Analysis-ECB, banks rift hampers Europe’s efforts to loosen reliance on US payments giants

By Jesús Aguado and Valentina Za MADRID/MILAN, May 22 (Reuters) – Europe’s push to curb its dependence on U.S. payments giants Visa and Mastercard has driven a wedge between the European Central Bank and financial firms keen to shield revenues, hobbling efforts to build a home-grown system, several people involved said. A surge in cashless…


Analysis-ECB, banks rift hampers Europe’s efforts to loosen reliance on US payments giants

By Jesús Aguado and Valentina Za

MADRID/MILAN, May 22 (Reuters) – Europe’s push to curb its dependence on U.S. payments giants Visa and Mastercard has driven a wedge between the European Central Bank and financial firms keen to shield revenues, hobbling efforts to build a home-grown system, several people involved said.

A surge in cashless payments since the COVID-19 ‌pandemic has increased the euro zone’s reliance on U.S. firms, which handle nearly two thirds of card payments in the bloc. Companies such as PayPal and Apple have also ‌expanded.

European policymakers have made payments sovereignty a strategic priority, as a fragmenting global order raises the risk of access to payments systems being weaponised and new forms of money challenge the euro’s role.

The ECB is looking to introduce a digital euro ​by 2029 – essentially an online wallet guaranteed by the ECB but operated by private companies including banks.

European banks, however, have expressed concerns that a digital euro would see customers transfer some cash from banks to the safety of an ECB-guaranteed wallet, and are exploring different options.

On Wednesday, 25 more banks, including ABN Amro and Sabadell, joined a European consortium planning to launch a euro-pegged cryptocurrency.

“Public and private actors are moving in the same strategic direction, but with misaligned incentives and timelines,” said Paolo Gusmerini, director for digital banking at consultancy PwC.

CAP ON MERCHANT FEES

The financial sector’s concerns have held up legislation, in the European Parliament, to issue ‌a digital currency for three years.

Fernando Navarrete, the EU lawmaker overseeing ⁠the legislation, told Reuters that negotiations regarding the exact role of the digital euro were still ongoing though he expected a final vote to take place before the end of the summer.

“Europe is moving toward payment sovereignty by developing both private interoperable payment solutions and the digital euro. The real challenge is to ⁠make the development of both options compatible and efficient without imposing additional costs on citizens,” Navarrete said.

“And that depends on the design choices and incentives we agree upon in European legislation.”

The ECB plans to supply for free the infrastructure it is building to support digital euro payments and to cap merchant fees for accepting them.

With euro zone card payments worth around 3.4 trillion euros ($3.9 trillion) a year, the cap could cost the private payments ​system ​8 billion to 9 billion euros in lost annual revenues, Reuters calculations on ECB data show.

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