Apple Pay is looking overseas in 2016.
After a sluggish start in the U.S. since its debut more than a year ago, Apple Pay is ramping up in markets where people are more comfortable with so- called contactless payments. The service, which lets consumers pay in an app or by tapping their iPhone on store terminals, will be introduced next year in China, Hong Kong, Singapore and Spain.
Apple is counting on its brand recognition as it enters markets that are further along than the U.S. in all things mobile payments, particularly in advanced technologies needed to accept them in retail outlets. Still, it won’t be easy. The iPhone maker will compete with local banks and Internet companies that already offer the service -- not to mention Samsung Electronics Co., the world’s leader in smartphones.
“There’s a lot of opportunity for Apple because their brand has a significant cache,” said Thad Peterson, a senior analyst at Aite Group. Apple’s challenge will be “to see if there’s going to be an adoption curve significant enough to justify the investment.”
Slow Start
The mobile-payment service, which only works with Apple devices, is a way for the company to make products more appealing and spur customer loyalty. After Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook called 2015 the “year of Apple Pay” in January, the service has been slow to take off domestically, partly because of a lack of promotion and a limited number of store terminals able to accept it.Adoption has been faster in the U.K., where Apple Pay was introduced in the summer. That’s partly because of agreements with merchants such as sandwich chain Pret A Manger and Twickenham Stadium that let customers use Apple Pay to ring up unlimited amounts in transactions. Also, Apple’s operating system, iOS, commands a strong market share, with 39.5 percent of smartphone sales in Great Britain in the three months ended in October, according to Kantar Worldpanel ComTech:
- China
Besides UnionPay, 15 banks, including the Bank of China, Bank of Shanghai and Bank of Guangzhou, have signed on to support Apple Pay, Eddy Cue, Apple’s senior vice president of Internet Software and Services, said last week. “China is an extremely important market for Apple,” he said.
Still, Apple Pay will compete with services like Tencent Holdings Ltd.’s WeChat and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.’s Alipay that control more than 75 percent of the mobile-payments market, according to Zennon Kapron, managing director of Shanghai-based consulting firm Kapronasia. And Apple should be prepared to race with Samsung, which also announced a partnership with UnionPay and plans to bring Samsung Pay to China as soon as early 2016.
- Hong Kong and Singapore
- Australia and Canada
“There’s little to no incentive for the major Australian banks to let Apple both utilize their merchant-deployed infrastructure or be cut into transaction fees,” said Foad Fadaghi, managing director at telecom consulting firm Telsyte in Sydney.
- Spain
Apple declined to provide fresh comments for this story.
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