| The
Value in Stored-Value
By Lauri Giesen
Marketing stored-value cards such
as gift cards brings in fee income and may help attract
some new customers.
Banks often borrow
ideas from retailers, particularly in the realm of branch
design and customer service. But products? There hasn't
seemed to be much of a correlation between financial products
and the things you can buy at, say, Borders and Starbucks.
Now there is. The product is a
gift card, the stored-value card that retailers found
to be especially popular with their customers during the
Christmas holiday season. A survey by Dallas-based Paymentech,
a processor of retail payments, estimates that 30% of
consumers received a gift card last holiday season.
Inspired by this success, the
bank credit card associations have come up with an array
of card products that can be used by consumers or corporate
employees, either to pay for goods in stores or to retrieve
cash from automated teller machines. In addition to gift
cards, these Visa- or MasterCard-branded product packages
can include payroll cards, travel cards, teen cards, incentive
cards and project cards. They're known as "stored-value"
cards because the monetary value is stored in an account
held by the issuer and accessed by a magnetic stripe on
the back of the card.
Financial institutions can benefit
from these cards in several ways. Providers generate fee
income by selling the cards to consumers, as well as through
interchange revenue, typically just under one percentage
point of the purchase price, whenever the cards are used
to make purchases. Some early issuers also say they've
been able to attract new customers with these cards
particularly those previously "un-banked"
and reinforce loyalty from established ones.
Potential drawbacks would include
the risk of criminals getting hold of the cards, although
issuers say the amount of actual fraud has been extremely
small thus far. There are also some operational issues
involving staff training in the branches and making sure
sufficient card inventory is available.
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Another potential problem relates
to litigation involving debit cards. The recent settlement
has the potential to reduce the interchange fees banks
can earn from stored value cards (see
sidebar). But none of these issues should deter institutions
from taking a serious look at this market.
A couple of dozen banks have already
dipped their toes in the water, including such major institutions
as Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc., and Comerica
Inc. And the field is expected to get crowded quickly.
Half the 20 large banks responding to a recent survey
by Unisys Corp., Global Concepts and Talson Associates
said they were interested in issuing stored-value cards,
although only a few were ready to reveal specific plans.
Of the stored-value products on the market, payroll cards
attracted the most attention from these banks, followed
closely by the gift cards.
"Banks are definitely interested,
but most are still trying to decide how they will play,"
says Janet Jones, consulting manager for Unisys' North
American payment practice in Charlotte, N.C.
Consumer
Direct
Most stored-value cards fall into
one of two categories direct-to-consumer and workplace-related
cards. The first group includes gift cards, consumer travel
cards and teen cards. Travel cards are purchased by consumers
as a substitute for traveler's checks, while teen cards
are purchased by parents for use by their children. The
parents fund the cards and then the teenagers can use
them to make purchases at any retailer that accepts Visa
and MasterCard. Parents can often set limits on usage
for example, banning purchases at liquor stores
or bars.
Workplace cards include payroll
cards, which are issued by corporations to employees in
lieu of a paycheck; corporate travel and entertainment
cards; incentive cards, given as employee bonuses; project
cards, which allow employees to pay for supplies and related
services needed to complete work-related projects; and
medical insurance cards, which are used to manage the
funds employees put into their flexible spending accounts.
The most popular stored-value
card today is the gift card, which retailers have seized
upon to build a $38-billion business that is growing rapidly,
according to New York-based Bain & Co., a business
consulting company. A recent Unisys survey of 101 national
merchants found half of them either currently issuing
or planning to issue gift cards this year.
Despite their popularity, these
retailer-issued cards have one disadvantage: they typically
can only be used at that retailer's store. Many customers
would prefer to give gift cards that can be used in a
wide variety of locations and incorporate the same benefits
and protections against loss that they receive from credit
cards. Hoping to fill that need, some banks are issuing
gift cards with their own brands as well as those of Visa
and MasterCard.
The market does seem to hold potential
for banks. Only 3% of consumers in the Unisys survey had
purchased gift cards from a bank or credit card company,
compared with 52% who bought them from retailers. Yet,
28% of consumers responding to the survey indicated some
degree of willingness to buy the cards from banks.
