While Android Pay is
finally being rolled out in the US of A on Friday September 11th 2015 as
reported in my blog
article entitled “1
million US Retailers for Android Pay - Why Samsung Pay Alliance with Asus, HTC,
Lenovo and Xiaomi is coming”, Apple Pay
has finally scored big......in Big Ben!
Apple has finally gotten the support of Lloyds, Halifax and
Bank of Scotland as reported in the article “Apple
Pay Now Supported by Halifax, Lloyds, and Bank of Scotland in the UK [Updated]”,
published Friday September 11, 2015 by Mitchel Broussard, MacRumors.
This was expected as Apple Pay
is already being used by five (5) other banks in the UK and gaining momentum
with some 250,000 retailers as I'd pointed out in my blog article
entitled “250,000
merchants in Britain accept Apple Pay - Why Bitcoin is more secure as Eight
banks except HSBC and Lloyds on the Bandwagon”.
Some of those retailers include Shops on High Street as well as
UK Government Agencies such as the Post
Office and Transport for London accept Apple Pay
on the Apple iPhone or the Apple Watch. And yes, Boots and Costco also use Apple Pay as well.
Apple Pay wins over
Lloyds, Halifax and Bank of Scotland – England is now Apple Pay Country
This latest announcement throws some shade on the Android Pay
launch as it brings the list of banks that have accepted Apple Pay to eleven (11) in
total as listed in the article “Lloyds
and Halifax join Apple Pay”, published 11 SEPTEMBER 15 by CARA MCGOOGAN, Wired:
1. American
Express
2. First
Direct
3. HSBC
4. Halifax
5. Lloyds
6. NatWest
7. NationWide
8. MBNA
9. Royal
Bank of Scotland
10. Santander
11. Ulster
M&S and Barclays are expected to follow as predicted in the
article “Another
2 major UK banks now support Apple Pay”, published 11.09.2015 by Lucy
England, Business Insider UK,
despite showing support for their own solution involving NFC bands, stickers
and other devices.
So now that they've basically conquered England, where else are
they having problems? In the land down under
Apple Pay facing
uphill battle in Australia - 40% of Australian use the Apple iPhone so victory
is in sight
The real battle royale for Apple Pay
is Australia, where they’re already facing resistance from Australian Banks as
it relate to their Transaction fee, which at US$1 for every US$100 worth of
transactions is higher than Australia's POS (Point of Sale) Banking Charges as
pointed out in the article “Apple
Pay said to hit roadblocks gaining support in Australia”, published August
17, 2015 by Lance Whitney, CNET News.
Also, other Contactless Mobile Wallet solutions already exist
in Australia as pointed out in “Why
Apple Pay faces an uphill battle in Australia”, published 18 August 2015 by
Claire Reilly, CNET News.
But with more than 40 percent of Australians using an iPhone,
it's only a matter of time before Apple’s negotiations bear fruit in the Land
down Under just as they've done with Big Ben!
Here’s the link:
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