Mastercard
Company type | Public (NYSE: MA) |
---|---|
ISIN | US57636Q1040 |
Industry | Financial Services |
Founded | 1966 |
Headquarters | Purchase, New York, United States |
Key people | Robert W. Selander, President & CEO |
Products | Payment systems |
Revenue | 22,237,000,000 United States dollar (2022) |
12,264,000,000 United States dollar (2022) | |
US$300.2 million ( US$44M FY 2005) | |
Total assets | 33,584,000,186 United States dollar (2020) |
Number of employees | 4,300 |
Website | www.mastercard.com |
MasterCard Worldwide (NYSE: MA) is a membership organization owned by the 25,000+ financial institutions that issue its card. MasterCard is also the company's brand of credit cards. It was originally created by United California Bank (later First Interstate Bank, subsequently merged into Wells Fargo Bank), Wells Fargo, Crocker National Bank (also subsequently merged into Wells Fargo), and the Bank of California (subsequently merged into the Union Bank of California) as a competitor to the BankAmericard issued by Bank of America. BankAmericard is now the VISA credit card, issued by Visa International.
History
The name Master Charge was licensed by the above mentioned California banks from the First National Bank of Louisville, Kentucky in 1967. With the help of New York's Marine Midland Bank, now HSBC Bank USA, these banks joined with the Interbank Card Association (ICA) to create "Master Charge: The Interbank Card".
In 1979, "Master Charge: The Interbank Card" was renamed simply "MasterCard". In the early 1990s MasterCard bought the British Access card and the Access name was dropped. In 2002, MasterCard International absorbed Europay International SA, another large credit-card issuer association, which for many years issued cards under the name Eurocard.
In 2006, MasterCard International underwent another name change to MasterCard Worldwide. This was done in order to suggest a more global scale of operations. In addition, the company introduced a new corporate logo adding a third circle to the two that had been used in the past (the familiar card logo, resembling a Venn diagram, remains unchanged). A new corporate tagline was introduced at the same time: "The Heart of Commerce".[1]
Shareholders
Based on an SEC filing in early 2005, MasterCard's largest current shareholders are:
- 11.8% - JPMorgan Chase
- 6.2% - Citigroup
- 6.0% - Bank of America
- 5.2% - Euro Kartensysteme
- 5.0% - Europay France
IPO
The company, which had been organized as a cooperative of banks, had an initial public offering on 25 May 2006 at $39.00 USD. The stock is traded on the NYSE under the symbol MA.
Litigation
Both MasterCard and Visa have paid approximately $3 billion in damages resulting from a class-action lawsuit filed by Hagens Berman in January 1996.[2] The litigation cites several retail giants as plaintiffs, including Wal-Mart, Sears Roebuck & Company, and Safeway.[3]
Advertising
MasterCard's current advertising campaign is "There are some things money can't buy. For everything else, there's MasterCard."
The first of these Priceless ads was run during the World Series in 1997 and there are numerous different TV, radio and print ads.[4] It was created by McCann-Erickson. MasterCard actually registered Priceless as a trademark.[5] Actor Billy Crudup has been the voice of the ads in the USA since 1997. In other countries the voiceover artist changes to suit the local market; in the UK, for instance, actor Jack Davenport is the voice.
This campaign attempts to position MasterCard as the friendly credit card company with a sense of humor. They are designed to respond to the public's worry that everything is being commodified, and that people are becoming too materialistic.[6] Many parodies have been made using this same pattern, especially on Comedy Central, though MasterCard has threatened legal action,[7] contending that MasterCard views such parodies as a violation of its rights under the federal and state trademark and unfair competition laws, under the federal and state anti-dilution laws, and under the Copyright Act. Despite these claims, however, noted US consumer advocate and presidential candidate Ralph Nader emerged victorious (after a four-year battle) in the suit MasterCard brought against him after he produced his own "Priceless" political commercials.[8]
During Super Bowl XXXIX on 6 February 2005, a MasterCard commercial was introduced featuring 10 legendary advertising characters from various foods and household products. The characters included Chef Boyardee, Charlie the Tuna, the Pillsbury Doughboy, Count Chocula, the Vlasic pickle stork, the Morton Salt girl, the Jolly Green Giant, Mr. Peanut from Planters, the Gorton's fisherman, and Mr. Clean.
