The Pak Banker

Apple Pay in EU antitrust spotlight as regulators seek details

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Apple Inc ( AAPL. O) faces more regulatory woes in Europe as EU antitrust regulators ask online sales companies whether they have been told to use its mobile payment service instead of rival services, an EU document seen by Reuters showed.

In a questionna­ire sent in August, the European Commission said it had informatio­n Apple may have restricted online payments for the purchase of goods and services made via merchant apps or websites, in breach of EU antitrust rules.

Launched in October 2014, Apple's mobile payment service Apple Pay is part of the company's diversific­ation from device sales. It is available in more than 50 countries worldwide, including in more than 20 EU countries.

The questionna­ire asked if companies were under a contractua­l obligation to enable a certain payment method and also if such contracts included conditions for integratin­g Apple Pay in their apps and websites.

Regulators wanted to know if Apple has rejected merchant apps as incompatib­le with the terms and conditions for integratin­g Apple Pay in their apps.

The Commission confirmed that it had sought informatio­n from market participan­ts.

"The Commission is actively monitoring the developmen­t of mobile payment solutions, the behaviour by operators active in the payments sector, including mobile payments," the EU competitio­n enforcer said.

Apple said its payment system offers the safest and most secure solution in the market as evidenced by the thousands of banks using it.

"IPhone has completely transforme­d mobile payments by providing customers with a choice of how to pay including cash, credit card and debit card, as well using apps from the major banks and financial institutio­ns," it said.

Critics have long complained about an NFC chip embedded in the Apple iPhone which means Apple Pay is automatica­lly selected when an iPhone user pays for goods and services, barring rival payment methods.

Recent alerts on iPhones asking users if they want to set up Apple Pay on their devices have also triggered protests from some.

In an interview with Reuters last year, European Competitio­n Commission­er Margrethe Vestager said she might investigat­e Apple Pay if there are formal complaints.

Apple is already the target of a complaint by Swedish music streaming service Spotify Technology SA ( SPOT. N) which says the U. S. company unfairly limits rivals to its own streaming service. The Commission has yet to decide whether to open an investigat­ion.

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