange transaction
fees for electronic debit transactions,
exemptions from the interchange
transaction fee limitations, prohibitions
on evasion and circumvention,
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prohibitions on payment card network
exclusivity arrangements and routing
restrictions for debit card transactions,
and reporting requirements for debit
card issuers and payment card
networks.
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 235.2
Definitions.
(a) Account means a transaction,
savings, or other asset account (other
than an occasional or incidental credit
balance in a credit plan) established for
any purpose and that is located in the
United States.
(b) Acquirer means a person that
contracts directly or indirectly with a
merchant to provide settlement for the
merchant’s electronic debit transactions
over a payment card network. An
acquirer does not include an institution
that acts only as a processor for the
services it provides to the merchant.
(c) Affiliate means any company that
controls, is controlled by, or is under
common control with another company.
(d) Cardholder means the person to
whom a debit card is issued.
(e) Control of a company means—
(1) Ownership, control, or power to
vote 25 percent or more of the
outstanding shares of any class of voting
security of the company, directly or
indirectly, or acting through one or
more other persons;
(2) Control in any manner over the
election of a majority of the directors,
trustees, or general partners (or
individuals exercising similar functions)
of the company; or
(3) The power to exercise, directly or
indirectly, a controlling influence over
the management or policies of the
company, as the Board determines.
(f) Debit card. (1) Means any card, or
other payment code or device, issued or
approved for use through a payment
card network to debit an account,
regardless of whether authorization is
based on signature, personal
identification number (PIN), or other
means, and regardless of whether the
issuer holds the account, and
(2) Includes any general-use prepaid
card.
(3) The term ‘‘debit card’’ does not
include—
(i) Any card, or other payment code
or device, that is redeemable upon
presentation at only a single merchant
or an affiliated group of merchants for
goods or services;
(ii) A check, draft, or similar paper
instrument, or an electronic
representation thereof; or
(iii) An account number, when used
to initiate an ACH transaction to debit
a person’s account.
(g) Designated automated teller
machine (ATM) network means either—
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(1) All automated teller machines
identified in the name of the issuer; or
(2) Any network of automated teller
machines identified by the issuer that
provides reasonable and convenient
access to the issuer’s customers.
(h) Electronic debit transaction means
the use of a debit card by a person as
a form of payment in the United States.
(i) General-use prepaid card means a
card, or other payment code or device,
that is—
(1) Issued on a prepaid basis, whether
or not that amount may be increased or
reloaded, in exchange for payment; and
(2) Redeemable upon presentation at
multiple, unaffiliated merchants for
goods or services, or usable at
automated teller machines.
(j) Interchange transaction fee means
any fee established, charged, or received
by a payment card network and paid by
a merchant or acquirer for the purpose
of compensating an issuer for its
involvement in an electronic debit
transaction.
(k) Issuer means any person that
issues a debit card.
(l) Merchant means any person that
accepts debit cards as payment for
goods or services.
(m) Payment card network means an
entity that—
(1) Directly or indirectly provides the
services, infrastructure, and software for
authorization, clearance, and settlement
of electronic debit transactions; and
(2) Establishes the standards, rules, or
procedures that govern the rights and
obligations of issuers and acquirers
involved in processing electronic debit
transactions through the network.
(n) Person means a natural person or
an organization, including a
corporation, government agency, estate,
trust, partnership, proprietorship,
cooperative, or association.
(o) Processor means a person that
processes or routes electronic debit
transactions for issuers, acquirers, or
merchants.
(p) United States means the States,
territories, and possessions of the
United States, the District of Columbia,
the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or
any political subdivision of any of the
foregoing.
§ 235.3 Reasonable and proportional
interchange transaction fees.
(a) In general. The amount of any
interchange transaction fee that an
issuer may receive or charge with
respect to an electronic debit transaction
shall be reasonable and proportional to
the cost incurred by the issuer with
respect to the electronic debit
transaction.
Alternative 1 (Issuer-Specific
Standard With Safe Harbor and Cap):
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81755
(b) Determination of reasonable and
proportional fees. Except as provided in
paragraph (e) of this section, an issuer
complies with the requirements of
paragraph (a) of this section only if,
during an implementation period of
October 1 of any calendar year through
September 30 of the following calendar
year, each interchange transaction fee it
receives or charges is no more than the
greater of—
(1) Seven cents per transaction; or
(2) The costs described in paragraph
(c) of this section incurred by the issuer
with respect to electronic debit
transactions during the calendar year
preceding the start of the
implementation period, divided by the
number of electronic debit transactions
on which the issuer charged or received
an interchange transaction fee during
that calendar year, but no higher than
twelve cents per transaction.
(c) Allowable costs. For purposes of
paragraph (b) of this section, the costs
incurred by an issuer for electronic
debit transactions—
(1) Are only those costs that vary with
the number of transactions sent to the
issuer and that are attributable to—
(i) Receiving and processing requests
for authorization of electronic debit
transactions;
(ii) Receiving and processing
presentments and representments of
electronic debit transactions;
(iii) Initiating, receiving, and
processing chargebacks, adjustments,
and similar transactions with respect to
electronic debit transactions; and
(iv) Transmitting or receiving funds
for interbank settlement of electronic
debit transactions; and posting
electronic debit transactions to
cardholder accounts; and
(2) Do not include fees charged by a
payment card network with respect to
an electronic debit transaction.
(d) Disclosure to payment card
network. If, during an implementation
period of October 1 of any given
calendar year through September 30 of
the following calendar year, an issuer
subject to this section will receive or
charge an interchange transaction fee in
excess of seven cents per transaction
under paragraph (b)(2) of this section,
the issuer must report, by March 31 of
the same calendar year as the start of the
implementation period, to each
payment card network through which
its electronic debit transactions may be
routed the amount of any interchange
transaction fee it may receive or charge
under paragraph (b)(2).
(e) Transition. From July 21, 2011
through September 30, 2012, an issuer
complies with the requirements of
paragraph (a) of this section if any
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interchange transaction fee it receives or
charges is no more than the greater of—
(1) Seven cents per transaction; or
(2) The costs described in subsection
(c) of this section incurred by the issuer
for electronic debit transactions during
the 2009 calendar year, divided by the
number of electronic debit transactions
on which the issuer received or charged
an interchange transaction fee during
the 2009 calendar year, but no higher
than twelve cents per transaction.
Alternative 2 (Cap):
(b) Determination of reasonable and
proportional fees. An issuer complies
with the requirements of paragraph (a)
of this section only if each interchange
transaction fee received or charged by
the issuer for an electronic debit
transaction is no more than twelve cents
per transaction.
[Reserved]
§ 235.5
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§ 235.4
Exemptions.
(a) Exemption for small issuers.
Sections 235.3, 235.4, and 235.6 do not
apply to an interchange transaction fee
received or charged by an issuer with
respect to an electronic debit transaction
if—
(1) The issuer holds the account that
is debited; and
(2) The issuer, together with its
affiliates, has assets of less than $10
billion as of the end of the previous
calendar year.
(b) Exemption for governmentadministered programs. Except as
provided in paragraph (d) of this
section, §§ 235.3, 235.4, and 235.6 do
not apply to an interchange transaction
fee received or charged by an issuer
with respect to an electronic debit
transaction if—
(1) The electronic debit transaction is
made using a debit card that has been
provided to a person pursuant to a
Federal, State, or local governmentadministered payment program; and
(2) The cardholder may use the debit
card only to transfer or debit funds,
monetary value, or other assets that
have been provided pursuant to such
program.
(c) Exemption for certain reloadable
prepaid cards. (1) In general. Except as
provided in paragraph (d) of this
section, §§ 235.3, 235.4, and 235.6 do
not apply to an interchange transaction
fee received or charged by an issuer
with respect to an electronic debit
transaction if the electronic debit
transaction is made using a general-use
prepaid card that is—
(i) Not issued or approved for use to
access or debit any account held by or
for the benefit of the cardholder (other
than a subaccount or other method of
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recording or tracking funds purchased
or loaded on the card on a prepaid
basis); and
(ii) Reloadable and not marketed or
labeled as a gift card or gift certificate.
(2) Temporary cards. For purposes of
this paragraph (c), the term ‘‘reloadable’’
includes a temporary non-reloadable
card issued solely in connection with a
reloadable general-use prepaid card.
(d) Exception. The exemptions in
paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section do
not apply to any interchange transaction
fee received or charged by an issuer on
or after July 21, 2012 with respect to an
electronic debit transaction if any of the
following fees may be charged to a
cardholder with respect to the card—
(1) A fee or charge for an overdraft,
including a shortage of funds or a
transaction processed for an amount
exceeding the account balance, unless
the fee or charge is charged for
transferring funds from another asset
account to cover a shortfall in the
account accessed by the card; or
(2) A fee charged by the issuer for the
first withdrawal per calendar month
from an automated teller machine that
is part of the issuer’s designated
automated teller machine network.
§ 235.6 Prohibition on circumvention or
evasion.
(a) Prohibition on circumvention or
evasion. No person shall circumvent or
evade the interchange transaction fee
restrictions in §§ 235.3 and 235.4.
Circumvention or evasion of the
interchange fee restrictions under
§§ 235.3 and 235.4 occurs if an issuer
receives net compensation from a
payment card network with respect to
electronic debit transactions.
§ 235.7 Limitations on payment card
restrictions.
(a) Prohibition on network exclusivity.
(1) In general.
Alternative A: An issuer or payment
card network shall not directly or
through any agent, processor, or
licensed member of a payment card
network, by contract, requirement,
condition, penalty, or otherwise, restrict
the number of payment card networks
on which an electronic debit transaction
may be processed to less than two
unaffiliated networks.
Alternative B: An issuer or payment
card network shall not directly or
through any agent, processor, or
licensed member of a payment card
network, by contract, requirement,
condition, penalty, or otherwise, restrict
the number of payment card networks
on which an electronic debit transaction
may be processed to less than two
unaffiliated networks for each method
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of authorization that may be used by the
cardholder.
(2) Prohibited exclusivity
arrangements. For purposes of
paragraph (a)(1) of this section, an issuer
or payment card network does not
satisfy the requirement to have at least
two unaffiliated payment card networks
on which an electronic debit transaction
may be processed if—
(i) The unaffiliated network(s) that is
added to satisfy the requirements of this
paragraph does not operate throughout
the United States, unless the debit card
is accepted on a nationwide basis on at
least two unaffiliated payment card
networks when the network(s) with
limited geographic acceptance is
combined with one or more other
unaffiliated payment card networks that
also accept the card.
(ii) The unaffiliated network(s) that is
added to satisfy the requirements of this
paragraph is accepted only at a small
number of merchant locations or at
limited types of merchants; or
(iii) The payment card network
restricts or otherwise limits an issuer’s
ability to contract with any other
payment card network that may process
an electronic debit transaction involving
the issuer’s debit cards.
(3) Subsequent affiliation. If
unaffiliated payment card networks
become affiliated as a result of a merger
or acquisition such that an issuer is no
longer in compliance with this
paragraph (a), the issuer must add an
unaffiliated payment card network
through which electronic debit
transactions on the relevant debit card
may be processed no later than 90 days
after the date on which the prior
unaffiliated payment card networks
become affiliated.
(b) Prohibition on routing restrictions.
An issuer or payment card network
shall not, directly or through any agent,
processor, or licensed member of the
network, by contract, requirement,
condition, penalty, or otherwise, inhibit
the ability of any person that accepts or
honors debit cards for payments to
direct the routing of electronic debit
transactions for processing over any
payment card network that may process
such transactions.
§ 235.8
Reporting requirements.
(a) Entities required to report. Each
issuer that is not otherwise exempt from
the requirements of this part under
§ 235.5(a) and each payment card
network shall file a report with the
Board in accordance with this section.
(b) Report. Each entity required to file
a report with the Board shall submit
data in a form prescribed by the Board
for that entity. Data required to be
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reported may include, but is not limited
to, data regarding costs incurred with
respect to an electronic debit
transaction, interchange transaction
fees, network fees, fraud-prevention and
data-security costs, and fraud losses.
(c) Timing. (1) Each entity shall
submit the data in a form prescribed by
the Board biennially.
(2) Each entity shall submit the report
to the Board by March 31 of the year the
entity is required to report.
(3) The first report shall be submitted
to the Board by March 31, 2012.
(d) Disclosure. The Board may, in its
discretion, disclose aggregate or
summary information reported under
this section.
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 235.9
Administrative enforcement.
(a)(1) Compliance with the
requirements of this part shall be
enforced under—
(i) Section 8 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act, by the appropriate
Federal banking agency, as defined in
section 3(q) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(q)), with
respect to—
(A) National banks, federal savings
associations, and federal branches and
federal agencies of foreign banks;
(B) Member banks of the Federal
Reserve System (other than national
banks), branches and agencies of foreign
banks (other than Federal branches,
Federal Agencies, and insured state
branches of foreign banks), commercial
lending companies owned or controlled
by foreign banks, and organizations
operating under section 25 or 25A of the
Federal Reserve Act;
(C) Banks and state savings
associations insured by the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (other
than members of the Federal Reserve
System), and insured state branches of
foreign banks;
(ii) The Federal Credit Union Act (12
U.S.C. 1751 et seq.), by the
Administrator of the National Credit
Union Administration (National Credit
Union Administration Board) with
respect to any federal credit union;
(iii) The Federal Aviation Act of 1958
(49 U.S.C. 40101 et seq.), by the
Secretary of Transportation, with
respect to any air carrier or foreign air
carrier subject to that Act; and
(iv) The Securities Exchange Act of
1934 (15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.), by the
Securities and Exchange Commission,
with respect to any broker or dealer
subject to that Act.
