BEIJING, June 7 (Reuters) - China is to allow foreign payment card
companies to operate in the country, potentially giving groups like Visa Inc
and MasterCard access to its 55-trillion-yuan ($8.4-trillion) card payment
market.
Visa and MasterCard, the world's two largest credit and debit card
companies, have been lobbying for more than a decade for direct access to
China's cards market, which is projected to become the world's biggest by 2020.
Bank card consumer transactions reached 55 trillion yuan in 2015,
accounting for 48 percent of total social consumption, the central bank said.
Presently the market is dominated by state-run China UnionPay Co Ltd.
Rules issued on Tuesday by China's central bank and the China Banking
Regulatory Commission include a requirement that applicants hold 1 billion yuan
($152.2 million) in registered capital in a local company.
The foreign bank card companies must also meet China's national security
and cyber security standards and be locally based.
The payment card rules come more than a year after the State Council,
China's cabinet, said China would allow foreign firms to operate bank card
clearing businesses.
This aimed to address a 2012 ruling by the World Trade Organisation that
found China was discriminating against U.S. credit card companies.
"In the future there will be more diverse participants in the domestic
bank card market, with many bank card brands competing on a level field,"
the central bank said in a Q&A published after the release of the rules.
Qualified foreign companies can apply to set up bank card businesses by
meeting the same standards and processes required by domestic companies, the
central bank said in its statement.
Foreign investors are also allowed to acquire domestic card clearing firms
after passing a security review, it said.
Once companies have submitted their applications, the central bank will
have 90 days to decide whether to grant an approval. Companies that get a green
light will have a year to set up their operations.
A Shanghai-based UnionPay spokesman said the company supported the rules
and would compete with other firms fairly and by law under the same
supervision.
Reuters could not reach Visa or MasterCard for comment after normal
business hours.
($1=6.5699 Chinese yuan renminbi) (Reporting by Shu Zhang and Matthew
Miller; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and Jane Merriman)
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