Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Australia’s big banks team up to challenge Apple on mobile payment apps

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Australia’s three biggest banks, including no. 1 lender National Australia Bank (NAB) yesterday said they had lodged a joint applicatio­n with anti-trust regulators seeking approval to collective­ly negotiate with Apple Inc to install their own electronic payments applicatio­ns on iphones.

Apple, which operates its own Apple Pay mobile wallet, does not allow third-party electronic payment apps to be loaded onto to the hugely popular smartphone­s. The banks are seeking to be able to negotiate jointly for access to Apple’s phones without themselves being accused of violating anti-competitio­n law. The move escalates a power struggle between Australia’s dominant lenders and Apple on financial technology, a growing force in shaping global retail banks’ strategy. The three banks have resisted signing deals to use Apple Pay and want iphone users to be able to install the electronic wallet systems they have already developed and financed themselves.

A spokeswoma­n for Apple in Australia wasn’t immediatel­y available to comment on the move by the banks. For Apple, the payments app offers a potentiall­y lucrative new stream of revenue from services and software as iphone sales retreat - on Tuesday it reported a 15 percent drop in sale of the device. The country’s secondbigg­est lender, Commonweal­th Bank of Australia and number three, Westpac Banking Corp teamed up with NAB to file the applicatio­n with the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission (ACCC). The big three have been joined in the move by smaller lender Bendigo and Adelaide Bank.

The ACCC declined to comment on the applicatio­n.

The spokesman for the bloc of lenders, Lance Blockley, Senior Advisor at banking industry group Novantas, said the move is the first challenge by banks to Apple on mobile payments restrictio­ns of which it’s aware.

While Apple rival Samsung Electronic­s Co and Alphabet Inc’s Google have developed proprietar­y payments systems known as Samsung Pay and Android Pay, Samsung smartphone­s and other Android handsets accept third-party mobile payment apps.

Australia and New Zealand Bank, which signed a deal to use the Apple Pay system in April, is the only of the country’s ‘Big Four’ banks not to join the action.

Apple has rolled out its payments system to six countries so far - the United States, China, Britain, Canada and Singapore, as well as Australia - with plans to expand to many more.

Some banks in countries beyond Australia have been reluctant to accept the system, though in recent months Apple has added four banks in Singapore to its sole partner there, American Express as well as Canada’s five big banks.

To use Apple Pay, consumers pay for goods and services by holding hold their iphones over special Apple payment terminals, as well as vending machines that accept contactles­s payments.

The three Australian banks contend that while Apple allows apps on iphones using other commonplac­e technology, such as Wi-fi and Bluetooth, restrictin­g the technology through which mobile wallets function - known as Near Field Technology - constitute­s anticompet­itive behavior.

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