(2) The terms used in paragraph (a)(1)
of this section that are not defined in
this part or otherwise defined in section
3(s) of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(s)) shall have the
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meaning given to them in section 1(b) of
the International Banking Act of 1978
(12 U.S.C. 3101).
(b) Additional powers. (1) For the
purpose of the exercise by any agency
referred to in paragraphs (a)(1)(i)
through (iv) of this section of its power
under any statute referred to in those
paragraphs, a violation of this part is
deemed to be a violation of a
requirement imposed under that statute.
(2) In addition to its powers under
any provision of law specifically
referred to in paragraphs (a)(1)(i)
through (iv) of this section, each of the
agencies referred to in those paragraphs
may exercise, for the purpose of
enforcing compliance under this part,
any other authority conferred on it by
law.
(c) Enforcement authority of Federal
Trade Commission. Except to the extent
that enforcement of the requirements
imposed under this title is specifically
granted to another government agency
under paragraphs (a)(1)(i) through (iv) of
this section, and subject to subtitle B of
the Consumer Financial Protection Act
of 2010, the Federal Trade Commission
has the authority to enforce such
requirements. For the purpose of the
exercise by the Federal Trade
Commission of its functions and powers
under the Federal Trade Commission
Act, a violation of this part shall be
deemed a violation of a requirement
imposed under the Federal Trade
Commission Act. All of the functions
and powers of the Federal Trade
Commission under the Federal Trade
Commission Act are available to the
Federal Trade Commission to enforce
compliance by any person subject to the
jurisdiction of the Federal Trade
Commission with the requirements of
this part, regardless of whether that
person is engaged in commerce or meets
any other jurisdictional tests under the
Federal Trade Commission Act.
Appendix A—Official Board
Commentary on Regulation II
Introduction
The following commentary to Regulation II
(12 CFR part 235) provides background
material to explain the Board’s intent in
adopting a particular part of the regulation.
The commentary also provides examples to
aid in understanding how a particular
requirement is to work.
Sec. 235.2 Definitions
2(a) Account
1. Types of accounts. The term ‘‘account’’
includes accounts held by any person,
including consumer accounts (i.e., those
established primarily for personal, family or
household purposes) and business accounts.
Therefore, the limitations on interchange
transaction fees and the prohibitions on
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network exclusivity arrangements and
routing restrictions apply to all electronic
debit transactions, regardless of whether the
transaction involves a debit card issued
primarily for personal, family, or household
purposes or a business-purpose debit card.
For example, an issuer of a business-purpose
debit card is subject to the restrictions on
interchange transaction fees and is also
prohibited from restricting the number of
payment card networks on which an
electronic debit transaction may be processed
under § 235.7. The term ‘‘account’’ also
includes bona fide trust arrangements.
2. Account located in the United States.
This part applies only to electronic debit
transactions that are initiated to debit (or
credit in the case of returned goods or
cancelled services) an account located in the
United States. If a cardholder uses a debit
card to debit an account held at a bank
outside the United States, then the electronic
debit transaction is not subject to this part.
2(b) Acquirer
1. In general. The term ‘‘acquirer’’ includes
only the institution that contracts, directly or
indirectly, with a merchant to provide
settlement for the merchant’s electronic debit
transactions over a payment card network
(referred to as acquiring the merchant’s
electronic debit transactions). In some
acquiring relationships, an institution
provides processing services to the merchant
and is a licensed member of the payment
card network, but does not settle the
transactions with the merchant (by crediting
the merchant’s account) or the network.
These institutions are not ‘‘acquirers’’ because
they do not provide credit for transactions or
settle to the merchant’s transactions with the
merchant. These institutions that only
process or route transactions are considered
processors for purposes of this part (See
§ 235.2(o) and commentary thereto).
2(c) Affiliate
1. Types of entities. The term ‘‘affiliate’’
includes both bank and nonbank affiliates.
2. Other affiliates. For commentary on
whether merchants are affiliated, see
comment 2(f)–5.
2(d) Cardholder
1. Scope. In the case of debit cards that
access funds in transaction, savings, or other
similar asset accounts, ‘‘the person to whom
a card is issued’’ is the person or persons
holding the account. If the account is a
business account, multiple employees (or
other persons associated with the business)
may have debit cards that can access the
account. Each employee that has a debit card
that can access the account is a cardholder.
In the case of a prepaid card, the cardholder
generally is either the purchaser of the card
or a person to whom the purchaser gave the
card, such as a gift recipient.
2(e) Control [Reserved]
2(f) Debit Card
1. Card, or other payment code or device.
The term ‘‘debit card’’ as defined in § 235.2(f)
applies to any card, or other payment code
or device, even if it is not issued in a
physical form. Debit cards include, for
example, an account number or code that can
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be used to access underlying funds. See,
however, § 235.2(f)(3)(iii). Similarly, the term
‘‘debit card’’ includes a device with a chip or
other embedded mechanism that links the
device to funds stored in an account, such as
a mobile phone or sticker containing a
contactless chip that enables an account to be
debited.
2. Deferred debit cards. The term ‘‘debit
card’’ includes a card, or other payment code
or device, that is used in connection with
deferred debit card arrangements in which
transactions are not immediately posted to
and funds are not debited from the
underlying transaction, savings, or other
asset account upon settlement of the
transaction. Instead, the funds in the account
are held and made unavailable for other
transactions for a specified period of time.
After the expiration of the applicable time
period, the cardholder’s account is debited
for the value of all transactions made using
the card that have been submitted to the
issuer for settlement during that time period.
For example, under some deferred debit card
arrangements, the issuer may debit the
consumer’s account for all debit card
transactions that occurred during a particular
month at the end of the month. Regardless of
the time period chosen by the issuer, a card,
or other payment code or device, that is used
in connection with a deferred debit
arrangement is considered a debit card for
purposes of the requirements of this part.
Deferred debit card arrangements do not refer
to arrangements in which a merchant defers
presentment of multiple small-dollar card
payments, but aggregates those payments into
a single transaction for presentment, or
where a merchant requests placement of a
hold on funds in an account until the actual
amount of the cardholder’s transaction is
known and submitted for settlement.
3. Decoupled debit cards. Decoupled debit
cards are issued by an entity other than the
financial institution holding the cardholder’s
account. In a decoupled debit arrangement,
transactions that are authorized by the card
issuer settle against the cardholder’s account
held by an entity other than the issuer via a
subsequent ACH debit to that account.
Because the term ‘‘debit card’’ applies to any
card, or other payment code or device, that
is issued or approved for use through a
payment card network to debit an account,
regardless of whether the issuer holds the
account, decoupled debit cards are debit
cards for purposes of this subpart.
4. General-use prepaid card. The term
‘‘debit card’’ includes general-use prepaid
cards. See § 235.2(i) and related commentary
for information on general-use prepaid cards.
5. Store cards. The term ‘‘debit card’’ does
not include prepaid cards that may be used
at a single merchant or affiliated merchants.
Two or more merchants are affiliated if they
are related by either common ownership or
by common corporate control. For purposes
of the ‘‘debit card’’ definition, the Board
would view franchisees to be under common
corporate control if they are subject to a
common set of corporate policies or practices
under the terms of their franchise licenses.
6. Checks, drafts, and similar instruments.
The term ‘‘debit card’’ does not include a
check, draft, or similar paper instrument or
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a transaction in which the check is used as
a source of information to initiate an
electronic payment. For example, if an
account holder provides a check to buy goods
or services and the merchant takes the
account number and routing number
information from the MICR line at the bottom
of a check to initiate an ACH debit transfer
from the cardholder’s account, the check is
not a debit card, and such a transaction is not
considered an electronic debit transaction.
Likewise, the term ‘‘debit card’’ does not
include an electronic representation of a
check, draft, or similar paper instrument.
7. ACH transactions. The term ‘‘debit card’’
does not include an account number when it
is used by a person to initiate an ACH
transaction that debits the person’s account.
For example, if an account holder buys goods
or services over the Internet using an account
number and routing number to initiate an
ACH debit, the account number is not a debit
card, and such a transaction is not
considered an electronic debit transaction.
However, the use of a card to purchase goods
or services that debits the cardholder’s
account by means of a subsequent ACH debit
initiated by the card issuer to the
cardholder’s account, as in the case of a
decoupled debit card arrangement, involves
the use of a debit card for purposes of this
part.
2(g) Designated Automated Teller Machine
(ATM) Network
1. Reasonable and convenient access
clarified. Under § 235.2(g)(2), a designated
automated teller machine network includes
any network of automated teller machines
identified by the issuer that provides
reasonable and convenient access to the
issuer’s cardholders. An issuer provides
reasonable and convenient access, for
example, if, for each person to whom a card
is issued, the network provides access to an
automated teller machine in the network
within the metropolitan statistical area of the
person’s last known address, or if the address
is not known, where the card was first
issued.
2(h) Electronic Debit Transaction
1. Subsequent transactions. The term
‘‘electronic debit transaction’’ includes both
the cardholder’s use of a debit card for the
initial purchase of goods or services and any
subsequent use by the cardholder of the debit
card in connection with the initial purchase
of goods or services. For example, the term
‘‘electronic debit transaction’’ includes using
the debit card to return merchandise or
cancel a service that then results in a credit
to the account initially debited to pay for the
merchandise or service.
2. Cash withdrawal at the point of sale.
The term ‘‘electronic debit transaction’’
includes a transaction in which a cardholder
uses the debit card both to purchase goods
or services and to withdraw cash (known as
a ‘‘cashback transaction’’).
3. Geographic limitation. This regulation
applies only to electronic debit transactions
that are initiated at a merchant located in the
United States. If a cardholder uses a debit
card at a merchant located outside the United
States to debit an account held at a U.S. bank
or a U.S. branch of a foreign bank, the
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electronic debit transaction is not subject to
this part.
2(i) General-Use Prepaid Card
1. Redeemable upon presentation at
multiple, unaffiliated merchants. A card, or
other payment code or other device, is
redeemable upon presentation at multiple,
unaffiliated merchants if such merchants
agree to honor the card, or other payment
code or device, if, for example, it bears the
mark, logo, or brand of a payment card
network, pursuant to the rules of the
payment network.
2. Mall cards. Mall cards that are generally
intended to be used or redeemed for goods
or services at participating retailers within a
shopping mall are considered general-use
prepaid cards if they carry the mark, logo, or
brand of a payment card network and can be
used at any retailer that accepts that card
brand, including retailers located outside of
the mall.
2(j) Interchange Transaction Fee
1. In general. Generally, the payment card
network is the entity that establishes and
charges the interchange transaction fee to the
merchants or acquirers. The merchants or
acquirers then pay to the issuers any
interchange transaction fee established and
charged by the network. Therefore, issuers
are considered to receive interchange
transaction fees from merchants or acquirers.
2. Compensating an issuer. The term
‘‘interchange transaction fee’’ is limited to
those fees that a payment card network
establishes, charges, or receives to
compensate the issuer for its role in the
transaction. (See § 235.3(c) and commentary
thereto for a description of an issuer’s role in
the transaction). In contrast, a payment card
network may charge issuers and acquirers
fees for sending transaction information to
the network for clearing and settlement. Such
fees are not interchange transaction fees
because the payment card network is
charging and receiving the fee as
compensation for its role in clearing and
settling.
2(k) Issuer
1. In general. The term ‘‘issuer’’ means any
person that issues a debit card. The following
examples illustrate the entity that is the
issuer under various card program
arrangements. For purposes of determining
whether an issuer is exempted under
§ 235.5(a), however, the term issuer is limited
to the entity that holds the account being
debited.
2. Four-party systems. In a four-party
system, the cardholder receives the card
directly or indirectly (e.g., through the bank’s
agent) from the account holding bank and has
a direct contractual relationship with its bank
with respect to the card. In this system, the
cardholder’s bank is the issuer.
3. Three-party systems. In a three-party
system, the network typically provides the
card, either directly or indirectly, to the
cardholder and holds the cardholder’s
account. Accordingly, the network is also the
issuer with respect to the card. In most cases,
the network also has a contractual
relationship with the cardholder.
4. BIN-sponsor arrangements. Payment
card networks assign member-financial
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institutions Bank Identification Numbers
(BINs) for purposes of issuing cards,
authorizing, clearing, settling, and other
processes. In exchange for a fee or other
financial considerations, some members of
payment card networks permit other entities
to issue debit cards using the member’s BIN.
The entity permitting the use of its BIN is
referred to as the ‘‘BIN sponsor’’ and the
entity that uses the BIN to issue cards is often
referred to as the ‘‘affiliate member.’’ BIN
sponsor arrangements can take at least two
different models:
i. Sponsored debit card model. In some
cases, a community bank or credit union may
provide debit cards to its account holders
through a BIN sponsor arrangement with a
member institution. In general, the bank or
credit union will provide, directly or
indirectly, debit cards to its account holders.
The bank or credit union’s name typically
will appear on the debit card. The bank or
credit union also holds the underlying
account that is debited and has the primary
relationship with the cardholder. Under
these circumstances, the bank or credit union
is the issuer for purposes of this part. If that
affiliate member, together with its affiliates,
has assets of less than $10 billion, then that
bank or credit union is exempt from the
interchange transaction fee restrictions.
Although the bank or credit union issues
cards through the BIN sponsors, the BIN
sponsor does not have the direct relationship
with the cardholder, and therefore is not the
issuer.
ii. Prepaid card model. A member
institution may also serve as the BIN sponsor
for a prepaid card program. Under these
arrangements, the BIN-sponsoring institution
generally holds the funds for the prepaid
card program in a pooled account, although
the prepaid card program manager may keep
track of the underlying funds for each
individual prepaid card through
subaccounts. While the cardholder may
receive the card directly from the program
manager or at a retailer, the cardholder’s
relationship is generally with the bank
holding the funds in the pooled account.
