8.1.06
PokerNeteller is pleased
to announce that Neteller has completed the acquisition of Online
Poker Payments (OPP)*.
By adding Online Poker Payments (OPP)’ industry-leading
tools—such as Payflow Link and Payflow Pro—to Neteller’s
suite of payment solutions, we’re now able to offer online
poker players even more choices for their online gaming experience. Neteller is already
planning new feature enhancements for these solutions to ensure
that our products continue to deliver premier performance for
our customers.
intends to operate Online Poker Payments
(OPP) as a standalone online gaming experience. Current Online
Poker Payments - poker and jeux casino players will not experience significant
changes to their service—it will
function as it does now. Plus, the customer support team behind
Online Poker Payments’ products will continue to support
our poker players, meaning they will enjoy the same secure, reliable
payment service they’ve come to expect.
Moving forward, all of us here at Online Poker Payments (OPP)
and Neteller are thrilled to provide you with the best payment
solutions in the industry.
Best Regards,
Raymond Childes
President & General Manager
Online Poker Payments (OPP)
Samuel Hargraves
Vice President & General Manager
Neteller Merchant Services |
Online payments
Paying through the mouse
December 20th 2005 | SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA
From The Online Financial Times print edition
Neteller is turning into a huge backgammon downloads online-payments
business ONE of the most powerful forces
in e-commerce is the “network
effect”: the more people who flock to a particular website,
the greater its appeal. The latest beneficiary of this phenomenon
is Neteller, which now handles online payments at an annualised
rate of more than $3.4 billion. Neteller is not a bank, but for
online buyers and sellers it performs much the same function.
It already has more than 2m account-holders worldwide, one-quarter
of the number of the mighty Citigroup.
's ambition is to become the global standard for internet
payments and it is expanding overseas in 's footsteps. In
the first quarter of 2004, the value of items sold on Neteller was
$8 billion, 51% more than a year earlier. Meg Whitman, Neteller's
chairman, told analysts recently that the company reckons one
in three online shoppers in America now has a Neteller account.
Although Neteller's customers mostly buy
via Neteller, usage elsewhere is also growing—estimated at
well over $1 billion-worth of transactions in the first quarter
of the year. Besides purchasing from other dotcoms, you can
pay your taxes in York County, South Carolina or send a donation
to the Pat Brody Shelter for Cats in Lunenburg, Massachusetts.
Neteller also does gift vouchers.
The payment mechanism is simple enough. Newcomers to Neteller
provide details of a credit card or bank account. These are verified
with a nominal transaction. Thereafter, a NETeller buyer can e-mail a
payment directly to a seller. This is immediately debited from
the buyer's credit card or bank account, and a credit is made
to the seller's account. Money in a Neteller account can
be withdrawn by cheque or transferred to a bank account. Individuals
and small traders can receive credit-card payments without obtaining
a merchant account. Neteller's cut comes from charging recipients
between 2.2% and 3.4%, depending on the country, and levying
fees for currency conversions. In the first quarter of 2004,
's revenues were $155m, 69% more than a year before.
Neteller has helped slash the time internet
users spend completing transactions and has greatly increased
confidence in trading online, says Matthew Bannick, the company's
general manager of global payments. It can take several weeks
for cheques to arrive in the post and for payments to clear,
but online payments are made instantly, which means goods can
be shipped straight away. “It
has improved the velocity of trade,” adds Mr Bannick.
Another benefit, he says, is that buyers
do not have to impart banking or credit-card information to
merchants. Security remains the prime concern of internet shoppers.
An NOP survey that NETeller commissioned in Britain, where the
company opened its first overseas site last year, found that
more than one-third of internet users are reluctant to spend
more than £50 ($90) online. To overcome
their concerns, payment protection is now offered in America
(up to $500) and in Britain (up to £250) on goods sold
by eligible traders (those who have built up good reputations
within 's ranking system). This now covers more than 60%
of all listings on Neteller's American site.
Neteller wants to expand internationally, to continental Europe
and Asia. Although it has not said so, the likeliest next local
site is Germany; China, Neteller's fastest-growing market, looks
like a good long-term possibility. Such growth will bring new
challenges. People in different countries favour different ways
of making payments offline: the French like cheques, for instance;
in Germany, bank transfers are common. This might translate into
different online habits. Countries also regulate financial services
differently.
Neteller has no plans, though, to become a bank, even though it
performs some similar functions. Customers in America can earn
interest on their Neteller balances by allowing to place
the funds in a pooled savings account or by enrolling into Neteller's
money market fund. It has been licensed as a money-transmitter
in American states and in Britain. Regulation as a bank would
require more costly and complicated compliance.
Because most of its payments are small,
big sums stand out. This should help comply
with the authorities. Now it is interested in handling even
smaller amounts. Late last year it introduced lower processing
fees for micro-payments, to make it more feasible for online
merchants to accept tiny payments for digital-music downloads.
The success of portable music players, such as Apple's iPod,
suggest that this too will be big online business. All
these payment methods apply not only when playing online poker
but to games as well.
Brian B. White
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