Sports sponsorship
MasterCard currently sponsors the New Zealand All Blacks, the country's world famous rugby union team.[9]
MasterCard is also the sponsor of the FIFA World Cup and the UEFA Champions League.
It is currently the sponsor of the Memorial Cup Tournament of the Canadian Hockey League. MasterCard has just announced new sponsorship deal with Australian Cricket team.
In 1997, MasterCard was the main sponsor of the aborted MasterCard Lola Formula One team.
Management and Board of Directors
Key executives include:[10]
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As of December 2004, the following banks are represented on MasterCard's board of directors:
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In January 2005, Washington Mutual Bank, the third largest issuer of debit cards in the United States, announced that it was changing its debit-card branding from VISA to MasterCard. The change will make Washington Mutual MasterCard's largest bank customer.
MasterMoney
MasterMoney is the branding of a MasterCard debit card distributed in North America. Like many debit cards, the brand has capabilities of being used as an ATM card as well as a credit card, providing sufficient funds are in one's bank account (usually a checking account) in order to complete a transaction.
PayPass
MasterCard PayPass is a new "contactless" payment feature based on the ISO 14443 standard that provides cardholders with a simpler way to pay by tapping a payment card or other payment device, such as a phone or key fob, on a point-of-sale terminal reader rather than swiping or inserting a card.
In 2003, MasterCard concluded a nine-month PayPass market trial in Orlando, Florida, with JPMorgan Chase, Citibank, and MBNA. More than 16,000 cardholders and more than 60 retailer locations participated in the market trial. In addition, MasterCard worked with Nokia, AT&T Wireless, and JPMorgan Chase to incorporate MasterCard PayPass into mobile phones using Near Field Communication technology, in Dallas, Texas.
In 2005, MasterCard began to roll out PayPass in certain markets. As of October 2006, the following financial institutions have issued the MasterCard PayPass:
- Bank of America
- JPMorgan Chase (available through its "blink" contactless feature)
- Citibank (both MasterCard credit and debit cards)
- HSBC Bank USA (debit card only)
- Key Bank (debit card only)
- Citizens Bank and Charter One Bank (both MasterCard credit and debit cards)
- Commonwealth Bank (Australia)
- Garanti Bank (Turkish, available through its Bonus Trink Card)
- Banco de Oro Universal Bank (Philippines, available through its BDO International ATM Card)
Banknet
MasterCard operates Banknet, a global telecommunications network linking all MasterCard card issuers, acquirers and data processing centers into a single financial network. The operations hub is located in St. Louis, Missouri.
MasterCard's network is significantly different from Visa's. Visa's is a star based system where all endpoints terminate at one of several main data centers, where all transactions are processed centrally. MasterCard's network is an edge based, peer-to-peer network where transactions travel a meshed network directly to other endpoints, without the need to travel to a single point. This allows MasterCard's network to be much more resilient, in that a single failure cannot isolate a large number of endpoints.
EPSnet
MasterCard Europe operates a Network known as EPSnet - this interfaces BankNet but is up for replacement in 2009. EPSnet is used to link Issuers and Acquirers for Online POS/ATM Transaction Processing.
See also
- Credit Card
- VISA
- American Express
- Diners Club
- Discover
- Maestro
- Octopus card
- China UnionPay
- JCB
- Cirrus
- Interchange fee
References
- ^ MasterCard changing name, Jay Loomis, The Journal News, June 28, 2006
- ^ Visa/MasterCard Litigation, January 1st 1996
- ^ VISA CHECK/MASTERMONEY ANTITRUST LITIGATION WEBSITE
- ^ Priceless Film Festival
- ^ Priceless, Trademark Electronic Search System, Retreieved July 5th 2006
- ^ Priceless, Jim Farrell, New American Dream, Retreieved July 5th 2006
- ^ Threats of legal action: MasterCard International (April 9, 2001). "Re: MasterCard/Infringement by NETFUNNY.COM web site".
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- ^ MasterCard Investor Relations, accessed 04 November 2006
External links
- Official website
- Corporate website
- Merchant website
- Business website
- How MasterCard Works (interactive site)