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E-commerce Payment
        Systems
          Instructor: Wei Ding




Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.   Slide 6-1




PayPal: The Money’s in the E-mail

               The first “peer-to-peer”
               payment system, which
               allows individuals to
               send money to one
               another via e-mail.
               PayPal emphasizes
               ease of use for both
               senders and receivers
               of cash.

Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.   Slide 6-2




                                                       1
PayPal: The Money’s in the E-mail
               One of e-commerce’s major success stories:
                   Went public in 2002; acquired by eBay October
                   2002 for $1.5 billion
               An example of a “peer-to-peer” payment system
               Fills a niche that credit card companies avoided –
               individuals and small merchants
               Piggybacks on existing credit card and checking
               payment systems
               Weakness: suffers from relatively high levels of fraud
               Competitors include Western Union (MoneyZap),
               AOL (AOLQuickcash) and Citibank (C2it)

Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.                                             Slide 6-3




 How PayPal works?
         1.      Create a PayPal account at the PayPal Web site by filling out a one-
                 page application form and providing credit card or bank account
                 information. Only PayPal is privy to this information, not the receiving
                 party.
         2.      When using PayPal to pay for a purchase, money is drawn from the
                 credit card or bank account and transmitted to the
                 AutomatedClearingHouse (ACH) Network, a privately operated
                 financial intermediary that tracks and transfers funds between
                 financial institutions.
         3.      The party who is to receive the payment is notified via e-mail that
                 money is waiting. If the receiving party has a PayPal account, the
                 funds are automatically deposited into the account; If the person does
                 not have a PayPal account, he or she must set one up, and then the
                 money is credited to his or her account.
         4.      Once the funds are in the PayPal account, the recipient can then
                 transfer them electronically to a checking account, request a paper
                 check, or use PayPal to send the funds to someone else.


Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.                                             Slide 6-4




                                                                                                 2
Why PayPal has grown so fast?
               The more people who accept and use PayPal, the
               greater the benefit to the consumer.
               It works for a company such as eBay, providing
               purchasers and sellers with a way to short-cut the
               time-consuming and cumbersome process of mailing
               checks and money orders and waiting for checks to
               clear before shipping items.
               For small merchants selling items on the Web, it is
               difficult and expensive to obtain the capability to
               accept credits cards. Moreover, credit companies
               usually require a physical place of business as a
               requirement.


Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.                        Slide 6-5




 PayPal earns money in two
 ways.
               Online sellers pay a transaction fee for the
               service, about the same that a merchant
               typically pays for a credit card transaction.
               PayPal earns revenue by collecting the
               interest earned on consumer funds not yet
               transferred out of the PayPal system.




Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.                        Slide 6-6




                                                                            3
Types of Payment Systems

               Cash
               Checking Transfer
               Credit Card
               Stored Value
               Accumulating Balance


Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.   Slide 6-7




Most Common Payment Systems, Based on Number
Of Transactions




Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.   Slide 6-8




                                                       4
Cash
               Legal tender defined by a national authority to
               represent value
               Most common form of payment in terms of number of
               transactions
               Instantly convertible into other forms of value without
               intermediation of any kind
               Portable, requires no authentication, and provides
               instant purchasing power
               “Free” (no transaction fee), anonymous, low cognitive
               demands
               Limitations: easily stolen, limited to smaller
               transaction, does not provide any float (the period of
               time between a purchase and actual payment for the
               purchase).
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.                           Slide 6-9




 Checking Transfer
               Funds transferred directly via a signed draft or check
               from a consumer’s checking account to a merchant
               or other individual
               Most common form of payment in terms of amount
               spend
               Can be used for both small and large transactions
               Some float
               Not anonymous, require third-party intervention
               (banks)
               Introduce security risks for merchants (forgeries,
               stopped payments), so authentication typically
               required

Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.                          Slide 6-10




                                                                               5
Credit Card
               Represents an account that extends credit to
               consumers, permitting consumers to purchase items
               while deferring payment, and allows consumers to
               make payments to multiple vendors at one time
               Credit card associations – Nonprofit associations
               (Visa, MasterCard) that set standards for issuing
               banks
               Issuing banks – Issue cards and process transactions
               Processing centers (clearinghouses) – Handle
               verification of accounts and balances


Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.                       Slide 6-11




 Stored Value
               Accounts created by depositing funds into an
               account and from which funds are paid out or
               withdrawn as needed
               Examples: Debit cards, gift certificates,
               prepaid cards, smart cards
               Debit cards: Immediately debit a checking or
               other demand-deposit account
               Peer-to-peer payment systems such as
               PayPal a variation


Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.                       Slide 6-12




                                                                            6
Accumulating Balance
               Accounts that accumulate expenditures and
               to which consumers make period payments
               Examples: utility, phone, American Express
               accounts




Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.                       Slide 6-13




 Current Online Payment Systems
               Credit cards are dominant form of online payment,
               accounting for around 80% of online payments in
               2002
               New forms of electronic payment include:
                  Digital cash
                  Online stored value systems
                  Digital accumulating balance payment systems
                  Digital credit accounts
                  Digital checking



Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.                       Slide 6-14




                                                                            7
Online Merchants’ Actual and
Preferred Online Payments




Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.                 Slide 6-15




 How an Online Credit Card
 Transaction Works
               Processed in much the same way that in-
               store purchases are
               Major difference is that online merchants do
               not see or take impression of card, and no
               signature is available (CNP transactions)
               Participants include consumer, merchant,
               clearinghouse, merchant bank (acquiring
               bank) and consumer’s card issuing bank


Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.                 Slide 6-16




                                                                      8
How an Online Credit Transaction
Works




Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.                                Slide 6-17




An online credit card transaction
  1.      It begins with a purchase (1).
  2.      A SSL (secure sockets layer) tunnel is used to send credit cared
          information to the merchant (2). SSL does not authenticate either
          the merchant or the consumer. The transacting parties have to
          trust one another.
  3.      Once the consumer credit card information is received by the
          merchant, the merchant software contacts a clearing house (3).
  4.      A clearing house is a financial intermediary that authenticates
          credit cards and verifies account balance. The clearinghouse
          contacts the issuing bank to verify the account information (4).
  5.      Once verified, the issuing bank credits the account of the merchant
          at the merchant’s bank (usually this occurs at night in a batch
          process). (5).
  6.      The debit to the consumer account is transmitted to the consumer
          in a monthly statement.




Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.                                Slide 6-18




                                                                                     9
Limitations of Online Credit
 Card Payment Systems
               Security – neither merchant nor consumer
               can be fully authenticated
               Cost – for merchants, around 3.5% of
               purchase price plus transaction fee of 20-30
               cents per transaction
               Social equity – many people do not have
               access to credit cards (young adults, plus
               almost 100 million other adult Americans who
               cannot afford cards or are considered poor
               risk)

Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc.                Slide 6-19




