BI Intelligence
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In the US, the in-store mobile wallet space is becoming increasingly crowded. Most customers have an option provided by their smartphone vendor, like Apple, Android, or Samsung Pay. But those are often supplemented by a myriad of options from other players, ranging from tech firms like PayPal, to banks and card issuers, to major retailers and restaurants.
With that proliferation of options, one would expect to see a surge in adoption. But that’s not the case — though Business Insider Intelligence projects that US in-store mobile payments volume will quintuple in the next five years, usage is consistently lagging below expectations, with estimates for 2019 falling far below what we expected just two years ago.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
See Also:
- The SBA gave banks with less than $1 billion in assets exclusive access to the PPP
- A Mastercard exec lays out how a surge in contactless payments is giving the company an unexpected boost as people rethink touching cash
- Leading European neobanks' new app downloads have dropped since the coronavirus pandemic broke out
from Business Insider https://ift.tt/2ATfe19
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