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Mastercard fees were anti-competitive, court upholds | |
(about 2 hours later) | |
The European Court of Justice has upheld a ruling that fees charged by Mastercard were anti-competitive. | |
The court said regulators were right to condemn the cost of its interchange fees - the fees retailers pay banks to process card payments - and has rejected an appeal. | |
Mastercard was investigated last year for the amount it charged for card transactions in Europe. | |
The company's president said the ruling was "disappointing". | |
Javier Perez, president of MasterCard Europe said despite that, the ruling would have "little or no impact on how MasterCard operates". | |
He said: "We will continue to comply with the decision as we have been doing for a number of years. This means we would maintain our European... cross-border consumer interchange fees at a weighted average of 0.2% for debit and 0.3% for credit." | |
Mastercard is the second-largest credit and debit card company after Visa. | Mastercard is the second-largest credit and debit card company after Visa. |
UK retailers welcomed the court's decision. Helen Dickinson, director general of the British Retail Consortium, said: "We are delighted with this historic ruling. | |
"Capping these excessive and anti-competitive fees will support the UK retail industry and others, boosting our ability to invest and innovate while continuing to deliver lower prices and value for customers." | |
The decision ends MasterCard's seven-year battle against a decision made by the EU's competition watchdog. |
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