• Home
  • Community Banks
  • Merchants
  • News
  • Home
  • Community Banks

    Community Banks

    We take pride in creating a merchant services program that complements each of our partners’ unique circumstances within its respective community, all while maximizing the program’s efficiency and revenue opportunities.

    About the Program

    Bank Home
    Dashboard
    Program Overview
    Marketing Resources
  • Merchants
  • Contact Us

    Contact Us

    Our industry-leading service team and business consultants are just a phone call or click away. 

    p:  330.702.8415
          800.487.5577
    f:   866.476.8416

    A small number of callers are experiencing issues when dialing our 800 number. If you cannot connect, please try calling our secondary number at 330.702.8415, contact us via email at info@finet.net or use the contact form at the bottom of the page. 

    info@finet.net

    Facebook Twitter Youtube

    Business Hours

    Monday – Friday: 8:30am – 5:00pm ET

    During off-hours, support for emergency issues is available by calling the 24/7 help desk for your specific processor or equipment provider. Consult your program documentation or terminal hardware for the appropriate contact information.

  • Home
  • Community Banks

    Community Banks

    We take pride in creating a merchant services program that complements each of our partners’ unique circumstances within its respective community, all while maximizing the program’s efficiency and revenue opportunities.

    About the Program

    Bank Home
    Dashboard
    Program Overview
    Marketing Resources
  • Merchants
  • Contact Us

    Contact Us

    Our industry-leading service team and business consultants are just a phone call or click away. 

    p:  330.702.8415
          800.487.5577
    f:   866.476.8416

    A small number of callers are experiencing issues when dialing our 800 number. If you cannot connect, please try calling our secondary number at 330.702.8415, contact us via email at info@finet.net or use the contact form at the bottom of the page. 

    info@finet.net

    Facebook Twitter Youtube

    Business Hours

    Monday – Friday: 8:30am – 5:00pm ET

    During off-hours, support for emergency issues is available by calling the 24/7 help desk for your specific processor or equipment provider. Consult your program documentation or terminal hardware for the appropriate contact information.

FinTech

Bank groups spell out payments industry concerns

FiNet
December 10, 2021

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) needs to protect consumers from big technology companies eager to make inroads in the payments processing business, according to comments filed this week with the agency by two bank industry trade groups.

The American Bankers Association (ABA) and the Community Bankers Association (CBA) called on the CFPB in a joint Dec. 7 letter to “ensure consumer protections are applied consistently to all companies offering payments products and financial services, including big tech”  as part of an investigation ordered in October by CFPB Director Rohit Chopra.

Chopra sent 50 detailed questions to the big tech companies Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon, Square and PayPal about their “products, plans, and practices.” The agency also plans to study the payments businesses of Chinese tech companies, including WeChat Pay and Alipay. Responses from the companies are due to the CFPB on December 15.

“Little is publicly known about how Big Tech companies will exploit their payments platforms,” according to an Oct. 21 statement from Chopra,  who could have asked the companies to provide the information voluntarily but chose not to do so.

As a Democratic member of the Federal Trade Commission, Chopra pushed for tough penalties against tech companies, Bloomberg News reported. Earlier this year, he was nominated as CFPB director by the Biden Administration and was confirmed by the U.S. Senate in a 50-48 party-line vote.

Republican critics, such as Sen. Pat Toomey (R-PA), said they were concerned that Chopra would use his position to pursue an “aggressively anti-business agenda,” according to the New York Times.

Last week, Chopra extended the deadline for the public to submit comments regarding its payments investigation to December 21. A CFPB spokesperson declined to comment on whether the tech companies would also get an extension.

The Electronic Transactions Association (ETA), which represents the tech companies, has vowed to cooperate with the CFPB investigation, noting that the industry has “a good story to tell.”

“The modern payments industry is highly competitive, highly regulated and focused on protecting consumers,” Scott Talbott, an ETA spokesman, said in an email statement. “We support regulations for safety and soundness and consumer protection based on the risk profile of the financial services provider.”

According to the bank trade groups, the CFPB should keep in mind how much control consumers have over their data and the protections they have against fraud or the loss of value. They also urged it to consider how to preserve consumer choice and competition when it reviews the tech companies’ responses to the bureau’s orders.

“Big tech is increasingly making inroads into finance and financial services, including payments,” the ABA and CBA said. “Companies like Google and Apple provide payments services and steadily are comprising a larger segment of the market.”

Square’s peer-to-peer payment service Cash App is a case in point. As the trade groups noted, as of December 2020, Cash App had 36 million monthly customers and an estimated 80 million have conducted a transaction through the service.

“However, despite the level of growth and engagement these companies have into the financial services market, they are not supervised and regulated like banks offering these same services,” the letter says. “As the consolidation of large companies in the payments market continues, including consolidation of financial technology companies (fintechs), these risks will only become more pronounced. “

Consumers also often don’t understand the ramifications of dealing with the tech companies in terms of safeguarding their personal confidential information, the bank trade associations said.

“Consumers can make better-informed choices if they more fully understand a big tech’s ability to collect and use a consumer’s financial transaction data, or directly and regularly access their bank account using their sign in and password,” the letter says.  “To the extent a big tech uses financial data collected from consumers to offer, market, or underwrite new products, consumers should not lose the protections otherwise available to them when dealing with a regulated bank.”

Source: Payments Dive


23% Global eCommerce spike coming between Thanksgiving and Cyber Monday
Previous Article
Retailers Face Brand New Competitor: Gas Prices
Next Article

7355 California Avenue
Boardman, OH 44512
p: 330.702.8415
    800.487.5577
f: 330.702.8416
    866.476.8416

© 2023 FiNet, Inc.

FiNet is a registered ISO/MSP of BMO Harris Bank NA

Privacy Policy
Envelope Facebook-f Twitter Linkedin Youtube

Community Banks

Community Banks Home
Program Overview
Dashboard
Marketing Resources

Merchants

Processing Services
Business Mgmt/Payments
Retail POS Systems
Additional Solutions
FREE Cost Analysis

Company

Contact Us
Click to access the login or register cheese
Manage Cookie Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}