Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Banks roll out Venmo-style payments app

Zelle service starting out as add-on to banking apps

- BEN STEVERMAN

For years, banks have watched as their youngest customers split restaurant checks, shared utility bills, and pitched in for parties using third-party payment apps such as Venmo. Now, they’re trying to take back the person-to-person payments business by offering an app of their own.

Nineteen banks, including Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, and Wells Fargo, are teaming up to start Zelle, a website and app that will let users send and request money much like Venmo does. Bank of America says it is the first to incorporat­e all of Zelle’s capabiliti­es — including the ability to split bills between users — into its own mobile app, starting last week. A stand-alone Zelle payment app should be available to anyone with a debit card, regardless of where they bank, by the middle of the year.

Zelle has some stiff competitio­n from Venmo and its parent company PayPal Holdings Inc. Venmo, which started in 2009, processed $17.6 billion in transactio­ns last year, a 135 percent increase from the previous year.

In the common vernacular, “to Venmo” means to move money to and from friends and family. That’s a huge advantage, said Michael Moeser, director of payments at Javelin Strategy & Research. When presented with another option, “an avid Venmo user is going to ask, ‘Why do I need something else?’” he said.

Zelle’s not-so-secret weapon is its connection to the big banks where millions of Americans keep their money. Request $40 from a roommate over the Zelle network using Bank of America’s app and the money shows up in your account within minutes of when he agrees to send it. On Venmo, that $40 would show up in your Venmo wallet right away, but then it stays there. To get the cash in your hands, you need to log in to your Venmo account, cash out your balance, and wait — sometimes days — for the money to show up in your bank account.

Venmo is trying to accelerate that process. PayPal made deals with Mastercard Inc. and Visa Inc. to move money over their debit card networks. By the middle of 2017, it should be possible to cash out a PayPal or Venmo account instantly, according to PayPal Holdings spokesman Josh Criscoe.

Zelle was built by Early Warning, a bank-owned company that also runs the clearXchan­ge payment system. It’s no easy task to build an app that syncs with 19 large banks, four payment processors, and two card networks.

To launch the new app without disrupting the old systems, Zelle is being rolled out in phases: In the first, underway now, bank payment apps will incorporat­e Zelle’s options and basic design without any Zelle branding. Banks can add these features whenever they’re ready. Later, bank apps will tout Zelle branding, and, sometime in the first half of the year, a stand-alone app will launch.

Bank of America’s person-to-person payments will be free. Though members of the Zelle network will have the option to charge, it’s not clear if any banks will try to do so when Venmo and other payment apps cost nothing.

The lack of an obvious revenue opportunit­y may be one reason why it has taken

so long for banks to launch a serious competitor to Venmo. Moeser summarized the attitude of banks until recently: “Do I really care about two 18-year-olds sending $20 to each other? Maybe not.”

But the people designing Zelle imply their goal is much bigger than just helping college students split a pizza bill.

“This is a great time for us to move [person-to-person payments] from millennial­s to mainstream,” said Lou Anne Alexander, Early Warning’s group president for payments. The use of mobile banking apps is growing exponentia­lly, creating many more opportunit­ies for people of all ages to send and request money. “Any place we see checks and cash, that’s our target,” she said.

Because Zelle is sponsored by and connected to the banks, Alexander said users should feel more comfortabl­e using it for larger transactio­ns

and for a broader array of uses, from paying a contractor to collecting money for a school dance team. Zelle may also be used for business-toconsumer payments, such as insurance companies paying out claims.

Anything that promotes the use of digital payments is ultimately good for Venmo, said PayPal’s Criscoe. “The common enemyNisOV­cEaMsBhE.”R 2013

Zelle and Venmo $640.25 have a lot in common, with one major exception. Venmo is also a social app, where users can choose to make their transactio­ns, along with any associated emoji-filled messages, public. Criscoe said average users check Venmo two to three times a week just to see what their friends are up to.

Zelle users won’t have the option to spy on their friends’ payment activity. The idea was tested on consumers but fell flat with Zelle’s intended audience, Alexander said. “While appealing to some ages, it’s not really appealing to all.”

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