The battle between the big banks and Apple continues with the banks making a further submission to the ACCC as a follow up to the interim decision not to grant them the right to collectively bargain with Apple.
Late last year the ACCC handed down a draft ruling that it was not in the public interest for Westpac, NAB and Commonwealth (Among with Bendigo Bank) to act as a cartel in collectively bargaining with Apple over access to Apple Pay for their customers.
That group of banks have returned to the ACCC with a change in plan – they now don’t care about the costs, they just want access to the iPhone NFC.
The ACCC will now need to rule if the four banks can sit together around a table to negotiate with Apple over access to the NFC chip alone.
NFC is “near field communication” and it is the technology by which “tap and go” works – on mobile phones it’s the chip that allows both payments as well as pairing of devices and information exchange.
Apple however have a wall around their NFC chip, and it is not used by any other application other than Apple Wallet.
They do this for security reasons, Apple believe that by opening NFC to individual apps and bypassing their secure zone there is a greater risk to consumers.
You’d have to say, Apple have a much better record on device security than almost anyone else, and certainly iOS over Android is a no-brainer.
In their application to the ACCC, the banks say “NFC access is required to enable real choice and real competition for consumers, and to facilitate innovation and investment in the digital wallets available to Australians”
They go on to say “With NFC access, a customer could have in their phone:”
This is a positive move from the banks. Their hope is that consumers will then chose their app for payment and thus save them any pass-through fees to Apple. The problem is, Consumers don’t care about that. Consumers want convenience.
In my own submission to the ACCC I made the point that while the banks think Apple is short sighted, the banks themselves are missing the point.
A single digital wallet is the only good solution to the transition from physical to digital. How many people have just one bank or financial institution? Anyone who uses more than one card will know that the idea of a wallet for each card is ridiculous.
And what the banks fail to address is the integration within Apple Wallet for things like loyalty schemes. With Apple Pay correctly configured and in use, it’s possible to have your Supermarket rewards card in your “Apple Wallet” as well as your payment cards, and when paying for groceries simply choose the payment card and it automatically uses the loyalty card at the same time.
Plus, all of this is accessible from the lock-screen. No need to turn your phone on, no need to do anything except present your phone to the payment terminal.
With bank apps and loyalty apps all separated, that convenience is lost and the use of digital wallets will stall and likely fail.
I respect the banks for re-focusing their submission, but in reality, it’s only because they saw some small light at the end of the tunnel in some of the ACCC’s words in the draft ruling.
For example:
With all that said, we’re in for a long battle here. The bank’s statement on this revised application comes with the following quote:
“The application seeks permission to jointly negotiate with Apple; this is not an attempt to delay Apple Pay from entering the Australian market. The applicants expect that Apple Pay would be offered to their customers alongside open access to the NFC function. Any delay or frustration will be as a result of Apple refusing to negotiate.
Seems the banks think Apple Pay hasn’t launched here – what they don’t know is that Australia is transacting with Apple Pay more than any country in the world!
All the while customers of non ANZ banks are missing out on the simplest and easiest payment system on the planet. Apple Pay.
The only way to get it – change banks. That will give them a message.
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