Good Morning,

Yesterday Kathy M. and I installed Roam Data onto her phone; and it was VERY EASY!  The application works beautifully.  Would recommend it to anyone!

Di

Vision Payment Solutions  provides merchant accounts, supports all major credit and debit cards, e-check and ACH transactions, electronic benefits transfer, recurring bill payments, and gift and stored-value cards. As a proven leader in payment technologies, we offer advanced virtual terminal and payment gateway solutions that are fully supported by our in-house teams.

By STEPHANIE CLIFFORD
Published: March 1, 2011. NY Times

While the average debt on credit cards in December decreased by 4 percent compared with the same month a year before, Americans still carried an average of $4,284 on credit card statements in December 2010, according to data released this week by the credit monitoring company Experian.

The data offers conflicting versions of the economy’s already mixed picture. While some consumers spent more during the holidays because the economy was rebounding, others were still unable to cover expenses without leaning on their credit cards. And while holiday spending also appeared to have been more robust than in the last several years, even more recent data has shown a bit of a slowdown in consumption this year.

“You’ve got people who already had good credit and were pretty much managing their credit, and because of the risk, paid down their debt even more,” said Maxine Sweet, vice president for public education at Experian. Then there were “very dramatic increases in debt by people who, mainly, lost jobs, but also had medical emergencies, and turned to credit cards to carry them through the hard times.”

The most recent consumer credit report from the Federal Reserve showed that revolving credit, which is mostly credit card debt, increased by 3.5 percent in December at an annual rate, the first such increase in 27 months. (That data included “charge-offs,” or debt that the credit card companies considered essentially uncollectible, while the Experian data, since it was pulled from active credit files, did not.) Card spending (including credit, debit and electronic benefit-transfer cars) was up 6.5 percent in December compared with spending at the same stores a year earlier, according to First Data, which processes merchant transactions.

Retailers tend to benefit from credit card spending, as it often means people are spending beyond their budgets.

Holiday spending rose 5.5 percent in the 50 days before Christmas in 2010 compared with 2009, according to MasterCard Advisors SpendingPulse. Much of that was driven by increases in apparel, jewelry and luxury goods.

While many shoppers had vowed to spend only with cash this holiday season, that was a budgeting trick that not everyone could use.

The cash shoppers, Ms. Sweet suggested, “were the ones that were pretty much in control — they can say, ‘I’m going to be more conservative.’ ” People under more difficult circumstances had to put certain debts on their credit cards, she said. In February, the retail analyst David Strasser issued a note to clients saying that the increase in credit spending was good news.

Spending at Visa and MasterCard in the United States was up a combined 8.3 percent for the fourth quarter, Mr. Strasser noted, “a hopeful sign that big-ticket spending is in recovery mode for 2011.”

“Weak credit trends have clearly bottomed out,” he wrote, and the increases in credit card spending “will disproportionately help big-ticket retailers that were hit hard during the downturn, as credit was curtailed and consumers lacked liquidity to purchase big-ticket products.”

The Experian data, which is broken down by metropolitan area, also gives a sense of how different cities may be recovering from the recession.

The city with the highest card debt in December was San Antonio, with $5,177 due on average, 21 percent above the national average. (The figures include debts on regular credit cards and retail Visas and MasterCards, but not a retailer’s own card — so a Gap-brand credit card would not be included, but a Gap Visa card would.)

San Antonio was followed by Jacksonville, Fla., at $5,115, a city with one of the lowest average credit scores, suggesting that pure debt may have been piling up there. Dallas, which came in at fifth with $4,936, also has one of the lowest average credit scores in the country.

Atlanta was third, with $4,960, and Honolulu, with $4,939, was fourth.

In 2009, the list of cities with the most credit card debt was similar: Dallas, Atlanta, San Antonio, Jacksonville and the Waco, Tex., metropolitan area.

Jeanie Wyatt, chief executive of the San-Antonio based advisory firm South Texas Money Management, said the economy in the city had been quite steady.

“Our unemployment rate is lower than the national average,” she said, “the health care field has been fast-growing, and of course we still have a big military component, and tourism, and a growing energy component. People are feeling, I think, pretty good about their job security.”