                                                                     10

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Payment systems 2 1

  • 1. E-commerce Payment Systems Instructor: Wei Ding Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-1 PayPal: The Money’s in the E-mail The first “peer-to-peer” payment system, which allows individuals to send money to one another via e-mail. PayPal emphasizes ease of use for both senders and receivers of cash. Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-2 1
  • 2. PayPal: The Money’s in the E-mail One of e-commerce’s major success stories: Went public in 2002; acquired by eBay October 2002 for $1.5 billion An example of a “peer-to-peer” payment system Fills a niche that credit card companies avoided – individuals and small merchants Piggybacks on existing credit card and checking payment systems Weakness: suffers from relatively high levels of fraud Competitors include Western Union (MoneyZap), AOL (AOLQuickcash) and Citibank (C2it) Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-3 How PayPal works? 1. Create a PayPal account at the PayPal Web site by filling out a one- page application form and providing credit card or bank account information. Only PayPal is privy to this information, not the receiving party. 2. When using PayPal to pay for a purchase, money is drawn from the credit card or bank account and transmitted to the AutomatedClearingHouse (ACH) Network, a privately operated financial intermediary that tracks and transfers funds between financial institutions. 3. The party who is to receive the payment is notified via e-mail that money is waiting. If the receiving party has a PayPal account, the funds are automatically deposited into the account; If the person does not have a PayPal account, he or she must set one up, and then the money is credited to his or her account. 4. Once the funds are in the PayPal account, the recipient can then transfer them electronically to a checking account, request a paper check, or use PayPal to send the funds to someone else. Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-4 2
  • 3. Why PayPal has grown so fast? The more people who accept and use PayPal, the greater the benefit to the consumer. It works for a company such as eBay, providing purchasers and sellers with a way to short-cut the time-consuming and cumbersome process of mailing checks and money orders and waiting for checks to clear before shipping items. For small merchants selling items on the Web, it is difficult and expensive to obtain the capability to accept credits cards. Moreover, credit companies usually require a physical place of business as a requirement. Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-5 PayPal earns money in two ways. Online sellers pay a transaction fee for the service, about the same that a merchant typically pays for a credit card transaction. PayPal earns revenue by collecting the interest earned on consumer funds not yet transferred out of the PayPal system. Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-6 3
  • 4. Types of Payment Systems Cash Checking Transfer Credit Card Stored Value Accumulating Balance Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-7 Most Common Payment Systems, Based on Number Of Transactions Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-8 4
  • 5. Cash Legal tender defined by a national authority to represent value Most common form of payment in terms of number of transactions Instantly convertible into other forms of value without intermediation of any kind Portable, requires no authentication, and provides instant purchasing power “Free” (no transaction fee), anonymous, low cognitive demands Limitations: easily stolen, limited to smaller transaction, does not provide any float (the period of time between a purchase and actual payment for the purchase). Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-9 Checking Transfer Funds transferred directly via a signed draft or check from a consumer’s checking account to a merchant or other individual Most common form of payment in terms of amount spend Can be used for both small and large transactions Some float Not anonymous, require third-party intervention (banks) Introduce security risks for merchants (forgeries, stopped payments), so authentication typically required Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-10 5
  • 6. Credit Card Represents an account that extends credit to consumers, permitting consumers to purchase items while deferring payment, and allows consumers to make payments to multiple vendors at one time Credit card associations – Nonprofit associations (Visa, MasterCard) that set standards for issuing banks Issuing banks – Issue cards and process transactions Processing centers (clearinghouses) – Handle verification of accounts and balances Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-11 Stored Value Accounts created by depositing funds into an account and from which funds are paid out or withdrawn as needed Examples: Debit cards, gift certificates, prepaid cards, smart cards Debit cards: Immediately debit a checking or other demand-deposit account Peer-to-peer payment systems such as PayPal a variation Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-12 6
  • 7. Accumulating Balance Accounts that accumulate expenditures and to which consumers make period payments Examples: utility, phone, American Express accounts Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-13 Current Online Payment Systems Credit cards are dominant form of online payment, accounting for around 80% of online payments in 2002 New forms of electronic payment include: Digital cash Online stored value systems Digital accumulating balance payment systems Digital credit accounts Digital checking Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-14 7
  • 8. Online Merchants’ Actual and Preferred Online Payments Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-15 How an Online Credit Card Transaction Works Processed in much the same way that in- store purchases are Major difference is that online merchants do not see or take impression of card, and no signature is available (CNP transactions) Participants include consumer, merchant, clearinghouse, merchant bank (acquiring bank) and consumer’s card issuing bank Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-16 8
  • 9. How an Online Credit Transaction Works Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-17 An online credit card transaction 1. It begins with a purchase (1). 2. A SSL (secure sockets layer) tunnel is used to send credit cared information to the merchant (2). SSL does not authenticate either the merchant or the consumer. The transacting parties have to trust one another. 3. Once the consumer credit card information is received by the merchant, the merchant software contacts a clearing house (3). 4. A clearing house is a financial intermediary that authenticates credit cards and verifies account balance. The clearinghouse contacts the issuing bank to verify the account information (4). 5. Once verified, the issuing bank credits the account of the merchant at the merchant’s bank (usually this occurs at night in a batch process). (5). 6. The debit to the consumer account is transmitted to the consumer in a monthly statement. Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-18 9
  • 10. Limitations of Online Credit Card Payment Systems Security – neither merchant nor consumer can be fully authenticated Cost – for merchants, around 3.5% of purchase price plus transaction fee of 20-30 cents per transaction Social equity – many people do not have access to credit cards (young adults, plus almost 100 million other adult Americans who cannot afford cards or are considered poor risk) Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 6-19 10