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Reuters: MasterCard Inc (MA.N) is counting on responsible spending and rare defaults among its customers in Asia, along with a greater use of credit by the region’s young, its chief financial officer told Reuters on Wednesday.
A growing middle class and rising consumption also set Asia apart from the West, the electronic payment giant’s CFO Martina Hund-Mejean said. “We are seeing a change in Asia.
The older population are saving first and then they are spending. But when we do analysis on the younger population, we are seeing people using more and more of the credit line,” she said in an interview.
“I sure hope that Asia doesn’t go the way that the US went, where they had to learn their lesson, but I think at this point, we see responsible behaviour in Asia. It could be honour or ‘face’ that makes them not go overboard.” MasterCard charges fees to process card payments between the banks of merchants and buyers via its global network, its main rivals being Visa Inc (V.N) and American Express Co (AXP.N).
A litigation-related charge took a large bite out of MasterCard’s fourth-quarter earnings, but it beat analysts’ estimates for the seventh straight quarter as consumers around the world used their plastic more.
Asians tend to spend on items such as travel, dining and entertainment, as well as home furnishings, and this can only grow, as many of these markets are underdeveloped relative to the United States, Hund-Mejean said.
“Population change, more middle class and consumption growth are big characteristics of Asia-Pacific. The other thing that I would say is the women. Women have the purse strings in many Asian countries,” she said.
MasterCard has worked with banks in Asia to tailor many products for women, she said, with special cards for women and a marketing strategy to attract women from across Asia to shop at the annual Great Singapore Sale.
Going cashless
Around 55 percent of the $37 trillion of global personal consumption spending was in cash and cheques, Hund-Mejean said, the rest being via electronic means such as credit, debit and prepaid cards.
MasterCard has invested in a mobile payment technology, PayPass, that allows people to “tap and go” instead of swiping a card or providing a signature. Consumers can make purchases with a PayPass-enabled phone, card or mobile payment tag.
“Cash costs society something,” she said. “You have to print it, you have to transport it, you have to count it. There’s also tax evasion.”
Hund-Mejean said Asia-Pacific was likely to be MasterCard’s higher-growth region, with Singapore, Indonesia, South Korea and Australia the key drivers.
But there remain some regulatory or infrastructure obstacles in the company’s path.
In China, for example, MasterCard can handle only cross-border, not domestic, transactions. And some developing countries, such as Vietnam, lack the network for electronic payments.
Of 36 analysts covering MasterCard stock, 26 have a “buy” or “strong buy” rating and 10 have “hold”, according to Thomson Reuters data.