She said San Antonians were largely living on working-class paychecks, which could explain some of the credit card debt.

“While San Antonio has a lower unemployment rate and a more stable economy, our wage earners are at that mid- to lower end,” she said. “I would presume that lower-income individuals tend to have a higher percentage of credit card debt.”

The cities that racked up the lowest credit card debt for December were Sioux Falls, S.D. ($3,446); the area in Tennessee and Virginia around Kingsport, Johnson City and Bristol ($3,449); Fort Wayne, Ind. ($3,476); Paducah, Ky.($3,515); and Davenport, Iowa ($3,515).

In December 2009, the cities with the lowest credit card debt were Altoona, Pa.; Lafayette, La.; Evansville, Ind.; Davenport, Iowa; and Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

VantageScore, a credit rating produced by the three major reporting bureaus, Experian, Equifax and TransUnion, gives a picture of whether the credit card spending came from economic confidence, or from desperation.

Midwest and West Coast cities dominated the list of cities with the 25 highest VantageScores. Wisconsin had three cities on that list (Green Bay, at No. 1; Madison, at No. 2; and Milwaukee, at No. 21). Several states had two: California (San Francisco and Santa Barbara), Minnesota (Minneapolis and the Valley City-Fargo area, which crosses into North Dakota), Oregon (Eugene and Portland) and Iowa (Cedar Rapids and Des Moines). There were no Southern or Southwestern states on the list of the top credit scores.

“Cities like Minneapolis, that always have great credit scores, actually have higher debt than other cities,” Ms. Sweet said. “But it’s offset by the fact that they never miss payments, and they always have high credit limits.”

The list of the 25 cities with the lowest VantageScores in December was heavily Southern. Texas had seven cities on the list (Harlingen, El Paso, Tyler, Waco, San Antonio, Dallas and Houston, going from lowest to highest credit scores). Other than two California cities (Bakersfield and Fresno) and Las Vegas, every other city on the list was from the South.

“Part of that is a lot just a lot of younger people moving in, and a larger migrant population — so by younger, meaning not just in age, but also less depth in their credit history, and we think that’s one factor,” Ms. Sweet said of the lower credit scores in Texas in particular.

“When you have these consumers who are in crisis with foreclosures and unemployment, that has to be driving up their credit card debt,” Ms. Sweet said.

Shoppers interviewed last December sounded quite cautious about their spending.

Julianne Cantarella, 43, was at the Garden State Plaza Mall in Paramus, N.J. (the New York metropolitan area is No. 42 on the Experian list of high credit card debt). Her house had finally sold over the summer after being on the market for a year and a half, she said, so she thought the economy was improving.

“But I did cut down on the money I’m spending and the amount of gifts I’m buying,” she said.

In Columbus, Ohio (No. 12 on the Experian list), Dorothy Huggins, 54, was shopping with her granddaughter.

“Everybody in our family is fine — nobody’s lost their jobs, but I have lots of friends and neighbors who have been hit,” Ms. Huggins said. “That made us more conservative this year because we’re wondering, are we next?”

“There are so many people hurting, through no fault of their own. And we’re fortunate enough to be doing well,” she said. “So we bought a lot less stuff this year.”

Vision Payment Solutions  provides merchant accounts, supports all major credit and debit cards, e-check and ACH transactions, electronic benefits transfer, recurring bill payments, and gift and stored-value cards. As a proven leader in payment technologies, we offer advanced virtual terminal and payment gateway solutions that are fully supported by our in-house teams.

vision payment solutions smartphones
Speed, Convenience and Savings

VPS gives you the lowest rates on credit transactions while ROAMpay rigorously protecting your customers’ personal data.

Remember the big one that got away? Never again. When you invest the time in getting a prospect ready to place a big order, wrap up the deal without delay by taking their credit card right then and there — using just your cell phone.

With Vision Payment Solutions, ROAMpay delivers the highest security possible and the convenience of a mobile phone. Available for use on over 400+ phones, ROAM-pay is the definitive application for processing major credit cards like Visa® and MasterCard® all on your mobile phone. With features such as real-time authorization, emailed receipts, void, and online reporting, you can trust that your business is up and processing anywhere you have cellular service.

