Your credit card is stolen. You place a phone call to the number
provided in your tourist guide or in the local daily press. You provide
your details and you cancel your card. You block it. In a few minutes,
it should be transferred to the stop-list available to the
authorization centres worldwide. From that moment on, no thief will be
able to fraudulently use your card. You can sigh in relief. The danger
is over.
But is it?
It is definitely not. To understand why, we should first review the intricate procedure involved.
In principle, the best and safest thing to do is call the authorization
centre of the bank that issued your card (the issuer bank). Calling the
number published in the media is second best because it connects the
cardholder to a "volunteer" bank, which caters for the needs of all the
issuers of a given card. Some service organizations (such as IAPA – the
International Air Passengers Association) provide a similar service.
The "catering bank" accepts the call, notes down the details of the
cardholder and prepares a fax containing the instruction to cancel the
card. The cancellation fax is then sent on to the issuing bank. The
details of all the issuing banks are found in special manuals published
by the clearing and payments associations of all the banks that issue a
specific card. All the financial institutions that issue Mastercards,
Eurocards and a few other more minor cards in Europe are members of
Europay International (EPI). Here lies the first snag: the catering
bank often mistakes the identity of the issuer. Many banks share the
same name or are branches of a network. Banks with identical names can
exist in Prague, Budapest and Frankfurt, or Vienna, for instance.
Should a fax cancelling the card be sent to the wrong bank – the card
will simply not be cancelled until it is too late. By the time the
mistake is discovered, the card is usually thoroughly abused and the
financial means of the cardholder are exhausted.
Additionally, going the indirect route (calling an intermediary bank
instead of the issuing bank) translates into a delay which could prove
monetarily crucial. By the time the fax is sent, it might be no longer
necessary.
If the card has been abused and fraudulent purchases or money
withdrawals have been debited to the unfortunate cardholders' bank or
credit card account – the cardholder can reclaim these charges. He has
to clearly identify them and state in writing that they were not
effected by him. A process called "chargeback" thus is set in motion.
A chargeback is a transaction disputed within the payment system. A
dispute can be initiated by the cardholder when he receives his
statement and rejects one or more items on it or when an issuing
financial institution disputes a transaction for a technical reason
(usually at the behest of the cardholder or if his account is
overdrawn). A technical reason could be the wrong or no signature,
wrong or no date, important details missing in the sales vouchers and
so on. Despite the warnings carried on many a sales voucher ("No Refund
– No Cancellation") both refunds and cancellations are daily
occurrences.
To be considered a chargeback, the card issuer must initiate a
well-defined dispute procedure. This it can do only after it has
determined the reasons invalidating the transaction. A chrageback can
only be initiated by the issuing financial institution. The cardholder
himself has no standing in this matter and the chargeback rules and
regulations are not accessible to him. He is confined to lodging a
complaint with the issuer. This is an abnormal situation whereby rules
affecting the balances and mandating operations resulting in debits and
credits in the bank account are not available to the account name
(owner). The issuer, at its discretion, may decide that issuing a
chargeback is the best way to rectify the complaint.
The following sequence of events is, thus, fairly common:
The cardholder presents his card to a merchant (aka: an acceptor of payment system cards).
The merchant may request an authorization for the transaction, either
by electronic means (a Point of Sale / Electronic Fund Transfer
apparatus) or by phone (voice authorization). A merchant is obliged to
do so if the value of the transaction exceeds predefined thresholds.
But there are other cases in which this might be either a required or a
recommended policy.
If the transaction is authorized, the merchant notes down the
authorization reference number and gives the goods and services to the
cardholder. In a face-to-face transaction (as opposed to a phone or
internet/electronic transaction), the merchant must request the
cardholder to sign the sale slip. He must then compare the signature
provided by the cardholder to the signature specimen at the back of the
card. A mismatch of the signatures (or their absence either on the card
or on the slip) invalidate the transaction. The merchant will then
provide the cardholder with a receipt, normally with a copy of the
signed voucher.
Periodically, the merchant collects all the transaction vouchers and sends them to his bank (the "acquiring" bank).
The acquiring bank pays the merchant on foot of the transaction
vouchers minus the commission payable to the credit card company. Some
banks pre-finance or re-finance credit card sales vouchers in the form
of credit lines (cash flow or receivables financing).
The acquiring bank sends the transaction to the payments system (VISA
International or Europay International) through its connection to the
relevant network (VisaNet, in the case of Visa, for instance).
The credit card company (Visa, Mastercard, Diners Club) credits the acquirer bank.
The credit card company sends the transaction to the issuing bank and automatically debits the issuer.
The issuing bank debits the cardholder's account. It issues monthly or transaction related statements to the cardholder.
The cardholder pays the issuing bank on foot of the statement (this is
automatic, involuntary debiting of the cardholders account with the
bank).
Some credit card companies in some territories prefer to work directly
with the cardholders. In such a case, they issue a monthly statement,
which the cardholder has to pay directly to them by money order or by
bank transfer. The cardholder will be required to provide a security to
the credit card company and his spending limits will be tightly related
to the level and quality of the security provided by him. The very
issuance of the card is almost always subject to credit history and to
an approval process.
Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After
the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He served as a columnist for
Global Politician, Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and
eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business
Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe
categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.
Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government of
Macedonia.
Visit Sam's Web site at samvak.tripod.com