One of the first banks to sell
gift cards was National City Corp. For several years,
the Cleveland-based bank had offered a re-loadable teen
card. Over time, it found customers wanted a lower- priced,
disposable card that could be given as a gift. This past
November, National City began marketing Visa-affiliated
gift cards from its Web site and branches.
Cards purchased via the Net can
be personalized with an embossed name or message or ordered
in a standard form. The branches sell only the non-personal
cards. The personalized cards sell for between $4.95 and
$8.95, depending on the denomination retained in the card,
while the plain cards cost $2.95. Cards are sold in various
denominations between $25 and $500. Unlike the teen cards,
the gift cards are not re-loadable.
While National City initially
viewed gift cards as a way to satisfy established customers,
the bank has also found the product has generated some
new customers. "Because few banks are selling these
cards from their branch counters yet, we have an edge,"
says Roger Piskos, senior vice president and group manager
of emerging technologies. "A lot of consumers are
coming into our branches just to buy these cards, which
gives us the opportunity to present our other products
and services."
Bank of America, pioneering another
approach, has partnered with Simon Property Group Inc.,
the nation's largest owner and manager of shopping malls,
to create a Simon-branded Visa gift card. This card is
sold at customer service stations in the 249 malls owned
by the group, but can be redeemed at any store that accepts
Visa gift cards. Bank of America reportedly shares with
Simon in the revenue generated by the card. BofA also
sells its own Visa gift card directly to consumers.
Cards for
Work
While gift cards seem to be leading
the stored-value charge for now, work-related cards may
offer even more potential for financial institutions.
In late 2002, MasterCard unveiled
an array of stored-value cards that banks can promote
to their corporate customers, who then issue them to their
employees. The most popular of these cards are payroll
cards. Typically directed toward people who don't have
checking accounts, payroll cards allow corporations to
load the value of an employee's pay onto a card, which
then can be used to access funds held in a special account.
The employee can use the card to retrieve cash from ATMs
that sport the MasterCard logo and make purchases at any
location that accepts MasterCard. Visa offers similar
payroll and work-related products and formed a separate
division in 2002 to oversee all its stored-value card
products.
Unlike gift cards, which are typically
secured by a signature, the payroll cards generally involve
the use of a personal identification number so that they
can be accepted at ATMs and other retail locations that
accept PIN-based debit transactions. These cards also
can be used with a signature at those locations that do
not feature PIN pads.
St. Louis-based First Banks Inc.
was one of the first institutions to look at payroll cards.
Since last year, it has sold MasterCard-branded payroll
cards through two third-party companies. Starting this
summer, it plans to sell the product directly to its commercial
customers. Several larger banks, including Bank of America,
Comerica, ABN AMRO Holding N.V., and J.P. Morgan Chase
& Co., also offer stored-value cards to corporate
customers.
Shannon Phelps, vice president
of card products for First Banks, says many corporations
want to shift more of their employees to automatic deposit
in order to cut administrative costs, but are hindered
by the fact that many employees lack bank accounts. Such
workers include teens, part-time staff, temporary employees
and immigrants. Stored-value cards provide the employer
with the same cost savings as electronic payments while
making it easy for employees to access their cash.
In a recent study of the economics
of the payroll card, Boston-based Celent Communications
estimated about 13% of U.S. households are un-banked and
that it costs employers $1.90 to cut a paycheck for each
employee in these households. In addition to the cost
of actually issuing the checks, these employers spend
between $10 and $12 per check replacing lost or stolen
checks. Corporations that shift from checks to plastic
cards can reduce their total check costs by 70%.
Employees also fare better with
cards. According to Celent, un-banked employees who use
check-cashing services pay an average of 2.5% of the check's
value to check cashers, with some fees reaching 8%. These
numbers would indicate banks could charge either the corporation
and/or employees a few dollars for each card per pay period
and still provide both with cost savings.
Banks can also offer corporations
a variety of other stored-value products for employee
compensation. Corporate travel stored-value cards, for
example, can be used to fund the travel of employees who
venture out only a few times a year. Such limited travel
may not justify the issuance of a corporate credit card,
but stored value provides a similar ease of payment for
an employee while giving the corporation documentation,
including a monthly statement that shows how funds are
being spent.
Value Exchange
There are several ways that banks
can make money from stored-value cards. With the consumer
cards, there is first the upfront fee, typically a couple
of dollars per card above the value retained. Then, with
re-loadable cards, there is usually a flat fee charged
each time the card is loaded. Additionally, card issuers
receive interchange fees when a card is used to make a
purchase.