Key Benefits
  • Quick activation
  • No additional equipment costs
  • DES3 secure, PCI compliant
  • Quickly process credit card orders
  • Real-time authorization
  • Log cash orders for reporting and receipts
  • Email receipts to your customers
  • Cross channel touch point
  • Build up your customer list
  • Check transaction history and reports on your phone or online
Secure and fully compliant
ROAM adheres to the highest possible standards in payment security. Being PCI certified (Payment Card Industry), you can trust that your transactions are processed accord­ingly. All customer data is encrypted before it leaves your cell phone. No personal data is retained on your cell phone.
No additional hardware required
With Vision Payment Solutions you use your current cell phone and your current calling plan. The service works on all major cell phones. If you don’t already have a data plan, you can simply pay-as-you-go for data usage. It’s just pennies per transaction.

VPS and ROAMpay also includes a web interface so you can securely enter credit card data from your PC or Mac’s desktop.

Here’s the list of 400+ phones available for processing

For New Merchant Accounts including mobile swipe with Roampay and VPS:

For more information email salessupport@visionpayments.com or call (877) 674-2286.

$44.95 Hardware Swipe

$49 Setup Fee

Rates: Interchange, Dues and Assessments plus .75 basis points.

0.30 cents per transaction

$30 per month includes; Bank Service Fee, Monthly Gateway  and PCI Tool Kit

Vision Payment Solutions  provides merchant accounts, supports all major credit and debit cards, e-check and ACH transactions, electronic benefits transfer, recurring bill payments, and gift and stored-value cards. As a proven leader in payment technologies, we offer advanced virtual terminal and payment gateway solutions that are fully supported by our in-house teams.

iDynamo for IPhone 4 and 3 Series, IPAD is now available for ordering.

If you have an iphone and open a merchant account with Vision Payment Solutions, for a limited time you can purchase the Magtek iphone swipe at $129.00

This will allow you to process most credit and debit cards at card present pricing, saving you money.

Merchant Account iphone Program:

There is No Application Fee, No Download Fee, No Setup Fee. For more information email salessupport@visionpayments.com or call (877) 674-2286.

Rates: Interchange, Dues and Assessments plus .75 basis points.

.25 cents per transaction

$25 per month includes; Bank Service Fee and PCI Tool Kit

$49 Annual Fee

More about the Product:

MagTek’s four decades of industry leading design and innovation securing payments for today and the future

Secure and Easy-to-Use
• Protects data and surpasses the PCI DSS standards by combining multi-layered MagneSafeTM security
• Protects sensitive card data from the point of swipe and reduces your scope of PCI compliance
• Simple to install and use secure card reader authenticators
• Makes card present transactions easy to accept with security designed to simply decline counterfeit cards

Affordable and Flexible
• Supported by PCs, Macs, iPhone 3GS, iPhone 3G, iPod touch and other popular mobile smart phones
• Lowers the cost of card acceptance by offering authentic, card present transactions
• Reduces the scope of PCI compliance by eliminating sensitive card data from the application

For more information email salessupport@visionpayments.com or call (877) 674-2286.

* This program is only available through our exclusive offer with new merchant accounts and the above listed rates.

Vision Payment Solutions  provides merchant accounts, supports all major credit and debit cards, e-check and ACH transactions, electronic benefits transfer, recurring bill payments, and gift and stored-value cards. As a proven leader in payment technologies, we offer advanced virtual terminal and payment gateway solutions that are fully supported by our in-house teams.

Electronic Recovery is a superior check recovery solution that is fast, effective and – best of all – FREE!

When a bad check is written, the Vision Payments Solutions partner Payliance, debits the checking account (from any bank in the US Federal Reserve System) of the individual along with a state allowed NSF fee. 100% of the face value of the check is remitted to you, while Payliance retains the NSF fee. If all presentations are depleted, the unrecovered item can be returned to you or automatically flow into our Legal Recovery program.

How does it work?

