The Contactless Conundrum: Making The Business Case
- Date:October 21, 2019
- Author(s):
- Rachel Huber
- Report Details: 19 pages, 6 graphics
- Research Topic(s):
- Tech & Infrastructure
- PAID CONTENT
Overview
The United States recently moved to chip technology but is it ready for contactless payments? Issuers and merchants both need each other to make the business case to upgrade to near field communication (NFC) options. The report reviews the business case to move to NFC technology for both issuers and merchants while determining market readiness.
Key questions discussed in this report:
- What are the current adoption rates of contactless cards in the United States?
- How do consumers view contactless cards?
- Why should issuers and merchants adopt contactless cards?
- What are the risks of not adopting contactless cards?
Methodology
The consumer data in this report was primarily collected from the following:
- A random-sample survey of 3,000 respondents conducted online in March 2019. Respondents are selected to be demographically representative of the U.S. population over the age of 18. The overall margin of error is +/-2% at the 95% confidence level for questions answered by all respondents.
Learn More About This Report & Javelin
Related content
What FIS’s Latest Deal Says About Finding Synergies Across the Payments Value Chain
A move by FIS to unload Worldpay—which it acquired to much hoopla in 2019, a year that also saw a huge deal between Global Payments and TSYS—illustrates the difficulty of finding s...
The Fate of the CFPB and Section 1033 Rules
The Trump administration’s efforts to shrink the federal government have stalled the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s actions, including litigation related to and enforcement...
Looking Past Deadlines: The ISO 20022 Opportunity
ISO 20022 is set to revolutionize payments with richer data, a seamless standard worldwide, and a forged path to future payment innovation. For mid-market banks, adoption isn’t jus...
Make informed decisions in a digital financial world