ANZ's Apple Pay exclusivity drives credit card applications, other Australian banks take notice
Australian bank ANZ earlier this month observed a 20 percent spike in online credit card and deposit account applications after announcing support for Apple Pay, results that have prompted holdouts to rethink their position on Apple's payments service.

In April, ANZ became the first of Australia's "big four" banks to break rank and adopt Apple Pay, rolling out initial support for bank issued Visa credit and debit cards. Shortly after the service launched, chief executive Shayne Elliott credited the ensuing social media buzz with a 20 percent uptick in applications and heightened interest in the company's website, The Australian Financial Review reported last week. The bank's Apple Pay mini site, for example, logged 61,000 unique visitors over four days.
The remaining big four banks, Commonwealth Bank, National Australia Bank and Westpac, resisted Apple's advances in a bid to protect their credit card transaction fees, which the report estimates is worth billions of dollars. To net Apple Pay, ANZ supposedly agreed to offer Apple a slice of its interchange fees, though specifics surrounding the deal remain secret.
According to the publication, the Reserve Bank of Australia is looking to lower transaction fees to 30 cents for $100 of transactions, down from 50 cents per $100. By comparison, Apple is thought to net 15 cents for every $100 Apple Pay transaction in the U.S.
With ANZ demonstrating a successful launch, Commonwealth, NAB and Westpac are once again negotiating terms for future Apple Pay integration, the report said. The banks are apparently willing to entertain the idea, as Westpac already offers a touchless payments solution for Samsung devices, while NAB introduced its own branded product for Android in January.
Transaction fees, however, are not Apple's endgame. The Cupertino tech giant has made it abundantly clear that Apple Pay is first and foremost a value added iOS platform feature. For example, when negotiating terms to bring Apple Pay into China, Apple reportedly agreed to take half of its normal fee rate. Revenue from Apple Pay pales in comparison to hardware device sales and the sustained income of a "sticky" ecosystem.
Apple Pay is currently available in the U.S., Canada, China, Australia, Singapore, and the UK. With the introduction of iPhone SE, Apple's entire smartphone lineup -- and Apple Watch --supports touchless NFC transactions.

In April, ANZ became the first of Australia's "big four" banks to break rank and adopt Apple Pay, rolling out initial support for bank issued Visa credit and debit cards. Shortly after the service launched, chief executive Shayne Elliott credited the ensuing social media buzz with a 20 percent uptick in applications and heightened interest in the company's website, The Australian Financial Review reported last week. The bank's Apple Pay mini site, for example, logged 61,000 unique visitors over four days.
The remaining big four banks, Commonwealth Bank, National Australia Bank and Westpac, resisted Apple's advances in a bid to protect their credit card transaction fees, which the report estimates is worth billions of dollars. To net Apple Pay, ANZ supposedly agreed to offer Apple a slice of its interchange fees, though specifics surrounding the deal remain secret.
According to the publication, the Reserve Bank of Australia is looking to lower transaction fees to 30 cents for $100 of transactions, down from 50 cents per $100. By comparison, Apple is thought to net 15 cents for every $100 Apple Pay transaction in the U.S.
With ANZ demonstrating a successful launch, Commonwealth, NAB and Westpac are once again negotiating terms for future Apple Pay integration, the report said. The banks are apparently willing to entertain the idea, as Westpac already offers a touchless payments solution for Samsung devices, while NAB introduced its own branded product for Android in January.
Transaction fees, however, are not Apple's endgame. The Cupertino tech giant has made it abundantly clear that Apple Pay is first and foremost a value added iOS platform feature. For example, when negotiating terms to bring Apple Pay into China, Apple reportedly agreed to take half of its normal fee rate. Revenue from Apple Pay pales in comparison to hardware device sales and the sustained income of a "sticky" ecosystem.
Apple Pay is currently available in the U.S., Canada, China, Australia, Singapore, and the UK. With the introduction of iPhone SE, Apple's entire smartphone lineup -- and Apple Watch --supports touchless NFC transactions.
Comments
So when one bank offers a superior payment solution I could see people switching and/or opening another account to access that feature.
The security alone (no more skimmed cards) is pretty compelling.
ffs jeez, NFC is everywhere ...
Go Apple Pay !
If my old bank adopts it, I'm not gonna switch back.
To be honest I would have switched even without the lower fees as long as it didn't make me worse off. The security and convenience of Pay alone would have made it worth the switch.
It's great to see though that the vote of confidence from consumers has got the other banks reconsidering their stance against Pay.
Hopefully as more banks and more customers in the US sign up for Pay the merchants will follow. But the US seems a bit more restart to change in this area.
For comparison, I use another bank (not a Big Four) whose mobile app shows available balance on login and all pending transactions in the list view (with an hourglass indicator) which is SO much more useful; I know at a glance how much money I still really have, and what’s been “paid for” as far as I’m concerned (and that includes direct debits / recurring payments etc).
As fantastic as having Apple Pay is as a payment method, after trialling it about half a dozen times I’m seriously disappointed in the underlying systems and communications from ANZ’s online side, and probably won’t be using it again until another bank with a more informative mobile app starts offering it.
But Xander is right. The lack of pending transactions in ANZ's online banking and app is ridiculous.