  • Your Financial institution forwards all returned items to Payliance
  • NSF and Unrecoverable funds returned items are automatically re-presented electronically.
  • Unrecoverable items flow into our Legal Recovery
  • You receive 100 percent of the recovered face value of all checks

Benefits!

  • A debit network is utilized to “peek” into accounts and verify funds
  • You recieve 100% of the face value of your recovered checks
  • Reporting and front/back check images are available online
  • Live client support
  • Optional legal recovery
  • It’s FREE to you.

Vision Payment Solutions  provides merchant accounts, supports all major credit and debit cards, e-check and ACH transactions, electronic benefits transfer, recurring bill payments, and gift and stored-value cards. As a proven leader in payment technologies, we offer advanced virtual terminal and payment gateway solutions that are fully supported by our in-house teams.

The PCI Security Standards Council (PCI SSC) released version 2.0 of the Payment Card Industry (PCI) Data Security Standard (DSS) and the Payment Application (PA) DSS on Oct. 28, 2010. The council said the updates are primarily meant to help clarify existing standards and assist with their implementation.

PCI DSS 2.0 arrives in the wake of PCI SSC annual meetings in Orlando, Fla. (Sept. 23 to 25), and Barcelona, Spain (Oct. 18 to 20), where more than 1,500 people from 600 organizations participated in discussions that were largely designed to help craft the new standards, according to the PCI SSC’s website. Among the participants were merchants, banks and processors, along with members of the council.

PCI DSS 2.0 goes into effect Jan. 1, 2011, although merchants aren’t required to become fully compliant with the new standards until Dec. 31, 2011.

Some of the new requirements include more explicit instructions for issuers and processors regarding the storage of sensitive authentication data, changes regarding the prioritization of different security vulnerabilities, and a provision for logging different data streams in a centralized place to simplify tracking.

“Many merchants have many logs associated with many different systems,” said Jeremy King, European Director for the PCI SSC. “What we’re saying is try to create a centralized logging process.

“Instead of having many different logs, just have one centralized process. …. These things can help you identify critical issues when they occur.”

Easing the process

Some changes are intended to make the standards easier to manage and speedier to implement. A few eliminate redundancies (by, for example, combining requirements 10 and 11, which relate to remote access of payment data), while others clarify certain passages that have caused confusion.

Another noteworthy change relates to future updates to the PCI DSS, which will now be released every three years, rather than every two. “We’ve gotten a lot of feedback from people saying two years is just too short a time frame; you know, by the time we’ve understood the requirements, it already needs to be changed again,” King said. “We’ve listened to that and we’ve changed it.”

King said the updates will also facilitate implementation of the PCI DSS by doing more to tailor certain requirements to different types of merchants, rather than having them apply a uniform standard.

“The final ruling within this set is to say to the merchant, ‘You really need to take a more risk-based approach to your processes and your environment,’” he said, adding that analyzing factors like whether a merchant is brick-and-mortar, e-commerce and/or MO/TO, for example, will help merchants understand where cardholder data is going to be in their systems.

“And from that you can match your security appropriately and thereby meet the requirements,” he said. “This is an improvement. Instead of, in the past, ‘You must, you must, you must,’ it’s now ‘do this risk-based approach and then match your security to it.’ And that’s going to be a significant improvement to make life easy for the merchants and let them focus on key areas.”

King said the PCI 2.0 updates target smaller merchants, especially, adding that the PCI SSC has added a new section to its website that’s entirely dedicated to helping small merchants implement a good security framework. For further information on small-merchant PCI compliance issues, go to www.pcisecuritystandards.org/smb.

Vision Payment Solutions  provides merchant accounts, supports all major credit and debit cards, e-check and ACH transactions, electronic benefits transfer, recurring bill payments, and gift and stored-value cards. As a proven leader in payment technologies, we offer advanced virtual terminal and payment gateway solutions that are fully supported by our in-house teams.

Use your iphone to process ACH transactions… AND SPS GUARANTEE’S THE TRANSACTIONS REAL-TIME!


IT’S AS SIMPLE AS A CLICK OF THE CAMERA BUTTON ON YOUR iPHONE!

With Vision Payment Solutions and SPS’ new “MobileXpress21™” payment solution, powered by Mitek Systems proprietary smartphone check imaging technology, SPS has created the only real time, “guaranteed funds” remote deposit solution available on a smartphone!

