Apple Pay will definitely make paying for merchandise and services much easier at participating merchants, but what does Apple get out of the deal? We mean besides the 0.15% of each transaction we already know about.
Sanjay Sakhrani of Keefe, Bruyette & Woods was able to get a look at an Apple Pay contract, and in a note published on Friday, Sakhrani stated that Apple Pay terms and conditions were “in-line” with expectations, but he also highlighted several notable points:
While we knew about the 0.15% per transaction fee, the half a penny per debit transaction is news.
Card issuers must allow 95% of their portfolio to participate in Apple Pay, that’s anything with a credit card company logo on it, excepting gift cards or ATM-only cash cards.
Up to twice yearly audits on the amounts issuers pay to Apple will likely keep them on the straight and narrow, and the data Apple requires to be reported will also give them a good idea what consumers are paying for via their device’s Apple Pay capabilities.