Over 200 million chip enabled payment cards issued in the US


  • TECH
  • Tuesday, 29 Sep 2015

Security measure: US consumers will be required to carry a new kind of card in October.

In an effort to reduce counterfeit and credit card fraud more than 200 million payment cards have been issued with embedded computer chips in the US, ahead of a Oct 1 deadline for the switch to such cards, according to the Smart Card Alliance.

Credit card companies have set the October deadline which will require US consumers to carry a new kind of card and retailers across the nation to upgrade payment terminals.

Randy Vanderhook, executive director at the Smart Card Alliance which counts Visa Inc, MasterCard Inc, American Express Co and Discover Financial Services as its members told Reuters there are many more chip cards in the hands of consumers than there are merchant locations that are equipped to accept them.

"Many people have multiple cards in their wallet," Vanderhook said.

"So even if people get one card in their wallet that's their primary shopping card then it doesn't matter that there are still hundreds of thousands of other cards that have yet to be replaced."

The Alliance expects to issue 600 million chip-enabled cards by 2015. The total number of payment cards in the US stands at approximately 1.2 billion, which includes credit, debit, charge and other forms of payment cards.

US retailers are investing US$8.65bil (RM38.4bil) for upgrading their payment terminals and some including Target Corp are prepared to accept the new cards. It is not entirely clear at the moment how many US retailers have upgraded their payment terminals.

"Retailers are making an enormous investment in order to upgrade their terminals to accept these cards," said Brian Dodge, executive vice president of the Retail Industry Leaders Association.

"But the level of security in these cards is not what it should be and it is not equal to what is available in the rest of the world," Dodge said.

US banks and card companies will not issue personal identification numbers (PINs) with the new credit cards, an additional security measure that would render stolen or lost cards virtually useless when making in-person purchases at a retail outlet.

Instead, they will stick with the present system of requiring signatures.

Analysts predict that credit card fraud at brick-and-mortar retailers will fall after the introduction of chip-enabled cards, but that online fraud will rise, as has happened in other countries using the technology.

Research and consulting firm Aite Group estimates US online card fraud will more than double to $6.6bil (RM29.3bil) from $3.3bil (RM14.6bil) between 2015 and 2018. — Reuters

Limited time offer:
Just RM5 per month.

Monthly Plan

RM13.90/month
RM5/month

Billed as RM5/month for the 1st 6 months then RM13.90 thereafters.

Annual Plan

RM12.33/month

Billed as RM148.00/year

1 month

Free Trial

For new subscribers only


Cancel anytime. No ads. Auto-renewal. Unlimited access to the web and app. Personalised features. Members rewards.
Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Tech News

Scientists develop ‘intelligent’ liquid with programmable response
Restaurants are putting digital detox on the menu with smartphone-free dining
To stand out in the job market, get to grips with ChatGPT
Amazon ad exec Aubrey steps aside for new role
Stablecoin Tether gets boost as dollar alternative in emerging markets, CEO says
Google scraps minimum wage, benefits rules for suppliers and staffing firms
Trump media shares gain as it suggests 'potential market manipulation'
Apple's offer to open up tap-and-go tech to be approved by EU next month, sources say
Dutch privacy watchdog recommends government organisations stop using Facebook
Nigerian court adjourns Binance and executives' tax evasion trial to May 17

Others Also Read