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Market Research Report
Commercial Cards and the Multinational Space: One Small Slice of the Global Commercial Payments Pie
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Commercial Cards and the Multinational Space: One Small Slice of the Global Commercial Payments Pie published by Mercator Advisory Group, Inc. in December, 2007. This report consists of 27 pages, 13 exhibits and the price starts from US $ 2950.
Abstract
NEW RESEARCH REPORT BY MERCATOR ADVISORY GROUP
Just a few months ago, Mercator Advisory Group proclaimed the purchasing card
market specifically to be a "credit channel re-envisioned as
software-as-service" and that the way to maximize the efficiency of electronic
payments for commercial entities was for banks and other commercial payment
service providers to offer broad, integrated technology-based sourcing and
payment solutions that would, in essence, capture as much commercial spend of
all types, and all payment methods, as possible. While we still contend that
global business-to-business payments are best managed by commercial financial
service providers with a diverse array of products and offerings, some of
which may compete directly and indirectly with cards, the market for
commercial cards of all types remains very attractive. The rates of growth for
volume charged on purchasing cards, corporate travel and entertainment cards,
fleet cards, and especially small business cards have been remarkably strong
since their birth over two decades ago and their adoption by businesses and
governments worldwide. The commercial card category remains the fastest
growing one in the plastic "pay-later" world.
While the global move to electronic payments most definitely has businesses
small and large leading the revolution, and the increasing sophistication of
commercial entities concerning payments demands that solutions proposals be
exceedingly refined, the value of cards continues to be enhanced by networks
and issuers, and accessed by enterprises seeking the visibility, regulatory
compliance, policy enforcement, business process efficiency, security, and
access to working capital that cards afford. And while the commercial payments
landscape is the quintessential cost-conscious market, as also witnessed in
the merchant acquiring industry among others, an issuer demonstrating the true
and exact value of its solutions will always have a market to participate in.
Report Highlights:
- 1. Analysis of the most recent data indicates that commercial cards
(corporate T & E, purchasing, small business, and fleet) comprise the fastest
growing card category in the credit space.
- 2. When it comes to commercial cards, Visa, American Express, and
MasterCard have eclipsed all other brands. Growth of global commercial volume
is robust for all of the three major card payment networks.
- 3. Provision of global expense data from supplier to buyer can take
several forms-card issuers and service providers are increasingly enabling
that process and providing the analytical tools to make commercial payments
more streamlined and expenditure data more meaningful.
- 4. Integration of electronic payments as a means of increasing business
process efficiency, providing more control and policy compliance enforcement,
and reducing costs is the focus of the current commercial payments market.
- 5. Multinational corporations are seeking electronic enterprise payments
solutions with sophisticated means of capturing, reporting, and analyzing
expenditure data. While enhanced data capabilities inherent in commercial card
products require merchants to do the heavy lifting, electronic invoicing and
virtual account numbers seek to provide effective workarounds.
David Fish, Senior Analyst in Mercator Advisory Group' s Credit Advisory
Service and principal analyst on the report, comments, "The closing bell
for card-based commercial payments is not yet ringing in the mid-to-large
corporate and multinational markets-far from it. Though supply chain
management transactions, procurement expenditures, and other types of direct
spend where data is inherent in the payment process and enterprise
architecture will likely always have cards playing second (or third) fiddle,
payments for travel, meetings and events, maintenance, fleet services,
emergency sourcing, and other kinds of otherwise indirect spending have the
distinct potential for commercial cards' penetration of those markets."
This report contains 27 pages and 13 exhibits.
Table of Contents
Introduction
I. Global Commercial Card Market Overview
- 1. Visa, Inc. and Visa Europe - A Slice Larger Than the Sum of its Parts
- 2. American Express-Commercial Services a la Mode
- 3. MasterCard - As American as Apple Pie
- 4. Domestic Issuers Market Share of US based Commercial Card Payments
- 5. Commercial Card Product Performance
II. Integrated Commercial Payment Solutions
III. Multinational Commercial Card Implementations: Strategy and Conclusions
TABLE OF FIGURES
- Figure 1: The Global Commercial Card Payments Pie 2006 - Card Brand Market
Share
- Figure 2: Visa Global Commercial Volume
- Table 1: Countries with Value Added Tax Recovery
- Figure 3: American Express Global Commercial Volume
- Figure 4: MasterCard Global Commercial Volume
- Figure 5: US Issuers' Market Share of Domestic Commercial Card Volume
(2006)
- Figure 6: Commercial Bankcard Product Volume Share (US Issuers, 1998-2006)
- Figure 7: Commercial Bankcard Volume by Product Type (US Issuers,
1998-2006)
- Figure 8: Commercial Bankcard Volume Growth by Product (US Issuers,
2002-2006)
- Figure 9: AFP: Average Percentage of a US Business' s B2B Payments Made By
Check
- Figure 10: AFP: Percentage of US Businesses Who Have Integrated E-Payments
with Accounting Systems
- Figure 11: Many-to-Many EIPP Scheme
- Figure 12: Data Items by Level
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