  • Transactions are captured and transmitted via secure Check21 technology!
  • Funds are electronically settled in two business days!
  • No expensive wireless POS devices, cabling issues, or bulky scanners!
  • At the merchant’s option checks are GUARANTEED … Real-Time!

“MobileXpress21™” is the culmination of a SPS – Mitek technology integration initiated earlier this year that unites the capabilities of SPS’ electronic transaction processing, Check 21 image-capture, and guarantee solutions with Mobile Deposit®. This service positions merchants with a breakthrough in convenience, accuracy, and security for guaranteed funding of mobile remote check deposits. Already certified on the Apple Store for the iPhone, “MobileXpress21™” can be downloaded by participating merchants for an easy-to-implement processing solution.

A smartphone equipped with “MobileXpress21™” provides for easy data prompting, entry, and image scanning of checks. Transaction data and check images are captured remotely and securely, and transmitted real time to SPS servers for immediate translation and transaction processing. Approvals are transmitted near instantaneously back to the smartphone, letting the user know of the guarantee and safety of the remote check-acceptance solution. Moreover, settlement funding is performed in one or two business days, emulating the existing electronic check conversion process.


WHO IS THIS SERVICE FOR?

  • It is for any business that would like to accept customer check payments remotely (or already does so), have them instantly guaranteed (if desired, but not required), and not have to invest in expensive and bulky wireless point of sale terminals and check scanners!
  • It is for any business that may accept only a few checks each day in their physical retail location, and not have to purchase or lease an expensive check imager!
  • It is for any merchant that wishes to have funds deposited QUICKLY AND ELECTRONICALLY and not have to worry about the risk/safety of accepting checks written remotely, or messengers or drivers losing paper checks or not capturing all the required check writer’s information … regardless if accepting business checks or personal checks!

That’s right! Remote electronic conversion using the latest Check21 technology! All on a single smartphone … with guaranteed payment! At the check writer’s location … fast … easy … convenient … safe … secure!


HOW CAN I GET IT?

This innovative solution is only available through and provided by Vision Payment Solutions and Secure Payment Systems (SPS)

Basic Information

  • This service requires a contract addendum to the basic Services Agreement. The addendum can be downloaded directly by calling VPS at the information below.

For More Information Please Contact: VPS at 866-674-2286 or emailing salessupport@visionpayments.com.

Vision Payment Solutions  provides merchant accounts, supports all major credit and debit cards, e-check and ACH transactions, electronic benefits transfer, recurring bill payments, and gift and stored-value cards. As a proven leader in payment technologies, we offer advanced virtual terminal and payment gateway solutions that are fully supported by our in-house teams.





Writing a card number down or dialing-in an authorization is becoming a thing of the past. Cardholders are unwilling to give credit card information over the phone. Manually recording customer data is time consuming, it can lead to lost sales, manual entry errors, chargebacks and delayed funding.  Processing credit cards manually can be costly!

Remind your merchants, when they manually record a customer’s credit card number the sale is not final. It can take days to process or the customer can simply deny the transaction. VeriFone’s way5000 provides swiped transactions including PIN debit performed at the point-of-service. way5000 is an affordable pocket-sized, fully mobile payment solution. To learn more about way5000 visit www.verifonezone.com

Vision Payment Solutions  provides merchant accounts, supports all major credit and debit cards, e-check and ACH transactions, electronic benefits transfer, recurring bill payments, and gift and stored-value cards. As a proven leader in payment technologies, we offer advanced virtual terminal and payment gateway solutions that are fully supported by our in-house teams.

(November 2, 2010) With a freshly revised version of industry rules for payment card data security having just emerged (Digital Transactions News, Oct. 28), further evidence is also surfacing of the compliance challenge acquirers face with the smallest merchants. Indeed, the smaller the business, the less sensitive it is to the possibility of a data breach, and the less likely it is to understand or comply with the Payment Card Industry data-security standard (PCI), according to survey results released on Tuesday by ControlScan Inc., a vendor of compliance solutions.