This bank typically is also the BIN sponsor.
Accordingly, under these circumstances, the
BIN sponsor, or the bank holding the pooled
account, is the issuer.
5. Decoupled debit cards. In the case of
decoupled debit cards, an entity other than
the entity holding the cardholder’s account
directly or indirectly provides the debit card
to the cardholder and has a direct
relationship with the cardholder. The
account-holding institution does not have a
relationship with the cardholder with respect
to the decoupled debit card. Under these
circumstances, the entity providing the debit
card, and not the account-holding institution,
is considered the issuer. If the issuer of a
decoupled debit card, together with its
affiliates, has assets of less than $10 billion,
the issuer is not exempt under § 235.5(a)
because it is not the entity holding the
account to be debited.
2(l) Merchant [Reserved]
2(m) Payment Card Network
1. Scope of definition. The term ‘‘payment
card network’’ generally includes only those
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entities that establish guidelines, rules, or
procedures that govern the rights and
obligations of, at a minimum, issuers and
acquirers involved in processing electronic
debit transactions through the network. Such
guidelines, rules, or procedures may also
govern the rights and obligations of
merchants, processors, or cardholders in
addition to issuers and acquirers. The term
‘‘payment card network’’ includes an entity
that serves in the multiple roles of payment
card network and issuer and/or acquirer,
such as in the case of a three-party system,
to the extent that the entity’s guidelines,
rules, or procedures also cover its activities
in its role(s) as issuer or acquirer. Acquirers,
issuers, third-party processors, payment
gateways, or other entities that may provide
services, equipment, or software that may be
used in authorizing, clearing, or settling
electronic debit transactions are generally
excluded from the term ‘‘payment card
network,’’ unless such entities also establish
guidelines, rules, or procedures that govern
the rights and obligations of issuers and
acquirers involved in processing an
electronic debit transaction through the
network. For example, an acquirer is not
considered to be a payment card network
solely due to the fact that it establishes
particular transaction format standards, rules,
or guidelines that apply to electronic debit
transactions submitted by merchants using
the acquirer’s services, because such
standards, rules, or guidelines apply only to
merchants that use its services, and not to
other entities that are involved in processing
those transactions, such as the card issuer.
2(n) Person [Reserved]
2(o) Processor
1. Distinction from acquirers. Although a
processor may perform all transactionprocessing functions for a merchant or
acquirer, a processor is not the entity that
acquires (that is, settles with the merchant
for) the transactions. The entity that acquires
electronic debit transactions is the entity that
is responsible to other parties to the
electronic debit transaction for the amount of
the transaction.
2. Issuers. An issuer may use a third party
to perform services related to authorization,
clearance, and settlement of transactions. The
third party is the issuer’s processor.
2(p) United States [Reserved]
Sec. 235.3 Reasonable and Proportional
Interchange Transaction Fees
Alternative 1 (Issuer-Specific Standard
With Safe Harbor and Cap):
3(a) [Reserved]
3(b) Determination of Reasonable and
Proportional Fees
1. Two options. An issuer may comply
with § 235.3(a) in two ways: (1) an issuer may
elect to receive or charge an interchange
transaction fee that is no more than the
amount in § 235.3(b)(1), known as the ‘‘safe
harbor,’’ or (2) an issuer may determine the
maximum interchange transaction fee it may
receive or charge using the cost-based
approach in § 235.3(b)(2) (See § 235.3(c) and
related commentary). An issuer complies
with § 235.3(a) if it receives an interchange
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transaction fee in an amount at or below the
safe harbor even if the maximum interchange
transaction fee that the issuer is able to
receive or charge under § 235.3(b)(2) is less
than the safe harbor.
2. Safe harbor. An issuer that receives or
charges interchange fees at or below the
amount in § 235.3(b)(1) (known as the ‘‘safe
harbor’’) is not required to compute an
interchange fee transaction amount under
§ 235.3(b)(2). An issuer that receives or
charges an interchange transaction fee in an
amount at or below the safe harbor, however,
must comply the reporting requirements in
§ 235.8.
3. Cap. An issuer that determines the
maximum interchange transaction fee that it
may receive or charge under the cost-based
approach in § 235.3(b)(2) may not receive or
charge an interchange transaction fee above
the maximum amount allowable under
§ 235.3(b)(2), known as the ‘‘cap,’’ even if its
costs are above the cap. In contrast, if an
issuer calculates that it has allowable pertransaction costs that are lower than the cap,
that issuer may not receive or charge an
interchange transaction fee higher than the
amount determined using the formula in
§ 235.3(b)(2) or the safe harbor amount,
whichever is greater.
4. Variation among interchange fees. A
network is permitted to set fees that vary
with the value of the transaction (ad valorem
fees), as long as the maximum amount of the
interchange fee received by an issuer for any
electronic debit transaction was not more
than that issuer’s maximum permissible
interchange fee. A network is permitted to
establish different interchange fees for
different types of transactions (e.g., cardpresent and card-not-present) or different
types of merchants, as long as each of those
fees satisfied the relevant limits of the
standard.
3(c) Issuer Costs
1. In general. Section 235.3(c) sets forth the
allowable costs that an issuer may include
when calculating its interchange transaction
fee under § 235.3(b)(2). These costs are those
that are attributable to the authorization,
clearance, and settlement of electronic debit
transactions. Section 235.3(c)(1) further
limits the costs in §§ 235.3(c)(1)(i) through
(c)(1)(iv) to those that vary with the number
of transactions sent to the issuer.
2. Activities. Section 235.3(c)(1) limits the
allowable costs that an issuer may include
when calculating its interchange transaction
fee to the variable costs associated with its
role in authorization, clearance, and
settlement of electronic debit transactions.
i. Issuer’s role in authorization. Section
235.3(c)(1)(i) describes an issuer’s role in the
authorization process. The authorization
process begins when the cardholder presents
a debit card or otherwise provides the card
information to the merchant to purchase
goods or services and ends when the
merchant receives notice that the issuer
either has approved or denied the
transaction. In both four-party and threeparty systems, the issuer receives the request
for authorization of the electronic debit
transaction. In a four-party system, the
approval request is sent to the issuer via the
acquirer and payment card network (and any
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processors that the acquirer or issuer may
use). In a three-party system, the payment
card network is both the issuer and the
acquirer and therefore the approval request
travels through fewer parties. In both
systems, the issuer decides whether to
approve or deny the electronic debit
transaction based on several factors, such as
the availability of funds in the cardholder’s
account. Once the issuer approves or denies
the transaction, it sends the approval or
denial back through the payment card
network and acquirer (and any processors) to
the merchant. Section 235.3(c)(1)(i)’s
authorization activities include activities
such as data processing, voice authorization
inquiries, and referral inquiries. An issuer
generally performs separate activities with
the primary purpose of fraud-prevention in
connection with authorization. Those
separate activities are not considered to be
part of an issuer’s role in authorization under
§ 235.3(c)(1).
ii. Issuer’s role in clearance. Section
235.3(c)(1)(ii) describes the issuer’s role in
the clearance process. Clearance is the
process of submitting a record of an
electronic debit transaction for payment. In
PIN debit (or single-message) networks, the
authorization message also generally serves
as the clearance of the transaction. In
signature debit (or dual-message) networks,
the acquirer sends the clearance message
through the network to the issuer following
the completion of the purchase by the
cardholder, as specified in payment card
network rules. Section 235.3(c)(1)(ii)’s
signature-debit clearance activities include
activities such as data processing and
reconciling clearing message information.
iii. Non-routine transactions. In some
instances, an issuer may decide to reverse
settlement for an electronic debit transaction,
pursuant to payment card network rules.
This reversal is known as a ‘‘chargeback.’’ The
issuer’s role in the clearance process includes
the process of initiating the chargeback. After
the acquirer receives a chargeback, the
acquirer may decide to represent the
transaction, pursuant to the network rules.
The issuer’s role in the clearance process also
includes receiving and processing
representments. Finally, after the initial
clearance process, an acquirer may determine
that the transaction record contained an
error. For example, the transaction record
may reflect an incorrect transaction amount
or may be a duplicate of a previous
transaction. The issuer’s role in the clearance
of a transaction also includes receiving and
processing adjustments. Accordingly,
§ 235.3(c)(1)(iii)’s non-routine clearance
activities include activities such as data
processing to prepare and send the
chargeback message through the network,
and reconciliation expenses specific to
receiving representments and error
adjustments, such as posting a credit to a
cardholder’s account. An issuer’s clearance
costs do not include the costs of receiving
cardholder inquiries about particular
transactions.
iv. Issuer’s role in settlement. Issuers have
two roles in settlement of electronic debit
transactions: Interbank settlement and
settlement with the cardholders. Interbank
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settlement is the process of transferring funds
between issuers and acquirers. Typically,
each day a payment card network will collect
all transactions sent for clearing and will
determine the net amount owed by each
issuer and acquirer, after deducting
interchange transaction fees and other fees.
The issuer (unless it is also a large merchant
acquirer) will generally be in a net debit
position and will transmit funds for
interbank settlement. Issuers settle the
electronic debit transactions with their
cardholders by posting the transactions to the
cardholder accounts. Section 235.3(c)(1)(iv)’s
settlement costs include the fees for
settlement through a net settlement service,
ACH, or Fedwire ®, and data processing costs
for posting transactions to the cardholders’
accounts.
3. Issuer’s costs.
i. Variable costs vs. fixed costs. Variable
costs that are attributable to authorizing,
clearing, and settling electronic debit
transactions can be considered in
determining an issuer’s permissible
interchange transaction fee. For example, the
portion of an issuer’s data-processing costs
that vary based on the number of
authorization requests is a variable cost. If an
issuer uses a third-party processor or other
agent for all of its authorization, clearance,
and settlement activities, then any pertransaction fee the third-party processor
charges is a variable cost for the issuer. In
contrast, fixed costs are those costs that do
not vary with changes in output up to
existing capacity limits within a calendar
year. For example, an issuer may pay a fixed
fee to connect to a network in order to
process transactions. The connectivity fee is
a fixed cost.
ii. Network fees excluded. Per-transaction
fees (e.g., switch fees) paid to the network in
its role as network for purposes of
authorization, clearance, and settlement are
not an allowable cost. A payment card
network may offer optional authorization,
clearance, and settlement services to an
issuer. In this case, although the network is
charging fees to the issuer, the network is not
doing so in its role as a network. Rather,
these fees are considered fees an issuer pays
to a processor. Therefore, fees charged by a
network for its role as a third-party processor
may be included in an issuer’s allowable
costs, provided they otherwise are
permissible to include under § 235.3(c)(1).
iii. Common costs excluded. Common
costs, which are not attributable to
authorization, clearance, and settlement, are
not allowable costs. For example, an issuer
may not allocate a portion of its overhead
costs (e.g., the costs of its facilities or its
human resources and legal staff) for the
purpose of calculating its permissible
interchange transaction fee. Similarly, the
costs of operating a branch office are
common to all banking activities, including
the debit card program, and therefore are not
allowable costs.
iv. Costs of other activities excluded.
Section 235.3(c) sets forth an exclusive list of
costs that an issuer may include when
determining the amount of an interchange
transaction fee it may receive or charge with
respect to an electronic debit transaction.
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Therefore, an issuer may not include those
costs that are not incurred for the activities
listed in §§ 235.3(c)(1)(i) through (iv). In
addition, as discussed earlier, fixed costs,
even if incurred for activities related to
authorization, clearance, or settlement of
debit card transactions, may not be included.
Fraud losses, the cost of fraud-prevention
activities, and the cost of rewards programs
are not includable as allowable costs.
3(d) Disclosure to payment card network
1. No differentiation. A payment card
network may, but is not required to,
differentiate among issuers subject to § 235.3
when setting interchange transaction fees. If
a payment card network chooses to set the
interchange transaction fee for all issuers that
are subject to the interchange fee standards
at or below the safe harbor amount, it is not
necessary for issuers to report to the payment
card network through which it receives
electronic debit transactions the maximum
amount of any interchange transaction fee it
may receive or charge.
2. Differentiation. If a payment card
network differentiates among issuers when
setting interchange transaction fees, any
issuer that is subject to the interchange fee
standards receives or charges interchange
transaction fees above the safe harbor must
report the maximum amount of any
interchange transaction fee it may receive or
charge to the payment card network. An
issuer must report such amount by March 31
of each calendar year for which it will be
receiving an interchange transaction fee
above the safe harbor (effective October 1 of
the calendar year). An issuer need not submit
its detailed cost information to the payment
card networks.
Alternative 2 (Cap):
3(a) [Reserved]
3(b) Determining reasonable and proportional
fees
1. Variation among interchange fees. A
network is permitted to set fees that vary
with the value of the transaction (ad valorem
fees), as long as the maximum amount of the
interchange fee received by an issuer for any
electronic debit transaction was not more
than that issuer’s maximum permissible
interchange fee. A network is permitted to
establish different interchange fees for
different types of transactions (e.g., cardpresent and card-not-present) or types of
merchants, as long as each of those fees
satisfied the relevant limits of the standard.
Sec. 235.4 [Reserved]
Sec. 235.5 Exemptions for certain electronic
debit transactions.