Executives with National City
and First Bank say they are booking interchange fees on
a par with what they get on a signature-based debit card
transaction, which currently exceeds 1%. That amount is
expected to be lowered to about 75 basis points starting
in August, due to the recent settlement of litigation
between a group of retailers and Visa and MasterCard.
Finally, on the disposable cards,
there are often unused amounts that banks get to keep.
For example, if a consumer is given a $50 gift card and
spends everything but 75 cents, he or she may decide to
just toss the card. National City's Piskos describes the
unused funds that the bank keeps as "quite small,"
but even small amounts can add up to a significant sum
when spread over millions of cards. And as gift cards
grow in popularity, these funds may become quite substantial.
With employee cards, banks can
structure deals with the sponsoring corporation in a number
of different ways. Sometimes, employees may be charged
a monthly fee. Other times, the corporation may pay the
bank a monthly or flat servicing fee for all its employees.
Or both the corporation and employee could share the cost.
Either way, banks also receive interchange from payroll
cards when those cards are redeemed in retail locations.
Float is a big factor with payroll
cards because the amount of funds that consumers keep
on their cards can be quite high. While business travel
cards and other work-related cards may not involve sums
that large, float continues to be a factor because the
funds often stay on the card a lot longer than is the
case with payroll cards.
In addition to direct revenue,
banks have the potential to use stored-value cards to
attract new customers, although there is disagreement
about the effectiveness of this strategy. Taking the positive
view, Bill Mathis, senior vice president of member relations
for MasterCard International in Purchase, N.Y., says stored-value
cards are "great at increasing bank brand recognition
and at going after the un-banked market, particularly
young, newly-employed consumers who are just entering
the job market."
Others point out that this un-banked
market can be costly to serve. "A lot of banks find
they're generating a lot more traffic in their branches,
but it may not be traffic they want. Customers they attract
may not keep large balances in their accounts and may
not be very profitable to serve," says Les Riedl,
executive vice president of Speer & Associates, an
Atlanta-based bank consulting firm.
Riedl concludes that banks not
wanting to actively pursue the un-banked market might
be better off selling gift cards from the Web or via telephone
orders.
Managing
Risk
The risk of loss from fraud also
has the potential to offset gains from any new business
activity. But bank executives who have issued stored-value
cards say the incidence of fraud is lower than they had
expected. "Our fraud rate has been much lower than
with either credit or debit cards," says National
City's Piskos. "And there is a lot that banks can
do to reduce their exposure."
Small amounts of personal information
about the user captured at the time of purchase can be
used to verify identity at the point of sale, for example.
Also, banks can put a freeze on all cards reported as
missing. "With stored-value cards, you don't have
to worry about credit risk or whether the customer has
the funds in a checking account to cover the purchase,
because with gift cards, you always know the funds are
good," Piskos says, referring to the fact that stored-value
card funds are stored in a separate account.
In the case of gift cards, most
institutions also limit the value of funds that can be
retained on the card usually to about $500
so even if the card is misused, the loss to the bank is
usually small.
Both Visa and MasterCard offer
banks assistance in risk management by replicating some
of the fraud prevention efforts they've developed for
credit and debit cards. "We help the issuers understand
the risk, and we've developed guidelines and procedures
that work to mitigate any losses," Mathis says.
Outside of fraud risk, there are
other costs associated with running a stored-value program.
If banks are to sell gift cards or other consumer card
products in the branches, staff training is required.
And there are inventory issues for banks with large branch
networks. "You have to make sure all the branches
have enough cards and remember that during the peak seasons,
such as near graduation and holidays, you'll need a lot
more cards," Piskos says.
Re-loadable cards may create other
concerns, according to Phelps at First Banks. "If
you're going to issue re-loadable cards, you have to make
sure that you have reloading mechanisms accessible to
your customers. The teens usually like to use the Web
to load value, but many un-banked cardholders may not
have Web access."
But once these logistical issues
are tackled, banks issuing stored-value cards say they're
happy with the programs. "Early sales have exceeded
our expectations and we've found little risk," says
Piskos. "Overall, the program has been quite popular
and we're looking to expand into other stored-value card
products."
Ms.
Giesen is a freelance writer based in Libertyville, Ill.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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