This is despite the fact that, news headlines about breaches at big retailers like TJX Cos. Inc. notwithstanding, the overwhelming share of card-data compromises occur at so-called Level 4 merchants, defined by Visa Inc. as those processing fewer than 1 million card transactions a year. In fact, such small businesses account for some 85% of breaches, according to a 2-year-old report from Visa, which tracks PCI compliance and, along with MasterCard Inc. and other card networks, enforces the standard.

Yet Atlanta-based ControlScan found an almost alarming level of nonchalance about data security among small merchants in their survey, which garnered responses from 628 Level 4 businesses. Nearly three-quarters classified their risk of compromise as “low,” while a further 11% said it was “non-existent.” More than half (53%) are not familiar with PCI, or are unsure whether they are. And just half understand that PCI compliance is mandatory. On the positive side, 84% rate data security as a “high” or “medium” priority (e-commerce merchants rate security at a significantly higher priority than do brick-and-mortar merchants). Among respondents, so-called micro-merchants, or businesses with 10 or fewer employees, accounted for 90% of replies.

The survey results are “definitely a little concerning but not shocking,” says Markiyan Malko, compliance officer and program manager at an independent ISO. “Most of them are worried about running their business rather than security. They don’t seem to be that worried about it.” He points out, though, that as Level 1, 2, and 3 merchants become harder to breach, hackers are increasingly targeting the smallest and most vulnerable merchants. And while these businesses in isolation may not perform huge volumes of transactions, collectively they account for a treasure trove of card data. “Hackers have tools, it’s automated and doesn’t take that much time,” Malko says. “It adds up pretty quickly.”

The risk these merchants face can be dire, with the costs of a breach including not just network fines but reimbursement to issuers to reissue cards, litigation expenses, and fees for forensic audits. “I definitely have heard of many merchants getting shut down,” says Malko. “I hear of it every few weeks.”

ControlScan sees an opportunity for acquirers and ISOs like Vision Payment Solutions to educate small merchants about PCI and the risk of data breaches. But they caution that the approach must be a careful one. Acquirers must be mindful of differences among businesses and of their need for concrete help. “The worst thing an ISO can do is charge a PCI fee and not do anything beyond that,” says Heather Foster, vice president of marketing at ControlScan.

Level 4 merchants number more than 5 million and account for more than 99% of all Visa merchants, while generating about one-third of all Visa card volume. But the exact level of PCI compliance among Level 4 businesses is not known, since Visa has left it up to acquirers to monitor compliance efforts among these clients. “Most of what I’ve heard is anecdotal,” says Foster.

All told, the two companies sent surveys to just over 10,000 small businesses. Among the respondents, 30% were physical stores, 22% were online merchants, and the remainder were either multichannel merchants or non-storefront businesses, such as limo services or medical-supply companies.

Vision Payment Solutions  provides merchant accounts, supports all major credit and debit cards, e-check and ACH transactions, electronic benefits transfer, recurring bill payments, and gift and stored-value cards. As a proven leader in payment technologies, we offer advanced virtual terminal and payment gateway solutions that are fully supported by our in-house teams.

New York (November 1, 2010) Capital Access Network, Inc.’s (CAN) Data Services Division today released its Q3 2010 Small Business Credit Sales Report (SBCS Report).  This SBCS Report shows that “Main Street” brick and mortar retailers, service providers and restaurants demonstrated the fourth consecutive quarter of moderation in Year-over-Year (YoY) card sales declines, decreasing from a high of 14.84% in Q3 2009 to this quarter’s YoY card sales decline of 5.06%.

“This report from CAN, along with Federal Reserve Statistical Release G.19 Consumer Credit published on October 7, 2010, lends support to the notion that Main Street retailers, service providers and restaurateurs seem to be attracting a disproportionately high share of the reducing consumer credit card float,” states Glenn Goldman, CAN’s CEO and President. “The restaurant industry offers another bright spot in this quarter’s report, as those with tickets averaging less than $25 experienced year-over-year card sales growth of 0.36% for the first time since Q1 2009.”

A copy of the Q3 2010 SBCS Report can be viewed at

http://www.capitalaccessnetwork.com/viewdocument/SBCSQ32010.pdf.