§ 235.5 In general
1. Eligibility for multiple exemptions. An
electronic debit transaction may qualify for
one or more exemptions. For example, a
debit card that has been provided to a person
pursuant to a Federal, State, or local
government-administered payment program
may be issued by an entity that, together with
its affiliates, has assets of less than $10
billion as of the end of the previous calendar
year. In this case, the electronic debit
transaction made using that card may qualify
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for the exemption under § 235.5(a) for small
issuers or for the exemption under § 235.5(b)
for government-administered payment
programs. A payment card network
establishing interchange fees for transactions
that qualify for more than one exemption
need only satisfy itself that the issuer’s
transactions qualify for at least one of the
exemptions in order to exempt the electronic
debit transaction from the interchange fee
restrictions.
5(a) Exemption for small issuers
1. Asset size determination. An issuer
would qualify for the small-issuer exemption
if its total worldwide banking and
nonbanking assets, including assets of
affiliates, are less than $10 billion.
5(b) Exemption for government-administered
payment programs
1. Government-administered payment
program. Electronic debit transactions made
using a debit card issued pursuant to a
government-administered payment program
generally are exempt from the interchange fee
restrictions. A program is considered
government-administered regardless of
whether a Federal, State, or local government
agency operates the program or outsources
some or all functions to third parties. In
addition, a program may be governmentadministered even if a Federal, State, or local
government agency is not the source of funds
for the program it administers. For example,
child support programs are governmentadministered programs even though a
Federal, State, or local government agency is
not the source of funds.
5(c) Exemption for certain reloadable prepaid
cards
1. Reloadable. Electronic debit transactions
made using certain reloadable general-use
prepaid cards are exempt from the
interchange fee restrictions. A general-use
prepaid card is ‘‘reloadable’’ if the terms and
conditions of the agreement permit funds to
be added to the general-use prepaid card after
the initial purchase or issuance. A generaluse prepaid card is not ‘‘reloadable’’ merely
because the issuer or processor is technically
able to add functionality that would
otherwise enable the general-use prepaid
card to be reloaded.
2. Marketed or labeled as a gift card or gift
certificate. Electronic debit transactions made
using a reloadable general-use prepaid card
are not exempt from the interchange fee
restrictions if the card is marketed or labeled
as a gift card or gift certificate. The term
‘‘marketed or labeled as a gift card or gift
certificate’’ means directly or indirectly
offering, advertising or otherwise suggesting
the potential use of a general-use prepaid
card as a gift for another person. Whether the
exclusion applies generally does not depend
on the type of entity that makes the
promotional message. For example, a card
may be marketed or labeled as a gift card or
gift certificate if anyone (other than the
purchaser of the card), including the issuer,
the retailer, the program manager that may
distribute the card, or the payment network
on which a card is used, promotes the use
of the card as a gift card or gift certificate. A
general-use prepaid card is marketed or
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labeled as a gift card or gift certificate even
if it is only occasionally marketed as a gift
card or gift certificate. For example, a
network-branded general purpose reloadable
card would be marketed or labeled as a gift
card or gift certificate if the issuer principally
advertises the card as a less costly alternative
to a bank account but promotes the card in
a television, radio, newspaper, or Internet
advertisement, or on signage as ‘‘the perfect
gift’’ during the holiday season.
The mere mention of the availability of gift
cards or gift certificates in an advertisement
or on a sign that also indicates the
availability of exempted general-use prepaid
cards does not by itself cause the general-use
prepaid card to be marketed as a gift card or
a gift certificate. For example, the posting of
a sign in a store that refers to the availability
of gift cards does not by itself constitute the
marketing of otherwise exempted general-use
prepaid cards that may also be sold in the
store along with gift cards or gift certificates,
provided that a person acting reasonably
under the circumstances would not be led to
believe that the sign applies to all cards sold
in the store. (See, however, comment 5(c)–
4.ii.)
3. Examples of marketed or labeled as a
gift card or gift certificate.
i. The following are examples of marketed
or labeled as a gift card or gift certificate:
A. Using the word ‘‘gift’’ or ‘‘present’’ on a
card or accompanying material, including
documentation, packaging and promotional
displays;
B. Representing or suggesting that a card
can be given to another person, for example,
as a ‘‘token of appreciation’’ or a ‘‘stocking
stuffer,’’ or displaying a congratulatory
message on the card or accompanying
material;
C. Incorporating gift-giving or celebratory
imagery or motifs, such as a bow, ribbon,
wrapped present, candle, or a holiday or
congratulatory message, on a card,
accompanying documentation, or
promotional material;
ii. The term does not include the following:
A. Representing that a card can be used as
a substitute for a checking, savings, or
deposit account;
B. Representing that a card can be used to
pay for a consumer’s health-related
expenses—for example, a card tied to a
health savings account;
C. Representing that a card can be used as
a substitute for travelers checks or cash;
D. Representing that a card can be used as
a budgetary tool, for example, by teenagers,
or to cover emergency expenses.
4. Reasonable policies and procedures to
avoid marketing as a gift card. The
exemption for a general-use prepaid card that
is reloadable and not marketed or labeled as
a gift card or gift certificate in § 235.5(c)
applies if a reloadable general-use prepaid
card is not marketed or labeled as a gift card
or gift certificate and if persons involved in
the distribution or sale of the card, including
issuers, program managers, and retailers,
maintain policies and procedures reasonably
designed to avoid such marketing. Such
policies and procedures may include
contractual provisions prohibiting a
reloadable general-use prepaid card from
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being marketed or labeled as a gift card or gift
certificate, merchandising guidelines or plans
regarding how the product must be displayed
in a retail outlet, and controls to regularly
monitor or otherwise verify that the generaluse prepaid card is not being marketed as a
gift card. Whether a general-use prepaid card
has been marketed as a gift card or gift
certificate will depend on the facts and
circumstances, including whether a
reasonable person would be led to believe
that the general-use prepaid card is a gift card
or gift certificate. The following examples
illustrate the application of § 235.5(c):
i. An issuer or program manager of prepaid
cards agrees to sell general-purpose
reloadable cards through a retailer. The
contract between the issuer or program
manager and the retailer establishes the terms
and conditions under which the cards may
be sold and marketed at the retailer. The
terms and conditions prohibit the generalpurpose reloadable cards from being
marketed as a gift card or gift certificate, and
require policies and procedures to regularly
monitor or otherwise verify that the cards are
not being marketed as such. The issuer or
program manager sets up one promotional
display at the retailer for gift cards and
another physically separated display for
exempted products under § 235.5(c),
including general-purpose reloadable cards,
such that a reasonable person would not
believe that the exempted cards are gift cards.
The exemption in § 235.5(c) applies because
policies and procedures reasonably designed
to avoid the marketing of the general-purpose
reloadable cards as gift cards or gift
certificates are maintained, even if a retail
clerk inadvertently stocks or a consumer
inadvertently places a general-purpose
reloadable card on the gift card display.
ii. Same facts as in same facts as in
comment 5(c)–4.i, except that the issuer or
program manager sets up a single
promotional display at the retailer on which
a variety of prepaid cards are sold, including
store gift cards and general-purpose
reloadable cards. A sign stating ‘‘Gift Cards’’
appears prominently at the top of the display.
The exemption in § 235.5(c) does not apply
with respect to the general-purpose
reloadable cards because policies and
procedures reasonably designed to avoid the
marketing of exempted cards as gift cards or
gift certificates are not maintained.
iii. Same facts as in same facts as in
comment 5(c)–4.i, except that the issuer or
program manager sets up a single
promotional multi-sided display at the
retailer on which a variety of prepaid card
products, including store gift cards and
general-purpose reloadable cards are sold.
Gift cards are segregated from exempted
cards, with gift cards on one side of the
display and exempted cards on a different
side of a display. Signs of equal prominence
at the top of each side of the display clearly
differentiate between gift cards and the other
types of prepaid cards that are available for
sale. The retailer does not use any more
conspicuous signage suggesting the general
availability of gift cards, such as a large sign
stating ‘‘Gift Cards’’ at the top of the display
or located near the display. The exemption
in § 235.5(c) applies because policies and
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procedures reasonably designed to avoid the
marketing of the general-purpose reloadable
cards as gift cards or gift certificates are
maintained, even if a retail clerk
inadvertently stocks or a consumer
inadvertently places a general-purpose
reloadable card on the gift card display.
iv. Same facts as in same facts as in
comment 5(c)–4.i,, except that the retailer
sells a variety of prepaid card products,
including store gift cards and generalpurpose reloadable cards, arranged side-byside in the same checkout lane. The retailer
does not affirmatively indicate or represent
that gift cards are available, such as by
displaying any signage or other indicia at the
checkout lane suggesting the general
availability of gift cards. The exemption in
§ 235.5(c) applies because policies and
procedures reasonably designed to avoid
marketing the general-purpose reloadable
cards as gift cards or gift certificates are
maintained.
5. On-line sales of prepaid cards. Some
Web sites may prominently advertise or
promote the availability of gift cards or gift
certificates in a manner that suggests to a
consumer that the Web site exclusively sells
gift cards or gift certificates. For example, a
Web site may display a banner advertisement
or a graphic on the home page that
prominently states ‘‘Gift Cards,’’ ‘‘Gift Giving,’’
or similar language without mention of other
available products, or use a web address that
includes only a reference to gift cards or gift
certificates in the address. In such a case, a
consumer acting reasonably under the
circumstances could be led to believe that all
prepaid products sold on the Web site are gift
cards or gift certificates. Under these facts,
the Web site has marketed all such products
as gift cards or gift certificates, and the
exemption in § 235.5(c) does not apply to any
products sold on the Web site.
6. Temporary non-reloadable cards issued
in connection with a general-purpose
reloadable card. Certain general-purpose
prepaid cards that are typically marketed as
an account substitute initially may be sold or
issued in the form of a temporary nonreloadable card. After the card is purchased,
the card holder is typically required to call
the issuer to register the card and to provide
identifying information in order to obtain a
reloadable replacement card. In most cases,
the temporary non-reloadable card can be
used for purchases until the replacement
reloadable card arrives and is activated by
the cardholder. Because the temporary nonreloadable card may only be obtained in
connection with the reloadable card, the
exemption in § 235.5(c) applies as long as the
card is not marketed as a gift card or gift
certificate.
Sec. 235.6 Prohibition on Circumvention or
Evasion
1. Illustration of circumvention or evasion.
A finding of evasion or circumvention will
depend on all relevant facts and
circumstances.
i. Example. Circumvention or evasion of
the interchange transaction fee restrictions is
indicated in the following example: The total
amount of payments or incentives received
by an issuer from a payment card network
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during a calendar year in connection with
electronic debit transactions, other than
interchange transaction fees passed through
to the issuer by the network, exceeds the total
amount of all fees paid by the issuer to the
network for electronic debit transactions
during that year.
ii. Incentives or fees considered. Payments
or incentives paid by a payment card
network could include, but are not limited to,
marketing incentives, payments or rebates for
meeting or exceeding a specific transaction
volume, percentage share or dollar amount of
transactions processed, or other fixed
payments for debit card related activities.
Incentives or payments made by a payment
card network do not include interchange
transaction fees that are passed through to
the issuer by the network. In addition, funds
received by an issuer from a payment card
network as a result of chargebacks or
violations of network rules or requirements
by a third party do not constitute incentives
or payments made by a payment card
network. Fees paid by an issuer to a payment
card network include, but are not limited to
network processing, or switch fees,
membership or licensing fees, network
administration fees, and fees for optional
services provided by the network.
2. Examples of circumstances not involving
circumvention or evasion. The following
examples illustrate circumstances that would
not indicate circumvention or evasion of the
interchange transaction fee restrictions in
§§ 235.3 and 235.4:
i. Because of an increase in debit card
transactions that are processed through a
payment card network during a calendar
year, an issuer receives an additional
volume-based incentive payment from the
network for that year. Over the same period,
however, the total network processing fees
the issuer pays the payment card network
with respect to debit card transactions also
increase so that the total amount of fees paid
by the issuer to the network continue to
exceed payments or incentives paid by the
network to the issuer. Under these
circumstances, the issuer does not receive
any net compensation from the network for
electronic debit transactions, and thus, no
circumvention or evasion of the interchange
transaction fee restrictions has occurred.
ii. Because of an increase in debit card
transactions that are processed through a
payment card network during a calendar
year, an issuer receives a rate reduction for
network processing fees that reduces the total
amount of network processing fees paid by
the issuer during the year. However, the total
amount of all fees paid to the network by the
issuer for debit card transactions continues to
exceed the total amount of payments or
incentives received by the issuer from the
network for such transactions. Under these
circumstances, the issuer does not receive
any net compensation from the network for
electronic debit transactions and thus, no
circumvention or evasion of the interchange
transaction fee restrictions has occurred.
3. No applicability to exempt issuers or
electronic debit transactions. The prohibition
against circumventing or evading the
interchange transaction fee restrictions does
not apply to issuers or electronic debit
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transactions that qualify for an exemption
under § 235.5 from the interchange
transaction fee restrictions.
Sec. 235.7 Limitations on Payment Card
Restrictions
1. Application of small issuer, governmentadministered payment program, and
reloadable card exemptions to payment card
network restrictions. The exemptions under
§ 235.5 for small issuers, cards issued
pursuant to government-administered
payment programs, and certain reloadable
prepaid cards do not apply to the limitations
on payment card network restrictions. For
example, an issuer of debit cards for
government-administered payment programs,
while exempt from the restrictions on
interchange transaction fees, is subject to the
requirement that electronic debit transactions
made using such cards must be capable of
being processed on at least two unaffiliated
payment card networks and to the
prohibition on inhibiting a merchant’s ability
determine the routing for electronic debit
transactions.
