By VICTOR JUMA, vjuma@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- MasterCard partners with banks to offer high-security cards that will help curb fraud.
- Visa is the dominant global payment solutions firm in Kenya, but the shift from magnetic strip cards to chip-based versions by March 2014 has offered a chance for MasterCard to raise its market share.
- Equity Bank, the largest retail bank with an estimated eight million customers, has started issuing MasterCard-linked EMV debit and credit cards.
MasterCard is seeking to spoil the party for its top rival Visa, inking deals with Equity and KCB for introduction of high-security cards that will help curb fraud at ATMs and points of sale.
Visa is the dominant global payment solutions firm
in Kenya, but the shift from magnetic strip cards to chip-based
versions by March 2014 has offered a chance for MasterCard to raise its
market share.
Fraudsters have found it easier to steal customer
information stored on the magnetic strips, enabling them to execute
illegal transactions running into millions of shillings. This has
prompted the shift to the more secure Europay MasterCard Visa (EMV) chip
technology which MasterCard is using to deepen its presence.
Equity Bank, the largest retail bank with an
estimated eight million customers, has started issuing MasterCard-linked
EMV debit and credit cards.
Equity will replace millions of its self-branded
cards with the MasterCard ones, offering an alternative to those backed
by Visa for the first time.
“Get your new Equity auto branch MasterCard,” said the bank in a notice to its card holders.
KCB, the second largest retail bank with an
estimated 1.3 million customers, also recently teamed up with MasterCard
and retail chain Nakumatt to issue over one million chip-based cards.
Like the case with Equity, the partnership will
deepen the uptake of MasterCard cards among KCB customer base that has
largely relied on Visa-backed debit and credit cards
.
.
Financial Times notes that Visa has over
six million cards in circulation in Kenya, giving it a market share of
over 40 per cent out of a total of 15 million cards issued by the 43
banks.
MasterCard, which has also signed similar deals
with SME-focused I&M and DTB banks, is betting on the flurry of
activities to grow its business. MasterCard and Visa have the lion’s
share of the global payment services market and see a huge growth
potential in markets such as Kenya where uptake of formal financial
services is still low.
Latest statistics show that there are 21 million
deposit accounts in the country, but a significant number of these are
being offered on mobile phone platforms.
The payment services firms are, however,
interested on the smaller but growing rich and middle class consumers
who use cards to close cross-border and interbank transactions.
MasterCard and Visa charge fees for a number of
services for online transactions, use of ATM card in a different bank,
card transactions in foreign countries and payments of services and
goods in outlets like supermarkets, hotels and fuelling stations.
The firms’ aggressive expansion in Kenya and other
African markets come at a time when they face lower revenues in the
developed markets and increased competition from new players.
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