Key Q3 2010 SBCS Report Highlights:

1. Overall same store credit and signature debit cards sales dropped 5.06% from their Q3 2009 levels. This quarter’s card sales represent the twelfth consecutive quarter of YoY declines. However, the Q3 2010 card sales decline also demonstrates the fourth consecutive quarter of a continued moderation in YoY card sales declines, decreasing from a high of 14.84% in Q3 2009 to this quarter’s YoY card sales decline of 5.06%.

SPOTLIGHT: Federal Reserve Statistical Release G.19 Consumer Credit published on October 7, 2010 lends support to the notion that Main Street retailers, service providers and restaurateurs have adjusted to the lower card spends — and since Q1 2010 seem to be attracting a disproportionately high share of the reducing consumer credit card float. In Q1 2010, Main Street‘s YoY card sales declined at a faster clip than the annual rate of decline in revolving consumer credit with YoY card sales down 9.16% and the annual rate of decline in revolving consumer credit at 8.5%. By Q2 2010, the curves inverted, with revolving consumer credit down at an annual rate of 7.2% and YoY Main Street card spend down only 5.6%. The trend continued through the summer. The Fed reports 7.5% and 7.2% annual rate decreases in consumer revolving credit for June and July 2010, respectively, and projects a 7.2% decrease for August 2010. For Q2 2010, and each of June, July and August 2010, the card spend on Main Street saw YoY declines of 5.6%, 5.7%, 5.4%, and 4.7%, respectively.

2. For the eighth consecutive quarter, all MSA* sizes reported declining YoY same store credit sales. However, MSAs with populations between 100,000 and 249,999 experienced essentially flat YoY card sales volumes, declining less than 1%. The rate of YoY card sales decline slowed in Q3 2010 for all MSA sizes – except for the 1 million+ population group. That most-populous grouping saw card sales decline 7% in Q3 2010 compared to the same period in 2009.

3. The Restaurant sector seems to have stabilized this quarter with a 1.65% YoY decline, compared to Q2 2010′s 1.18% reported YoY decline. The Retail sector demonstrated its fourth consecutive quarter of reduced card spend decline. On a quarter over prior year’s quarter basis, in Q3 2009, card sales declined for the Retail sector by 18.46%, followed by 15.22% in Q4 2009, 11.67% in Q1 2010, 9.32% in Q2 2010, and now 7.73% in Q3 2010.

SPOTLIGHT: While Q3 2010 saw card sales at Restaurants soften slightly overall on a YoY basis, no Average Ticket Size breakout experienced a greater than 3.76% decline. The least expensive restaurants — those with tickets averaging less than $25 — actually experienced YoY card sales growth (0.36%) for the first time since Q1 2009. The most expensive restaurants – those with tickets averaging more than $100 were essentially flat, declining less than 0.5% on a YoY basis.

4. For the seventh consecutive quarter, seven out of eight regions reported declining YoY Main Street card sales with New England showing positive YoY card sales for the first time since Q4 2008. However, all regions saw reductions in the rate of YoY decline in Q3 2010 as compared to the YoY decline seen in Q2 2010, with the exceptions of the RockyMountain and the Southeast Regions. The Rocky Mountain Region saw the greatest decline in card sales in Q3 2010 followed by the Southeast Region, with their retailers, service providers and restaurateurs seeing card sales fall 8.47%, and 6.47% compared to Q3 2009, respectively.

5. Less established businesses continue to struggle compared to more established business, although every Time in Business category posted card sales declines, as they have for nine straight quarters. Length of time in business continues to correlate with credit sales activities. Main Street businesses that have been operating more than 10 years have experienced slower rates of YoY decline than their less experienced counterparts in each of the past four quarters.

*Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas as defined by the Office of Management and Budget based on U.S. Census Bureau data.

Vision Payment Solutions  provides merchant accounts, supports all major credit and debit cards, e-check and ACH transactions, electronic benefits transfer, recurring bill payments, and gift and stored-value cards. As a proven leader in payment technologies, we offer advanced virtual terminal and payment gateway solutions that are fully supported by our in-house teams.

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