7(a) Prohibition on Network Exclusivity
1. Personal Identification Number (PIN)
debit. The term ‘‘PIN debit’’ refers to a
cardholder’s use of a personal identification
number, or PIN, to authorize a debit card
transaction. Payment card networks that
process debit card transactions that are
typically authorized by means of a
cardholder’s entry of a PIN are referred to as
‘‘PIN’’ or ‘‘PIN-based’’ (or single message)
debit networks.
2. Signature debit. The term ‘‘signature
debit’’ generally refers to a cardholder’s use
of a signature to authorize a debit card
transaction. Payment card networks that
process debit card transactions that are
typically authorized by means of a
cardholder’s signature are referred to as
‘‘signature’’ or ‘‘signature-based’’ debit (or dual
message) networks.
Alternative A (Two unaffiliated networks)
3. Scope of restriction. Section 235.7(a)
does not require an issuer to have multiple,
unaffiliated networks available for each
method of cardholder authorization. For
example, it is sufficient for an issuer to issue
a debit card that operates on one signaturebased card network and on one PIN-based
card network, as long as the two card
networks are not affiliated. Alternatively, an
issuer may issue a debit card that is accepted
on two unaffiliated signature-based card
networks or on two unaffiliated PIN-based
card networks.
Alternative B (Two unaffiliated networks for
each authorization method)
3. Scope of restriction. Section 235.7(a)
provides that each electronic debit
transaction, regardless of the method of
authorization used by the cardholder, must
be able to be processed on at least two
unaffiliated payment card networks. For
example, if a cardholder authorizes an
electronic debit transaction using a signature,
that transaction must be capable of being
processed on at least two unaffiliated
signature-based payment card networks.
Similarly, if a consumer authorizes an
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electronic debit transaction using a PIN, that
transaction must be capable of being
processed on at least two unaffiliated PINbased payment card networks. The use of
alternative technologies, such as contactless
or radio-frequency identification (RFID), to
authorize a transaction does not constitute a
separate method of authorization because
such transactions are generally processed
over either a signature debit network or a PIN
debit network.
4. Examples of limited geographic or
merchant acceptance networks. Section
235.7(a) requires that a payment card
network (or combination of payment card
networks) meet geographic and merchant
acceptance requirements to satisfy the rule.
The following are examples of payment card
networks that would not meet the geographic
or merchant acceptance tests:
i. A payment card network that operates in
only a limited region of the United States
would not meet the geographic test, unless
one or more other unaffiliated payment card
network(s) are also enabled on the card, such
that the combined geographic coverage of
networks permits the card to be accepted on
at least two unaffiliated payment card
networks for any geographic area in the
United States. For example, an issuer may
not issue a debit card that is enabled solely
on one payment card network that is
accepted nationwide and another unaffiliated
payment card network that operates only in
the Midwest United States. In such case, the
issuer would also be required to add one or
more unaffiliated payment card networks
that would generally enable transactions
involving the card to be processed on at least
two unaffiliated payment card networks in
almost all of the rest of the country. A
payment card network is considered to have
sufficient geographic reach even though there
may be limited areas in the United States that
it does not serve. For example, a national
network that has no merchant acceptance in
Guam or American Samoa would nonetheless
meet the geographic reach requirement.
ii. A payment card network that is
accepted only at a limited category of
merchants (for example, at a particular
grocery store chain or at merchants located
in a particular shopping mall).
5. Examples of prohibited restrictions on
an issuer’s ability to contract. The following
are examples of prohibited network
restrictions on an issuer’s ability to contract
with other payment card networks:
i. Network rules or contract provisions
limiting or otherwise restricting the other
payment card networks that may be enabled
on a particular debit card.
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ii. Network rules or guidelines that allow
only that network’s brand, mark, or logo to
be displayed on a particular debit card or that
otherwise limit the number, or location, of
network brands, marks, or logos that may
appear on the debit card.
6. Network logos or symbols on card not
required. Section 235.7(a) does not require
that a debit card identify the brand, mark, or
logo of each payment card network over
which an electronic debit transaction may be
processed. For example, a debit card that is
enabled for two or more unaffiliated payment
card networks need not bear the logos or
symbols for each card network.
7. Voluntary exclusivity arrangements
prohibited. Section 235.7(a) requires the
issuance of debit cards that are enabled on
at least two unaffiliated payment card
networks in all cases, even if the issuer is not
subject to any rule of, or contract,
arrangement or other agreement with, a
payment card network requiring that all or a
specified minimum percentage of electronic
debit transactions be processed on the
network or its affiliated networks.
Alternative A Only (Two unaffiliated
networks)
8. Affiliated payment card networks.
Section 235.7(a) does not prohibit an issuer
from including an affiliated payment card
network among the networks that may
process an electronic debit transaction with
respect to a particular debit card, as long as
at least two of the networks that are enabled
on the card are unaffiliated. For example, an
issuer may offer debit cards that are accepted
on a payment card network for signature
debit transactions and in an affiliated
payment card network for PIN debit
transactions as long as those debit cards may
also be accepted on another unaffiliated
payment card network.
Alternative B Only (Two unaffiliated
networks for each authorization method)
8. Affiliated payment card networks.
Section 235.7(a) does not prohibit an issuer
from including an affiliated payment card
network among the networks that may
process an electronic debit transaction for a
particular debit card, as long as, for each
method of authorization, at least two of the
networks that are enabled on the card are
unaffiliated. For example, an issuer may offer
debit cards that are accepted on a payment
card network for signature debit transactions
and on an affiliated payment network for PIN
debit transactions as long as those debit cards
may also be accepted on a second signature
debit network and a second PIN debit
network, both of which are unaffiliated with
the first network.
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7(b) Prohibition on Routing Restrictions
1. Relationship to the network exclusivity
restrictions. The prohibition on routing
restrictions applies solely to the payment
card networks on which an electronic debit
transaction may be processed for a particular
debit card. Thus, an issuer or payment card
network is prohibited from inhibiting a
merchant’s ability to route or direct the
transaction over any of the payment card
networks that the issuer has enabled to
process an electronic debit transaction for
that particular debit card.
2. Examples of prohibited merchant
restrictions. The following are examples of
issuer or network practices that would
inhibit a merchant’s ability to direct the
routing of an electronic debit transaction that
are prohibited under § 235.7(b):
i. Prohibiting a merchant from encouraging
or discouraging a cardholder’s use of a
particular method of debit card
authorization, such as rules prohibiting
merchants from favoring a cardholder’s use
of PIN debit over signature debit, or from
discouraging the cardholder’s use of
signature debit.
ii. Establishing network rules or
designating issuer priorities directing the
processing of an electronic debit transaction
on a specified payment card network or its
affiliated networks, except as a default rule
in the event the merchant, or its acquirer or
processor, does not designate a routing
preference, or if required by state law.
iii. Requiring a specific method of debit
card authorization based on the type of
access device provided by to the cardholder
by the issuer, such as requiring the use of
signature debit if the consumer provides a
contactless debit card.
3. Real-time routing decision not required.
Section 235.7(b) does not require that the
merchant have the ability to select the
payment card network over which to route or
direct a particular electronic debit
transaction at the time of the transaction.
Instead, the merchant and its acquirer may
agree to a pre-determined set of routing
choices that apply to all electronic debit
transactions that are processed by the
acquirer on behalf of the merchant.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, December 16, 2010.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2010–32061 Filed 12–27–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P
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[Pages 81722-81763]
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[FR Doc No: 2010-32061]
[[Page 81721]]
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Part II
Federal Reserve System
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12 CFR Part 235
Debit Card Interchange Fees and Routing; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 75 , No. 248 / Tuesday, December 28, 2010 /
Proposed Rules
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FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 235
[Regulation II; Docket No. R-1404]
RIN 7100-AD63
Debit Card Interchange Fees and Routing
AGENCY: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Board is requesting public comment on proposed new
Regulation II, Debit Card Interchange Fees and Routing, which:
establishes standards for determining whether an interchange fee
received or charged by an issuer with respect to an electronic debit
transaction is reasonable and proportional to the cost incurred by the
issuer with respect to the transaction; and prohibits issuers and
networks from restricting the number of networks over which an
electronic debit transaction may be processed and from inhibiting the
ability of a merchant to direct the routing of an electronic debit
transaction to any network that may process such transactions. With
respect to the interchange fee standards, the Board is requesting
comment on two alternatives that would apply to covered issuers: an
issuer-specific standard with a safe harbor and a cap; or a cap
applicable to all such issuers. The proposed rule would additionally
prohibit circumvention or evasion of the interchange fee limitations
(under both alternatives) by preventing the issuer from receiving net
compensation from the network (excluding interchange fees passed
through the network). The Board also is requesting comment on possible
frameworks for an adjustment to interchange fees for fraud-prevention
costs. With respect to the debit-card routing rules, the Board is
requesting comment on two alternative rules prohibiting network
exclusivity: one alternative would require at least two unaffiliated
networks per debit card, and the other would require at least two
unaffiliated networks for each type of transaction authorization
method. Under both alternatives, the issuers and networks would be
prohibited from inhibiting a merchant's ability to direct the routing
of an electronic debit transaction over any network that may process
such transactions.
DATES: Comments must be submitted by February 22, 2011.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by Docket No. R-1404 and
RIN No. 7100 AD63, by any of the following methods:
Agency Web site: https://www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments at https://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
Federal eRulemaking Portal:https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
E-mail: regs.comments@federalreserve.gov. Include the docket number
in the subject line of the message.
Fax: (202) 452-3819 or (202) 452-3102.
Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary, Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20551.
All public comments are available from the Board's Web site at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as
submitted, unless modified for technical reasons. Accordingly, your
comments will not be edited to remove any identifying or contact
information.
Public comments may also be viewed electronically or in paper in
Room MP-500 of the Board's Martin Building (20th and C Streets, NW.)
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. on weekdays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dena Milligan, Attorney (202/452-
3900), Legal Division, David Mills, Manager and Economist (202/530-
6265), Division of Reserve Bank Operations & Payment Systems, Mark
Manuszak, Senior Economist (202/721-4509), Division of Research &
Statistics, or Ky Tran-Trong, Counsel (202/452-3667), Division of
Consumer & Community Affairs; for users of Telecommunications Device
for the Deaf (TDD) only, contact (202/263-4869); Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve System, 20th and C Streets, NW., Washington, DC
20551.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
Background
I. Section 1075 of the Dodd-Frank Act--Overview
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the
``Dodd-Frank Act'') (Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010)) was
enacted on July 21, 2010. Section 1075 of the Dodd-Frank Act amends the
Electronic Fund Transfer Act (``EFTA'') (15 U.S.C. 1693 et seq.) by
adding a new section 920 regarding interchange transaction fees and
rules for payment card transactions.\1\
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\1\ Section 920 is codified in 15 U.S.C. 1693o-2. As discussed
in more detail below, interchange transaction fees (or ``interchange
fees'') are fees established by a payment card network, charged to
the merchant acquirer and received by the card issuer for its role
in transaction.
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EFTA Section 920 provides that, effective July 21, 2011, the amount
of any interchange transaction fee that an issuer receives or charges
with respect to an electronic debit transaction must be reasonable and
proportional to the cost incurred by the issuer with respect to the
transaction.\2\ That section authorizes the Board to prescribe
regulations regarding any interchange transaction fee that an issuer
may receive or charge with respect to an electronic debit transaction
and requires the Board to establish standards for assessing whether an
interchange transaction fee is reasonable and proportional to the cost
incurred by the issuer with respect to the transaction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Electronic debit transaction (or ``debit card transaction'')
means the use of a debit card, including a general-use prepaid card,
by a person as a form of payment in the United States.
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Under EFTA Section 920, the Board may allow for an adjustment to an
interchange transaction fee to account for an issuer's costs in
preventing fraud, provided the issuer complies with the standards to be
established by the Board relating to fraud-prevention activities. EFTA
Section 920 also authorizes the Board to prescribe regulations in order
to prevent circumvention or evasion of the restrictions on interchange
transaction fees, and specifically authorizes the Board to prescribe
regulations regarding any network fee to ensure that such a fee is not
used to directly or indirectly compensate an issuer and is not used to
circumvent or evade the restrictions on interchange transaction fees.
EFTA Section 920 exempts certain issuers and cards from the
restrictions on interchange transaction fees described above. The
restrictions on interchange transaction fees do not apply to issuers
that, together with affiliates, have assets of less than $10 billion.
The restrictions also do not apply to electronic debit transactions
made using two types of debit cards--debit cards provided pursuant to
government-administered payment programs and reloadable, general-use
prepaid cards not marketed or labeled as a gift card or certificate.
EFTA Section 920 provides, however, that beginning July 21, 2012, the
exemptions from the interchange transaction fee restrictions will not
apply for transactions made using debit cards provided pursuant to a
government-administered payment program or made using certain
reloadable, general-use prepaid cards if the cardholder may be charged
either an overdraft fee or a fee for the first
[[Page 81723]]
withdrawal each month from ATMs in the issuer's designated ATM network.
In addition to rules regarding restrictions on interchange
transaction fees, EFTA Section 920 also requires the Board to prescribe
certain rules related to the routing of debit card transactions. First,
EFTA Section 920 requires the Board to prescribe rules that prohibit
issuers and payment card networks (``networks'') from restricting the
number of networks on which an electronic debit transaction may be
processed to one such network or two or more affiliated networks.
Second, that section requires the Board to prescribe rules prohibiting
issuers and networks from inhibiting the ability of any person that
accepts debit cards from directing the routing of electronic debit
transactions over any network that may process such transactions.
EFTA Section 920 requires the Board to establish interchange fee
standards and rules prohibiting circumvention or evasion no later than
April 21, 2011. These interchange transaction fee rules will become
effective on July 21, 2011. EFTA Section 920 requires the Board to
issue rules that prohibit network exclusivity arrangements and debit
card transaction routing restrictions no later than July 21, 2011, but
does not establish an effective date for these rules.
