POS/PAYMENTS

  • Visa will pay some merchants to go cashless

    Visa Inc. is doing its best to usher in the cashless future.    The credit card giant has announced a new initiative, called the Visa Cashless Challenge, which will incentivize small merchants to move away from cash payments. Using an application-based format, Visa will award approximately $10,000 each to 50 eligible U.S.-based small business food service owners, including food truck owners.  
  • Study: Majority of shoppers favor ‘next-gen' payments

    Consumers are ready to leave paper-based checks behind.   In fact, 80% of Americans are in support of "futuristic" payments technologies and currencies, including tools like sensor fingerprinting, facial recognition, retinal scanning and voice control, as well as currencies like bitcoin. This was according to research from Viewpost, a B2B network provider for invoicing, payments and cash management.   
  • Fast-fashion giant steps up POS game with new partnership

    Eager to improve customer service and security at the front end, Forever 21 is converting its point-of-sale (POS) fleet to a single solution.   Through a partnership with Toshiba Global Commerce Solutions, the fast-fashion retailer is adding the vendor’s hardware, equipment and services across all its corporate stores around the globe. The agreement makes Toshiba the chain’s single point of contact for all POS systems, peripherals and original equipment manufacturer (OEM) front and back office retail store technology. 
  • Juniper: Retailers brace for $71 billion card-not-present fraud loss

    With fraudulent card-not-present (CNP) transactions on the rise, losses will become staggering over the next five years.    Retailers stand to lose $71 billion globally by 2022, driven by a number of factors, such as the United States' shift to Europay, MasterCard and Visa (EMV) chip cards, delays in 3DS 2.0 (3D-Secure) and click-and-collect fraud. This was according to “Online Payment Fraud: Emerging Threats, Key Vertical Strategies & Market Forecasts 2017-2022,” a report from Juniper Research. 
  • Study: The most popular store credit card is...

    A retailer that does nearly all of its transactions online has the most popular store credit card.   Amazon wins the store card battle, ranking as the top choice among consumers with store cards (32%), followed closely by Target (30%) and then Macy’s (24%).   
  • Study: Shoppers drawn to smart devices stay abreast of security

    A majority of Americans want to use connected devices to make purchases, yet they are keeping a keen eye on securing personal data.  
  • Office supplies giant still weighing takeover offer

    Staples Inc. has rejected a buyout offer.   The company turned down a takeover offer from Cerberus Capital Management, saying it was too low, Bloomberg reported. However, another private equity firm, Sycamore Partners, is still in the running to acquire Staples.      The bid from Cerberus valued the retailer at more than its current market value of about $5.8 billion, according to Bloomberg.   
  • Retailers applaud reports regarding swipe fee reform

    The retail industry's two major organizations are applauding reports that the House will drop efforts to repeal debit card swipe reform.   
  • Top four items on retail tech wish list

    Self-checkout technology tops the list of items that IT professionals would like to see in use over the next year, according to a poll by CompCom.   “It’s perhaps not surprising to see self-checkout rise to the top in the poll, since paying for purchases is probably the least pleasurable part of the shopping experience, and making the process as quick and easy as possible is increasingly important to retailers," said Tom Alvey, senior VP, retail solutions group at CompuCom.  
  • Google ups the ante on mobile payments

    Google is once again expanding its digital payment options.   The company knows it can be difficult for shoppers to make online payments within third-party apps and mobile websites, as well as in Google Assistant, when they are on the run. A new service is easing this pain and giving users more options.  
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