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Are Our Wallets About to Get Thinner?
August 21, 2017
In February 2011, I was in Salt Lake City for the annual Smart Card Alliance
conference, and a representative from the now-defunct Isis Mobile Wallet was
delivering the keynote address. As part of the keynote, the speaker played a video
clip from the Seinfeld show that famously depicts the "Costanza wallet," a wallet so
overstuffed that it gave George a backache from sitting on it. The conference
speaker had us imagining a world where our mobile phones replaced our physical
wallets. Six-and-a-half years later, that world remains a dream. But are we closer to
it, with private-label cards possibly leading the way?
As I was paying for my coffee this morning through a mobile phone app, it dawned
on me that I haven't used a physical card for this specific retailer in at least three
years. The retailer's mobile app has replaced my physical card, a private-label
prepaid card, as my payments credential. I no longer have a need for the card at this
retailer, nor do I want one—I'd prefer to keep my wallet from becoming a "Costanza
wallet." And while my example describes a prepaid card, I believe that this retailer's
model is indicative of what's on the horizon for private-label store credit cards as
well.
I usually quickly turn down any offers for private-label credit cards at retailers.
Even though these cards come with some sweet deals and benefits, I just don't want
more plastic in my wallet. But what if this credential could be issued directly within
the retailer's mobile application without ever issuing a plastic card? Sign me up!
I remain skeptical about the future of the so-called "pay wallets," but continue to
believe that the future of mobile payments will be driven by retailers' mobile apps.
And I think these mobile apps present these retailers the ideal opportunity to drive
their private-label prepaid or credit adoption and usage without ever having to
issue a plastic credential. If the credential that retailers issued were in electronic
form, such as a token or virtual card, it could disrupt the plastic card industry
—approximately 360 million credit and 4.5 billion prepaid cards in 2015, according
to the Nilson Report. Plus, merchants would benefit by avoiding the cost of issuing
and distributing cards.
So back to my original question: Are we closer to a world with thinner wallets, and
with private-label cards possibly leading the way? I don't think our physical wallets
will ever go away, but I do believe that they will slim down as we witness a
substantial rise in the issuance of private-label virtual credentials in the future on a
wide range of connected devices. In fact, I'm willing to go out on a limb and suggest
that these credentials will eventually overtake the number of physical cards. What
do you think on the future of plastic in the private-label space? And what new
challenges, if any, will the virtualization of plastic have on the personalization and
authentication of payment credentials?

By Douglas A. King, payments risk expert in the Retail Payments Risk

Forum at the Atlanta Fed
• August 21, 2017 in
◦ cards
◦ fintech
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