II. Overview of the Debit Card Industry
Over the past several decades, there have been significant changes
in the way consumers make payments in the United States. The use of
checks has been declining since the mid-1990s as checks (and most
likely some cash payments) are being replaced by electronic payments
(e.g., debit card payments, credit card payments, and automated
clearing house (ACH) payments). Debit card usage, in particular, has
increased markedly during that same period. After a long period of slow
growth during the 1980s and early 1990s, debit card transaction volume
began to grow very rapidly in the mid-1990s. Debit card payments have
grown more than any other form of electronic payment over the past
decade, increasing to 37.9 billion transactions in 2009. Debit cards
are accepted at about 8 million merchant locations in the United
States. In 2009, debit card transactions represented almost half of
total third-party debits to deposit accounts, while approximately 30
percent of total third-party debits to deposit accounts were made by
checks.\3\
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\3\ Third-party debits are those debits initiated to pay parties
other than the cardholder. These third-party debit numbers are
derived from the 2010 Federal Reserve Payments Study. The Study
reported that a total of 108.9 billion noncash payments were made in
2009, 35 percent of which were debit card payments. For purposes of
determining the proportion of noncash payments that were third-party
debits to accounts, ATM cash withdrawals and prepaid card
transactions are excluded from the calculation. A summary of the
2010 Federal Reserve Payments Study is available at https://www.frbservices.org/files/communications/pdf/press/2010_payments_study.pdf.
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In general, there are two types of debit card transactions: PIN
(personal identification number)-based and signature-based.\4\ The
infrastructure for PIN debit networks differs from that for signature
debit networks. PIN debit networks, which evolved from the ATM
networks, are single-message systems in which authorization and
clearing information is carried in one single message. Signature debit
networks, which leverage the credit card network infrastructure, are
dual-message systems, in which authorization information is carried in
one message and clearing information is carried in a separate message.
In the current environment, certain transactions cannot readily be
accommodated on PIN-based, single-message systems, such as transactions
for hotel stays or car rentals, where the exact amount of the
transaction is not known at the time of authorization. In addition, PIN
debit transactions generally are not accepted for Internet
transactions. Overall, roughly one-quarter of the merchant locations in
the United States that accept debit cards have the capability to accept
PIN-based debit transactions. According to the Board's survey of
covered card issuers, roughly 70 percent of debit cards outstanding
(including prepaid cards) support both PIN- and signature-based
transactions (87 percent, excluding prepaid cards).\5\
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\4\ Increasingly, however, cardholders authorize ``signature''
debit transactions without a signature and, sometimes, may authorize
a ``PIN'' debit transaction without a PIN. PIN-based and signature-
based debit also may be referred to as ``PIN debit'' and ``signature
debit.''
\5\ ``Covered issuers'' are those issuers that, together with
affiliates, have assets of $10 billion or more.
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Networks that process debit card transactions exhibit two main
organizational forms, often referred to as three-party and four-party
systems.\6\ The so-called four-party system is the model used for most
debit card transactions; the four parties are the cardholder, the
entity that issued the payment card to the cardholder (the issuer), the
merchant, and the merchant's bank (the acquirer or merchant
acquirer).\7\ The network coordinates the transmission of information
between the issuing and acquiring sides of the market (authorization
and clearing) and the interbank monetary transfers (settlement).\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Industry participants sometimes refer to four-party systems
as ``open loop'' systems and three-party systems as ``closed loop''
systems.
\7\ Throughout this proposed rule, the term ``bank'' often is
used to refer to depository institutions.
\8\ The term ``four-party system'' is something of a misnomer
because the network is, in fact, a fifth party involved in a
transaction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In a typical three-party system, the network itself acts as both
issuer and acquirer. Thus, the three parties involved in a transaction
are the cardholder, the merchant, and the network. Three-party systems
are also referred to as ``closed,'' because the issuer and acquirer are
generally the same institution--they have, thus, tended to be closed to
outside participants. The three-party model is used for some prepaid
card transactions, but not for other debit card transactions.
In a typical four-party system transaction, the cardholder
initiates a purchase by providing his or her card or card information
to a merchant. In the case of PIN debit, the cardholder also enters a
PIN. An electronic authorization request for a specific dollar amount
and the cardholder's account information is sent from the merchant to
the acquirer to the network, which forwards the request to the card-
issuing institution.\9\ The issuer verifies, among other things, that
the cardholder's account has sufficient funds to cover the transaction
amount and that the card was not reported as lost or stolen. A message
authorizing (or declining) the transaction is returned to the merchant
via the reverse path.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Specialized payment processors may carry out some functions
between the merchant and the network or between the network and the
issuer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The clearing of a debit card transaction is effected through the
authorization message (for PIN debit systems) or a subsequent message
(for signature debit systems). The issuer posts the debits to the
cardholders' accounts based on these clearing messages. The network
calculates and communicates to each issuer and acquirer its net debit
or credit position to settle the day's transactions. The interbank
settlement generally is effected through a settlement account at a
commercial bank, or through automated clearinghouse (ACH) transfers.
The acquirer credits the merchant for the value of its transactions,
less the merchant discount, as discussed below.
There are various fees associated with debit card transactions. The
interchange fee is set by the relevant network and paid by the merchant
acquirer to the issuer. Switch fees are charged by the network to
acquirers and issuers to compensate the network for its role in
[[Page 81724]]
processing the transaction.\10\ The merchant acquirer charges the
merchant a merchant discount--the difference between the face value of
a transaction and the amount the merchant acquirer transfers to the
merchant-that includes the interchange fee, network switch fees charged
to the acquirer, other acquirer costs, and an acquirer markup. The
interchange fee typically comprises a large fraction of the merchant
discount for a card transaction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ A variety of other network fees may be collected by the
network from the issuer or acquirer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
When PIN debit networks were first introduced, some of them
structured interchange fees in a manner similar to ATM interchange
fees.\11\ For ATM card transactions, the cardholder's bank generally
pays the ATM operator an interchange fee to compensate the ATM operator
for the costs of deploying and maintaining the ATM and providing the
service. Similarly, some PIN debit networks initially structured
interchange fees to flow from the cardholder's bank to the merchant's
bank to compensate merchants for the costs of installing PIN terminals
and making necessary system changes to accept PIN debit at the point of
sale. In the mid-1990s, these PIN debit networks began to shift the
direction in which PIN debit interchange fees flowed. By the end of the
decade, all PIN debit interchange fees were paid by acquirers to card
issuers.\12\
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\11\ In the late 1970s, bank consortiums formed numerous
regional electronic funds transfer (``EFT'') networks to enable
their customers to withdraw funds from ATMs owned by a variety of
different banks. The EFT networks were first used to handle PIN
debit purchases at retailers in the early 1980s. It was not until
the mid-1990s, however, that PIN debit became a popular method of
payment for consumers to purchase goods and services at retail
stores.
\12\ Debit Card Directory (1995-1999). See also, Fukimo Hayashi,
Richard Sullivan, & Stuart E. Weiner, ``A Guide to the ATM and Debit
Card Industry'' (Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City 2003).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
During the 1990s, most PIN debit networks employed fixed per-
transaction interchange fees. Beginning around 2000, many PIN debit
networks incorporated an ad valorem (i.e., percentage of the value of a
transaction) component to their interchange fees, with a cap on the
total amount of the fee for each transaction. In addition, PIN debit
networks expanded the number of interchange fee categories in their fee
schedules. For example, many networks created categories based on type
of merchant (e.g., supermarkets) and began to segregate merchants into
different categories based on transaction volume (e.g., transaction
tiers). Over the course of the 2000s, most PIN debit networks raised
the levels of fixed component fees, ad valorem fees, and caps on these
fees. By 2010, some networks had removed per-transaction caps on many
interchange fees.
In general, interchange fees for signature debit networks, like
those of credit card networks, combine an ad valorem component with a
fixed fee component. Unlike some PIN debit networks, the interchange
fees for signature debit networks generally do not include a per
transaction cap. Beginning in the early 1990s, signature debit networks
also began creating separate categories for merchants in certain market
segments (e.g., supermarkets and card-not-present transactions) \13\ to
gain increased acceptance in those markets. Until 2003, signature debit
interchange fees were generally around the same level as credit card
interchange fees and have generally been significantly higher than
those for PIN debit card transactions. PIN debit fees began to increase
in the early 2000s, while signature debit fees declined in late 2003
and early 2004.\14\ More recently, both PIN and signature debit fees
have increased, although PIN debit fees have increased at a faster
pace.
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\13\ Card-not-present transactions occur when the card is not
physically presented to the merchant at the time of authorization.
Examples include Internet, phone, and mail-order purchases.
\14\ This decline followed the settlement of litigation
surrounding signature debit cards. See In re: Visa Check/MasterMoney
Antitrust Litigation, 192 F.R.D. 68 (F.D.N.Y. 2000).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to setting the structure and level of interchange fees
and other fees to support network operations, each card network
specifies operating rules that govern the relationships between network
participants. Although the network rules explicitly govern the issuers
and acquirers, merchants and processors also may be required to comply
with the network rules or risk losing access to that network. Network
operating rules cover a broad range of activities, including merchant
card acceptance practices, technological specifications for cards and
terminals, risk management, and determination of transaction routing
when multiple networks are available for a given transaction.
III. Outreach and Information Collection
A. Summary of Outreach
Since enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act, Board staff has held
numerous meetings with debit card issuers, payment card networks,
merchant acquirers, merchants, industry trade associations, and
consumer groups. In general, those parties provided information
regarding electronic debit transactions, including processing flows for
electronic debit transactions, structures and levels of current
interchange transaction fees and other fees charged by the networks,
fraud-prevention activities performed by various parties to an
electronic debit transaction, fraud losses related to electronic debit
transactions, routing restrictions, card-issuing arrangements, and
incentive programs for both merchants and issuers. Interested parties
also provided written submissions.\15\
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\15\ The meeting summaries and written submissions are available
on the Regulatory Reform section of the Board's Web site, available
at https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/reform_meetings.htm.
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B. Surveys
On September 13, 2010, the Board distributed three surveys to
industry participants (an issuer survey, a network survey, and a
merchant acquirer survey) designed to gather information to assist the
Board in developing this proposal. Industry participants, including
payment card networks, trade groups and individual firms from both the
banking industry and merchant community, commented on preliminary
versions of the issuer and network surveys, through both written
submissions and a series of drop-in calls. In response to the comments,
the two surveys were modified, as appropriate, and an additional survey
of merchant acquirers was developed.\16\
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\16\ Documentation and forms for the card issuer, payment card
network, and merchant acquirer surveys are respectively available at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/files/card_issuer_survey_20100920.pdf, https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/files/payment_card_network_survey_20100920.pdf, and https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/files/merchant_acquirer_survey_20100920.pdf.
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The card issuer survey was distributed to 131 financial
organizations that, together with affiliates, have assets of $10
billion or more.\17\ The Board received 89
[[Page 81725]]
responses to the survey. An additional 13 organizations informed the
Board that they do not have debit card programs. Three organizations
that issued a small number of cards declined to participate in the
survey. The Board did not receive any communication from the other 26
organizations. The network survey was distributed to the 14 networks
believed to process debit card transactions, all of which provided
responses. The merchant acquirer survey was distributed to the largest
nine merchant acquirers/processors, all of whom responded to the
survey.
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\17\ These institutions include bank and thrift holding
companies with assets of at least $10 billion; independent
commercial banks, thrifts, and credit unions with assets of at least
$10 billion; and FDIC-insured U.S. branches and agencies of foreign
banking organizations with worldwide assets of at least $10 billion.
Assets were computed using the Consolidated Financial Statements for
Bank Holding Companies (FR Y-9C; OMB No. 7100-0128), the
Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income (Call Reports) for
independent commercial banks (FFIEC 031 & 041; OMB No. 7100-0036)
and for U.S. branches and agencies of foreign banks (FFIEC 002; OMB
No. 7100-0032), the Thrift Financial Reports (OTS 1313; OMB No.
1550-0023) for Thrift Holding Companies and thrift institutions, and
the Credit Union Reports of Condition and Income (NCUA 5300/5300S;
OMB No. 3133-0004) for credit unions. The ownership structure of
banking organizations was established using the FFIEC's National
Information Center structure database.
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Information Requested and Summary Results
In general, the surveys requested information on signature debit,
PIN debit and prepaid card operations and, for each card type, the
costs associated with those card types, interchange fees and other fees
established by networks, fraud losses, fraud-prevention and data-
security activities, network exclusivity arrangements and debit-card
routing restrictions. The Board compiled the survey responses in a
central database, and reviewed the submissions for completeness,
consistency, and anomalous responses. As indicated above, the response
rates for the three surveys were high; however, some respondents were
not able to provide information on all data elements requested in the
surveys. For example, most respondents provided cost data at an
aggregate level, but some were unable to provide cost data at the level
of granularity requested in the surveys. In addition, there were
inconsistencies in some data that were reported within individual
responses and across responses. Therefore, each of the summary
statistics reported below may be based on a subset of the responses
received for each of the three surveys. The reporting period for each
survey was calendar year 2009, unless otherwise noted.
