Frequently Asked Questions
Q: If Merchant Accounts are set up and
maintained at Acquiring Banks, what role do ISOs
such as the Company’s I.C.E. subsidiary play?
A: As member/owners of the Visa and
MasterCard Associations, Acquiring Banks
originally did handle all Merchant Acquiring
activities; soliciting new accounts from their
business customers, and processing the
applications when they came in. Some still do.
However, most banks divested or outsourced their
acquiring operations in the 1980s, effectively
turning the industry over to third-party
specialists that were better equipped to
organize and manage broad-based sales and
marketing activities. Today, most new Merchant
Accounts are solicited by independent agents and
Independent Sales Organizations (ISOs).
Q: Why don’t the thousands of agents that
solicit new Merchant Account business throughout
the U.S. go directly to the Acquiring Banks—why
do agents need to go through I.C.E. or another
ISO?
A: Although, at the grass-roots level,
Merchant Acquiring is largely a function of
marketing and sales, the business is still part
of the financial services industry. Moreover,
Merchant Accounts are very different from the
ordinary checking or savings accounts that a
business might open at their local bank. For one
thing, Acquiring Banks assume a certain
financial risk in the form of taking
responsibility for merchants on all of their
credit card transactions—i.e., the banks are
responsible for making sure the merchants
ultimately get paid after a customer leaves the
premises with their purchase. Further, the
establishment and administering of a Merchant
Account involves a host of additional activities
that aren’t needed in an ordinary account,
including: Payment processing; risk management,
including fraud prevention; account-data
management and reporting; charge backs—i.e., the
billing of merchants for the purpose of
recovering charges that have been successfully
disputed by a cardholder; and, collections.
These are among the activities that the
Acquiring Banks divested or outsourced years
ago, and that are now largely handled through
ISOs. And finally, ISOs and Acquiring Banks have
formal relationships whereby the ISOs are
sponsored by one or more Acquiring Banks to act
on their behalf—agents have no such
relationship.
Q: Which Acquiring Bank sponsors I.C.E.?
A: The Company’s I.C.E. subsidiary is sponsored
by Wells Fargo Bank.
Q: How does I.C.E.
successfully compete for this business?
A: We compete by offering the kinds of
services that appeal to our target market—the
agents and ISOs that focus predominantly on
serving the smaller merchant segment of the
market. More specifically, on the Merchant
Account processing side, being powered by
First Data Corporation enables us to utilize all
of that company’s processing networks. On the
customer service side, I.C.E. specializes in the kind of
highly responsive personal attention that other
providers—particularly the larger ones—are
unable to match for a variety of reasons.
Ultimately, the electronic transaction
processing industry is highly
relationship-oriented, largely as a result of
the interdependence that exists between the
various types of entities that make up the
industry. Accordingly, our marketing and sales
efforts targeting the agent and ISO community
are specifically designed to establish and
reinforce the personal rapport that builds
long-term loyalty.
Q: Why does I.C.E.
concentrate on the smaller merchant segment of
the market?
A: The simple answer is: that’s where the
action is. More specifically, the consolidation
that has taken place in the industry since the
1980s has created a large “service gap” as the
bigger providers trended toward reliance on
computerized operations to manage their vast
portfolios of Merchant Accounts. Simply put,
they no longer maintain enough customer service
personnel to provide hands-on, flexible
responses to the inquiries and technical issues
that arise with smaller businesses—it is not
worth it to them when measured against their
larger customers. Instead, whatever personal
interaction they do provide is often
characterized by standard “formula-based”
answers that often frustrate smaller customers.
In a very real sense, the bigger providers have
ceded the smaller merchant segment to smaller
providers that are willing to fill the gap.
Q: Isn’t it expensive to provide personal
attention to smaller merchants?
A: Yes, customer service operations are
more costly when offered in a personal, flexible
manner. However, smaller merchants still
represent a very profitable segment, and smaller
merchants generally pay higher transaction fees.
Q: Doesn’t the fact that the ten largest
providers in the industry already control 80% of
the market severely limit International Card
Establishment’s long-term opportunity?
A: Not at all, for three important
reasons:
1. Smaller merchants represent the largest and
fastest growing segment in the market. According
to U.S. Census Bureau estimates, for example,
there are approximately 20 million businesses in
the U.S. with average revenues under $1 million
a year that collectively generate $1.7 trillion
in annual sales. New businesses are launched
every day, and existing businesses switch their
Merchant Accounts to better service providers
every day;
2. The Company’s rapidly growing customer base
for merchant card services and equipment leasing
represent a highly valuable foundation that
supports the pursuit of additional revenue
generating operations, such as I.C.E.’s
Gift & Loyalty smart-card system; and,
3. Despite the fact that credit and debit cards
have been in existence for over 30 years, the
electronic transaction processing industry is
still in its relative infancy. Worldwide,
consumers make an estimated 2.3 trillion
purchases of one form or another each year, of
which only about 100 billion are made with
credit or debit cards—just 4.3%. Another 100
billion or so are made with checks, leaving an
estimated 2.1 trillion purchases paid for with
cash. Given the universal appeal of convenience
among consumers, there is little question that
the trend toward electronic transactions will
continue steadily for the foreseeable future.
Even in the U.S., which is considered a
relatively mature market in terms of credit and
debit card usage, some industry analysts have
projected that by 2005, credit and debit card
transactions at the point-of-sale will double
from the present level of 27 billion
transactions to 54 billion transactions.
Of course, each of those transactions will
generate a fee for the company that services the
Merchant Account.
Q: Is that why you are actively pursuing
the acquisition of existing Merchant Account
portfolios?
A: Exactly—every account we acquire adds
to our recurring revenue streams. In addition,
however, the acquisition of existing portfolios
also increases our economies of scale, while
providing new opportunities for the sale of our
other products and services—not least of which
being our I.C.E.'s Gift & Loyalty system and
equipment leasing services.
Q: Given the level of competition in the
industry for existing Merchant Account
portfolios, how will International Card
Establishment succeed in acquiring portfolios at
reasonable cost?
A: Competing effectively for choice
Merchant Account portfolios is one of the
reasons why we decided to become a public
company. Certainly, there are advantages to
being public when it comes to raising capital
for such acquisitions. However, the Company’s
stock is, itself, a very viable “currency”—i.e.,
another type of payment that can be utilized as
an incentive for a given agent or ISO to do
business with us. This is particularly
appropriate when dealing with agents and ISOs
that want to “monetize” their portfolios yet
remain active in the business—i.e., they can
fund their ongoing operations through the sale
of a portfolio, while also having a chance to
benefit stock-wise from any long-term success
that the portfolio helps to bring about.
which is also one of the reasons we are pursuing
a non-conversion portfolio acquisition strategy.
In addition to the benefit of lower costs and
reduced attrition rates that follow such an
acquisition, we believe, and have confirmed,
that the chance to retain a carried interest in
the success of a portfolio after it is sold is a
highly attractive incentive for sellers.
If
you have questions of your own about the
business, operations, market, or long-term
strategy of International Card
Establishment, Inc., please contact:
Philippe Niemetz
PAN Consultants, Ltd.
Phone: (212) 344-6464 1-800-477-7570
Fax: (212) 618-1276
Email: p.niemetz@panconsultants.com
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