Card use. The networks reported that there were approximately 37.7
billion debit and prepaid card transactions in 2009, valued at over
$1.45 trillion, with an average value of $38.58 per
transaction.18 19 20 Responding issuers reported that, on
average, they had 174 million debit cards and 46 million prepaid cards
outstanding during 2009. Eighty-seven percent of debit cards and 25
percent of prepaid cards were enabled for use on both signature and PIN
networks. Four percent of debit cards and 74 percent of prepaid cards
were enabled for use on signature networks only. Finally, 9 percent of
debit cards and 1 percent of prepaid cards were enabled for use on PIN
networks only. Responding acquirers reported that 6.7 million merchant
locations were able to accept signature debit cards and 1.5 million
were able to accept PIN debit cards.\21\
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\18\ These data do not include ATM transactions. Responding
issuers accounted for approximately 60 percent of total debit and
prepaid card transactions in 2009. The acquirers surveyed handled
about 95 percent of these total transactions.
\19\ Of these 37.7 billion transactions, 22.5 billion were
signature debit transactions, with a total value of $837 billion and
an average value of $37.15 per transaction; 14.1 billion were PIN
debit transactions with a total value of $584 billion and an average
value of $41.34 per transaction; and 1.0 billion were prepaid card
transactions, with a total value of $33 billion and an average value
of $32.54 per transactions. Of the 37.7 billion transactions, 90
percent were card-present transactions. Eighty-six percent of
signature debit and 97 percent of PIN debit transactions were card-
present transactions.
\20\ The recently released 2010 Federal Reserve Payments Study
reported 6.0 billion prepaid card transactions in 2009, of which 1.3
billion were general purpose prepaid card transactions and 4.7
billion were private label prepaid card and electronic benefit
transfer card transactions that were not included in the Board
survey.
\21\ These numbers differ from the estimates that were otherwise
provided to the Board by major payment card networks, card issuers,
and merchant acquirers.
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Interchange fees. Networks reported that debit and prepaid
interchange fees totaled $16.2 billion in 2009.\22\ The average
interchange fee for all debit transactions was 44 cents per
transaction, or 1.14 percent of the transaction amount. The average
interchange fee for a signature debit transaction was 56 cents, or 1.53
percent of the transaction amount. The average interchange fee for a
PIN debit transaction was significantly lower than that of a signature
debit transaction, at 23 cents per transaction, or 0.56 percent of the
transaction amount. Prepaid card interchange fees were similar to those
of signature debit, averaging 50 cents per transaction, or 1.53 percent
of the transaction amount.\23\
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\22\ Of the $16.2 billion in interchange-fee revenue, $12.5
billion was for signature debit transactions, $3.2 billion was for
PIN debit transactions and $0.5 billion was for prepaid card
transactions. The responding issuers reported receiving $11.0
billion, or about 68 percent of total interchange fees.
\23\ The network survey also requested information on historical
interchange fees. Not all networks reported historical interchange
fees back to 1990. However, from 1990 to 2009, it appears that
interchange fees for signature debit transactions generally were
around 1.5 percent of transaction value. Based on other industry
resources, interchange fees on PIN debit transactions in the late
1990s were about 7 cents per transaction (Debit Card Directory,
1995-1999). Therefore, it appears that these fees rose significantly
during the 2000s.
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Processing costs. Issuers reported their per-transaction processing
costs, which are those costs related to authorization, clearance, and
settlement of a transaction.\24\ The median per-transaction total
processing cost for all types of debit and prepaid card transactions
was 11.9 cents.\25\ The median per-transaction variable processing cost
was 7.1 cents for all types of debit and prepaid card transactions.\26\
The median per-transaction network processing fees were 4.0 cents for
all types of debit and prepaid card transactions.\27\
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\24\ Unlike other statistics in this discussion, the Board
discusses cost information using percentiles within this Federal
Register Notice to avoid having summary measures distorted by
extreme values in the sample cost data.
\25\ By transaction type, the median total per-transaction
processing cost was 13.7 cents for signature debit, 7.9 cents for
PIN debit and 63.6 cents for prepaid cards.
\26\ By transaction type, the median variable per-transaction
processing cost was 6.7 cents for signature debit, 4.5 cents for PIN
debit, and 25.8 cents for prepaid cards.
\27\ By transaction type, the median per-transaction network
processing fees were 4.7 cents for signature debit, 2.1 cents for
PIN debit, and 6.9 cents for prepaid cards.
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Network fees. Networks reported charging two types of per-
transaction fees: processing and non-processing fees. Networks also
reported charging fees other than on a per-transaction basis. Networks
charged issuers a total of $2.3 billion in fees and charged acquirers a
total of $1.9 billion in fees. In general, the proportion of fees paid
by each party varied by network type. Aggregating these fees across all
debit and prepaid card transactions, the average network fee
attributable to each transaction was 6.5 cents for issuers and 5.0
cents for acquirers. The average network fee attributable to each
signature debit transaction was 8.4 cents for issuers and 5.7 cents for
acquirers. Thus, about 60 percent of signature debit network fees were
paid by issuers and 40 percent by acquirers. For PIN debit
transactions, the average network fee attributable to each transaction
was 2.7 cents for issuers and 3.7 cents for acquirers. Thus, about 42
percent of PIN debit network fees were paid by issuers and 58 percent
by acquirers. As noted above, these fees include per-transaction
processing fees and non-processing fees, as well as other fees. Based
on data reported by responding issuers, signature debit network
processing fees were 3.0 cents per transaction on average and PIN debit
network processing fees were 1.6[cent] per transaction on average.
Networks also reported providing discounts and incentives to
issuers and acquirers/merchants. Issuers were provided discounts and
incentives totaling $0.7 billion, or an average of 2.0 cents per
transaction, while acquirers
[[Page 81726]]
were provided discounts and incentives of $0.3 billion, or an average
of 0.9 cents per transaction. Signature debit networks provided average
incentives and discounts of 2.6 cents per transaction to issuers and
1.2 cents per transaction to acquirers. Thus, 69 percent of signature
debit network incentives and discounts were provided to issuers and 31
percent to acquirers. PIN debit networks provided average incentives
and discounts of 0.7 cents per transaction to issuers and 0.5 cents per
transaction to acquirers. Thus, 61 percent of PIN debit network
incentives and discounts were provided to issuers and 39 percent to
acquirers.
Discounts and incentives effectively reduce the per-transaction
amount of network fees each party pays. After adjusting for discounts
and incentives, the average net network fee per transaction is 4.5
cents for issuers and 4.1 cents for acquirers.\28\ For signature debit
transactions, the average net network fee per transaction is 5.9 cents
for issuers and 4.5 cents for acquirers. Thus, 57 percent of net
network fees on signature networks were paid by issuers and 43 percent
by acquirers. For PIN debit networks, the average net network fee per
transaction is 1.9 cents for issuers and 3.2 cents for acquirers. Thus,
37 percent of net network fees on PIN debit networks were paid by
issuers and 63 percent by acquirers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ Net network fees paid by issuers and acquirers were
calculated by subtracting incentives and discounts provided from
network fees paid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fraud data. Survey responses on fraud occurrence, fraud losses, and
fraud-prevention and data-security costs are discussed in section IV of
this notice.
Exclusivity arrangements and routing restrictions. The surveys also
included a number of questions about exclusivity arrangements and
transaction routing procedures. Respondents reported that there are
arrangements, either rules-based or contractual, under which
transactions must be routed exclusively over specific networks or that
commit issuers to meet certain volume and dollar thresholds for
transactions on those networks. Respondents also reported that they
receive incentives under these arrangements, which for issuers take the
form lower network fees, signing bonuses, and marketing and development
funds. For acquirers, the incentives typically take the form of lower
network fees.
Summary of Proposal
Reasonable and proportional fees. The Board is requesting comment
on two alternative standards for determining whether the amount of an
interchange transaction fee is reasonable and proportional to the cost
incurred by the issuer with respect to the transaction. Alternative 1
adopts issuer-specific standards with a safe harbor and a cap. In
contrast, Alternative 2 adopts a cap that is applicable to all covered
issuers.
Under Alternative 1, an issuer could comply with the standard for
interchange fees by calculating its allowable costs and ensuring that,
unless it accepts the safe harbor as described below, it did not
receive any interchange fee in excess of its allowable costs through
any network. An issuer's allowable costs would be those costs that are
attributable to the issuer's role in authorization, clearance, and
settlement of the transaction and that vary with the number of
transactions sent to an issuer within a calendar year (variable costs).
The issuer's allowable costs incurred with respect to each transaction
would be the sum of the allowable costs of all electronic debit
transactions over a calendar year divided by the number of electronic
debit transactions on which the issuer received or charged an
interchange transaction fee in that year. The issuer-specific
determination in Alternative 1 would be subject to a cap on the amount
of any interchange fee an issuer could receive or charge, regardless of
the issuer's allowable cost calculation. The Board proposes to set this
cap at an initial level of 12 cents per transaction. Alternative 1 also
would permit an issuer to comply with the regulatory standard for
interchange fees by receiving or charging interchange fees that do not
exceed the safe harbor amount, in which case the issuer would not need
to determine its maximum interchange fee based on allowable costs. The
Board proposes to set the safe harbor amount at an initial level of 7
cents per transaction. Therefore, under Alternative 1, each payment
card network would have the option of setting interchange fees either
(1) at or below the safe harbor or (2) at an amount for each issuer
such that the interchange fee for that issuer does not exceed the
issuer's allowable costs, up to the cap.
Under Alternative 2, an issuer would comply with the standard for
interchange fees as long as it does not receive or charge a fee above
the cap, which would be set at an initial level of 12 cents per
transaction. Each payment card network would have to set interchange
fees such that issuers do not receive or charge any interchange fee in
excess of the cap.
Fraud-prevention adjustment. The Board's proposal requests comment
on two general approaches to the fraud-prevention adjustment framework
and asks several questions related to the two alternatives. One
approach focuses on implementation of major innovations that would
likely result in substantial reductions in total, industry-wide fraud
losses. The second approach focuses on reasonably necessary steps for
an issuer to maintain an effective fraud-prevention program, but would
not prescribe specific technologies that must be employed as part of
the program. At this time, the Board is not proposing a specific
adjustment to the amount of an interchange fee for an issuer's fraud-
prevention costs. After considering the comments received, the Board
expects to develop a specific proposal on the fraud adjustment for
public comment.
Exemptions. The Board's proposed rule exempts issuers that,
together with affiliates, have assets of less than $10 billion. The
Board's proposed rule also exempts electronic debit transactions made
using debit cards issued under government-administered programs or made
using certain reloadable prepaid cards. These exempt issuers or
transactions would not be subject to the interchange transaction fee
restrictions. The exemptions do not apply to the proposed rule's
provisions regarding network exclusivity and routing restrictions.
Prohibition on circumvention or evasion. In order to prevent
circumvention or evasion of the limits on the amount of interchange
fees that issuers receive from acquirers, the proposed rule would
prohibit an issuer from receiving net compensation from a network for
debit card transactions, excluding interchange transaction fees. For
example, the total amount of compensation provided by the network to
the issuer, such as per-transaction rebates, incentives or payments,
could not exceed the total amount of fees paid by the issuer to the
network.
Limitation on debit card restrictions. The Board is requesting
comment on two alternative approaches to implement the statute's
required rules that prohibit network exclusivity. Under Alternative A,
an issuer or payment card network may not restrict the number of
payment card networks over which an electronic debit transaction may be
carried to fewer than two unaffiliated networks. Under this
alternative, it would be sufficient for an issuer to issue a debit card
that can be processed over one signature-based network and one PIN-
based network, provided the networks are not affiliated. Under
[[Page 81727]]
Alternative B, an issuer or payment card network may not restrict the
number of payment card networks over which an electronic debit
transaction may be carried to less than two unaffiliated networks for
each method of authorization the cardholder may select. Under this
alternative, an issuer that used both signature- and PIN-based
authorization would have to enable its debit cards with two
unaffiliated signature-based networks and two unaffiliated PIN-based
networks.
Transaction routing. The Board proposes to prohibit issuers and
payment card networks from restricting the ability of a merchant to
direct the routing of electronic debit transactions over any of the
networks that an issuer has enabled to process the electronic debit
transactions. For example, issuers and payment card networks may not
set routing priorities that override a merchant's routing choice. The
merchant's choice, however, would be limited to those networks enabled
on a debit card.
Scope of Rule
In general, the Board's proposed rule covers debit card
transactions (not otherwise exempt) that debit an account. The Board's
proposed rule also covers both three-party and four-party systems.
Throughout the proposal, the Board generally describes the interchange
fee standards and the network exclusivity and routing rules in a manner
that most readily applies to debit card transactions initiated at the
point of sale for the purchase of goods and services and debit card
transactions carried over four-party networks. The scope of the
proposed rule, however, covers three-party networks and could cover ATM
transactions and networks. The Board requests comment on the
application of the proposed rule to ATM transactions and ATM networks,
as well as to three-party networks.
Coverage of ATM transactions and networks. The Board requests
comment on whether ATM transactions and ATM networks should be included
within the scope of the rule. Although the statute does not expressly
include ATM transactions within its scope, EFTA Section 920's
definitions of ``debit card,'' ``electronic debit transaction,'' and
``payment card network'' could be read to bring ATM transactions within
the coverage of the rule. Specifically, most ATM cards can be used to
debit an asset account. It could also be argued that an ATM operator
accepts the debit card as form of payment to carry out the transaction,
so the ATM network could be covered by the statutory definition of a
``payment card network.''
Under EFTA Section 920(c)(8), the term ``interchange transaction
fee'' is defined as a fee charged ``for the purpose of compensating an
issuer.'' Traditionally, however, the interchange fee for ATM
transactions is paid by the issuer and flows to the ATM operator. Thus,
the proposed interchange transaction fee standards would not apply to
ATM interchange fees and would not constrain the current level of such
fees.\29\
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\29\ The rule's interchange fee standard could become a
constraint in the future if ATM interchange fees begin to flow in
the same direction as point-of-sale debit card transactions, as was
the case for interchange fees of certain PIN debit networks in the
1990s.
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The network-exclusivity prohibition and routing provisions,
however, would directly affect the operations of ATM networks if these
provisions were applied to such networks. Issuers would be required to
offer ATM cards that can be accepted on at least two unaffiliated
networks, and the ATM operator would have the ability to choose the
network through which transactions would be routed. As discussed below,
in point-of-sale transactions, these provisions improve the ability of
a merchant to select the network that minimizes its cost (particularly
the cost associated with interchange fees) and otherwise provides the
most advantageous terms. In the case of ATM transactions, however, the
exclusivity and routing provisions would give the ATM operator, which
is receiving the ATM interchange fee, the ability to select the network
that maximizes that fee. Therefore, coverage of ATM networks under the
rule may result in very different economic incentives than coverage of
point-of-sale debit card networks.
If ATM networks and ATM transactions are included within the scope
of the rule, the Board requests comment on how to implement the network
exclusivity provision. For example, if the Board requires two
unaffiliated networks for each authorization method, should it
explicitly require an issuer to ensure that ATM transactions may be
routed over at least two unaffiliated networks? Should the Board state
that one point-of-sale debit network and one ATM-only network would not
satisfy the exclusivity prohibition under either proposed alternative?
The Board also specifically requests comment on the effect of treating
ATM transactions as ``electronic debit transactions'' under the rule on
small issuers, as well as the cardholder benefit, if any, of such an
approach.
Coverage of three-party systems. The Board also requests comment on
the appropriate application of the interchange fee standards to
electronic debit transactions carried over three-party systems. In a
three-party payment system, the payment card network typically serves
both as the card issuer and the merchant acquirer for purposes of
accepting payment on the network.\30\ In this system, there is no
explicit interchange fee. Instead, the merchant directly pays a
merchant discount to the network. The merchant discount typically is
equivalent to the sum of the interchange fee, the network switch fee,
other acquirer costs, and an acquirer markup that would typically be
imposed in a four-party system.
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\30\ In addition, under a three-party system, outside processors
generally are not authorized by the network to acquire transactions
from merchants. Although outside processors may provide some
processing services to the merchant, the network is ultimately the
acquirer for every transaction.
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Both the statutory and proposed definition of ``interchange
transaction fee'' would cover the part of the merchant discount in a
three-party system that is used to compensate the network for its role
as issuer. If a three-party network apportioned its entire merchant
discount to its roles as network or merchant acquirer, however, the
interchange fee would, in effect, be zero. This outcome, coupled with
the fact the statute does not restrict fees an acquirer charges a
merchant, may present practical difficulties in limiting the amount of
a merchant discount charged in a three-party network. The Board
requests comment on the appropriate way to treat three-party networks
and on any specific clarifications with respect to such fees that
should be provided in the regulation.
In addition, the Board requests comment on how the network
exclusivity and routing provisions should be applied to three-party
systems. If the limitations on payment card network restrictions under
Sec. 235.7 were applied to a three-party system, debit cards issued by
the network would be required to be capable of being routed through at
least one unaffiliated payment card network in addition to the network
issuing the card, and the network may not inhibit a merchant's ability
to route a transaction to any other unaffiliated network(s) enabled on
a debit card. For example, under Alternative A for the network
exclusivity provisions, the payment card network would be required to
add an unaffiliated network and arrange for the unaffiliated debit
network to carry debit transactions, for ultimate routing
[[Page 81728]]
to the contracting network, which may result in more circuitous routing
that would otherwise be the case. Under Alternative B, which requires
at least two unaffiliated payment card networks for each method of
authorization, the payment card network would be required to add at
least one unaffiliated signature debit network for a signature-only
debit card. In addition, if the debit card had PIN debit functionality,
the card would also have to be accepted on at least two unaffiliated
PIN debit networks.
The Board recognizes that the nature of a three-party system could
be significantly altered by any requirement to add one or more
unaffiliated payment card networks capable of carrying electronic debit
transactions involving the network's cards. Nonetheless, the statute
does not provide any apparent basis for excluding three-party systems
from the scope of the provisions of EFTA Section 920(b). The Board
requests comment on all aspects of applying the proposed rule to three-
party payment systems, including on any available alternatives that
could minimize the burden of compliance on such systems.
Section-by-Section Analysis
I. Sec. 235.1 Authority and purpose
This section sets forth the authority and purpose for the proposed
rule.
II. Sec. 235.2 Definitions
The proposed rule provides definitions for many of the terms used
in the rule. As noted throughout this section, many of the definitions
follow the EFTA's definitions. The proposed rule also provides
definitions for terms not defined in EFTA Section 920. Some of these
definitions are based on existing statutory or regulatory definitions,
while others are based on terminology in the debit card industry. The
Board requests comment on all of the terms and definitions set out in
this section. In particular, the Board requests comment on any terms
used in the proposed rule that a commenter believes are not
sufficiently clear or defined.
A. Sec. 235.2(a) Account
EFTA Section 920(c) defines the term ``debit card'' in reference to
a card, or other payment code or device, that is used ``to debit an
asset account (regardless of the purpose for which the account is
established) * * *.'' That section, however, does not define the terms
``asset account'' or ``account.'' EFTA Section 903(2) defines the term
``account'' to mean ``a demand deposit, savings deposit, or other asset
account (other than an occasional or incidental credit balance in an
open end credit plan as defined in section 103(i) of [the EFTA]), as
described in regulations of the Board established primarily for
personal, family, or household purposes, but such term does not include
an account held by a financial institution pursuant to a bona fide
trust agreement.'' \31\
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\31\ 15 U.S.C. 1693a.
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Similar to EFTA Section 903(2), proposed Sec. 235.2(a) defines
``account'' to include a transaction account (which includes a demand
deposit), savings, or other asset account. The proposed definition,
however, differs from EFTA Section 903(2) because EFTA Section 920(c)
does not restrict the term debit card to those cards, or other payment
codes or devices, that debit accounts established for a particular
purpose. Accordingly, the proposed definition includes both an account
established primarily for personal, family, or household purposes and
an account established for business purposes. For the same reason, the
proposed definition of ``account'' includes an account held by a
financial institution under a bona fide trust arrangement. These
distinctions from the EFTA Section 903(2)'s definition are clarified in
proposed comment 2(a)-1.
The proposed definition of ``account'' is limited to accounts that
are located in the United States. The Board does not believe it is
appropriate to apply EFTA Section 920's limitations to foreign issuers
or accounts, absent a clear indication from Congress to do so.
B. Sec. 235.2(b) Acquirer
Proposed Sec. 235.2(b) defines the term ``acquirer.'' Within the
debit card industry, there are numerous models for acquiring
transactions from merchants, and the term ``acquirer'' may not always
be used to refer to the entity that holds a merchant's account. In some
acquiring relationships, an institution performs all the functions of
the acquirer (e.g., signing up and underwriting merchants, processing
payments, receiving and providing settlement for the merchants'
transactions, and other account maintenance). In other acquiring
relationships, an institution performs all the functions of the
acquirer except for settling the merchant's transactions with both the
merchant and the network.
The Board is proposing to limit the term ``acquirer'' to entities
that ``acquire'' (or buy) the electronic debit transactions from the
merchant. Proposed Sec. 235.2(b) defines ``acquirer'' as a person that
``contracts directly or indirectly with a merchant to receive and
provide settlement for the merchant's electronic debit transactions
over a payment card network.'' Proposed Sec. 235.2(b) limits the term
to those entities serving a financial institution function with respect
to the merchant, as distinguished from a processor function, by
stipulating that the entity ``receive and provide settlement for the
merchant's'' transactions. Proposed Sec. 235.2(b) also explicitly
excludes entities that solely process transactions for the merchant
from the term ``acquirer.''
Proposed Sec. 235.2(b), however, takes into consideration the fact
that the degree of involvement of the entity settling with the merchant
varies under different models by defining ``acquirer'' as a person that
``contracts directly or indirectly with a merchant.'' See proposed
comment 2(b)-1.
C. Sec. 235.2(c) Affiliate and Sec. 235.2(e) Control
Proposed Sec. Sec. 235.2(c) and (e) define the terms ``affiliate''
and ``control.'' EFTA Section 920(c)(1) defines the term ``affiliate''
as ``any company that controls, is controlled by, or is under common
control with another company.'' The proposed rule incorporates the
EFTA's definition of ``affiliate.''
Although the EFTA's definition of affiliate is premised on control,
the EFTA does not define that term. The Board is proposing to adopt a
definition of ``control'' that is consistent with definitions of that
term in other Board regulations.\32\
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\32\ See Regulation Y (Bank Holding Companies and Change in Bank
Control), 12 CFR 225.2(e)) and Regulation P (Privacy of Consumer
Financial Information), 12 CFR 216.3(g).
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D. Sec. 235.2(d) Cardholder
Proposed Sec. 235.2(d) defines the term ``cardholder'' as the
person to whom a debit card is issued. Proposed comment 2(d) clarifies
that if an issuer issues a debit card for use to debit a transaction,
savings, or other similar asset account, the cardholder usually will be
the account holder. In some cases, however, such as with a business
account, there may be multiple persons who have been issued debit cards
and are authorized to use those debit cards to debit the same account.
Each employee issued a card would be considered a cardholder. In the
case of a prepaid card, the cardholder is the person that purchased the
card or a person who received the card from the purchaser. See proposed
comment 2(d)-1.
[[Page 81729]]
F. Sec. 235.2(f) Debit Card and Sec. 235.2(i) General-Use Prepaid Card
Debit Card (Sec. 235.2 (f))
EFTA Section 920(c)(2) defines the term ``debit card'' as ``any
card, or other payment code or device, issued or approved for use
through a payment card network to debit an asset account (regardless of
the purpose for which the account is established), whether
authorization is based on signature, PIN, or other means.'' The term
includes a general-use prepaid card, as that term was previously
defined by the gift card provisions of the Credit Card Accountability,
Responsibility and Disclosure Act of 2009 (Credit Card Act).\33\ The
statute excludes paper checks from the definition of ``debit card.''
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\33\ See EFTA Section 915(a)(2)(A).
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Proposed Sec. 235.2(f) defines the term ``debit card'' and
generally tracks the definition set forth in EFTA Section 920. Thus,
proposed Sec. 235.2(f)(1) generally defines the term ``debit card'' as
``any card, or other payment code or device, issued or approved for use
through a payment card network to debit an account, regardless of
whether authorization is based on signature, personal identification
number (PIN), or other means.'' In addition, the term applies
regardless of whether the issuer holds the underlying account. This is
consistent with the statutory definition of ``debit card'' which does
not require that an issuer also hold the account debited by the card,
code, or device. Proposed Sec. 235.2(f)(2) further provides that
``debit card'' includes a ``general-use prepaid card.'' See proposed
comment 2(f)-4.
Proposed comment 2(f)-1 clarifies that the requirements of this
part generally apply to any card, or other payment code or device, even
if it is not issued in card form. That is, the rule applies even if a
physical card is not issued or if the device is issued with a form
factor other than a standard-sized card. For example, an account number
or code that could be used to access underlying funds in an account
would be considered a debit card under the rule (except when used to
initiate an ACH transaction). Similarly, the term ``debit card'' would
include a device with a chip or other embedded mechanism that links the
device to funds held in an account, such as a mobile phone or sticker
containing a contactless chip that enables the cardholder to debit an
account.
Proposed comments 2(f)-2 and -3 address deferred and decoupled
debit cards, two types of card products that the Board believes fall
within the statutory definition of ``debit card'' notwithstanding that
they may share both credit and debit card-like attributes. Under a
deferred debit arrangement, transactions are not immediately posted to
a cardholder's account when the card transaction is received by the
account-holding institution for settlement, but instead the funds in
the account are held and made unavailable for other transactions for a
specified period of time.\34\ Upon expiration of the time period, the
cardholder's account is debited for the amount of all transactions made
using the card which were submitted for settlement during that period.
For example, under some deferred debit arrangements involving consumer
brokerage accounts (whether held at the issuer or an affiliate), the
issuer agrees not to post the card transactions to the brokerage
account until the end of the month. Regardless of the time period
chosen by the issuer for deferring the posting of the transactions to
the cardholder's account, deferred debit cards would be considered
debit cards for purposes of the requirements of this part. Deferred
debit card arrangements do not refer to arrangements in which a
merchant defers presentment of multiple small dollar card payments, but
aggregates those payments into a single transaction for presentment, or
where a merchant requests placement of a hold on certain funds in an
account until the actual amount of the cardholder's transaction is
known. See proposed comment 2(f)-2.
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\34\ The issuer's ability to maintain the hold assumes that the
issuer has received a settlement record for the transaction within
the time period required under card network rules.
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Proposed comment 2(f)-3 addresses decoupled debit arrangements in
which the issuer is not the institution that holds the underlying
account that will be debited. That is, the issuer-cardholder
relationship is ``decoupled'' from the cardholder's relationship with
the institution holding the cardholder's account. In these ``decoupled
debit'' arrangements, transactions are not posted directly to the
cardholder's account when the transaction is presented for settlement
with the card issuer. Instead, the issuer must send an ACH debit
instruction to the account-holding institution in the amount of the
transaction in order to obtain the funds from the cardholder's account.
As noted above, the term ``debit card'' includes a card, or other
payment code or device, that debits an account, regardless of whether
the issuer holds the account. Accordingly, the Board believes it is
appropriate to treat decoupled debit cards as debit cards subject to
the requirements of this part.
Moreover, the Board understands that there may be incentives for
some issuers to design or offer products with ``credit-like'' features
in an effort to have such products fall outside