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New Chase Credit Card With Chip Technology Aims To Please Americans Abroad

Chip Based Credit Card

By CANDICE CHOI   11/21/11 04:20 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK -- Chase is rolling out a credit card embedded with a "smart" chip technology that reduces fraud and is already widely used outside the United States.

The British Airways co-branded card, available Monday, is intended to appeal to frequent travelers who may experience hiccups with U.S. credit cards overseas.

The U.S. is the only developed country still primarily using credit and debit cards with magnetic strips. The rest of the industrialized world has already switched, or is transitioning, to the chip-based cards.

Chip-based cards aren't swiped like cards with magnetic strips. Instead, users insert the cards into a slot then punch in a PIN code to finalize a transaction. Although card terminals overseas also have a slot where magnetic strip cards can be swiped, cashiers in less-traveled areas are sometimes confused by how to process such transactions.

In other circumstances, such as train ticket kiosks, credit cards with magnetic strips can't be read.

Naney Pandit, general manager of Chase's card services, said not having a chip-based card was becoming a hassle for customers in recent years, as Europe and Asia adopt cards with the chip technology.

"What used to be a trickle a few years ago has become a frequent point of irritation," she said.

Chip technology nevertheless remains a rarity across the country. Magnetic strip technology is so entrenched that the transition to chip-based cards poses logistic difficulties. Stores have little reason to install terminals for smart cards because banks didn't issue them. Banks don't issue the cards because stores wouldn't accept them.

But increasing concerns over fraud could mean chip-based cards soon become more common. Visa this year announced new policies that will give U.S. banks, payment processors and stores incentives to adopt the smart cards, starting in 2015. Visa's move comes as industry experts are warning that U.S. merchants may become targets for fraudsters from countries where payment systems have tighter security.

U.S. banks have recently started offering the cards on a limited basis to high-end clients.

The British Airways card by JP Morgan Chase & Co., for example, has a $95 annual fee. Earlier this year, Chase introduced two other cards with chip technology. The J.P. Morgan Select card has a $95 annual fee after the first year and the Palladium card, which offers a 24-hour concierge service and travel perks such as unlimited airport lounge access, has a $595 annual fee.

Other banks began experimenting with the newer technology this summer. U.S. Bank gave 20,000 of its travel rewards customers cards with the chip. Wells Fargo & Co. started testing the chip technology with 15,000 customers. Wells says the response has been overwhelming, and it plans to roll out the chip-based cards more widely.

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NEW YORK -- Chase is rolling out a credit card embedded with a "smart" chip technology that reduces fraud and is already widely used outside the United States. The British Airways co-branded card, av...
NEW YORK -- Chase is rolling out a credit card embedded with a "smart" chip technology that reduces fraud and is already widely used outside the United States. The British Airways co-branded card, av...
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03:51 PM on 12/08/2011
This new Chase / BA credit card will appeal to globe-trotting Americans, who have long had issues using their U.S. cards in Europe and elsewhere. The whole thing started in the early 2000s when the chip-and-PIN technology made its appearance in the U.K. and then swiftly displaced the older and less secure magnetic stripe cards across Western Europe.

However, U.S. banks continued to rely exclusively on the magnetic stripe, which could still be accepted by chip-and-PIN terminals through the so-called fallback procedures, but in reality most European retailers either did not know how to do that or simply didn’t want to.

As a result, U.S. issuers lost $447 million in revenues in 2008 alone, because 9.7 million Americans could not use their cards in Europe and elsewhere, according to a report from Aite Group. Moreover, U.S. credit card companies were missing out on a huge cost-saving opportunity in the form of lower fraud losses.

So the new Chase / BA card is good for everyone, European merchants very much included. http://blog.unibulmerchantservices.com/how-new-chip-cards-cure-americans-headaches-at-european-checkouts
02:00 PM on 11/25/2011
Welcome to the 21st century!
09:10 AM on 11/24/2011
Not only can we not build anything in USA anymore we also have the least technology in credit cards? We really are going for 3rd world status aren't we? Thanks conservative tea party republicans.
01:49 PM on 11/23/2011
Great. One more way to track our every move, with an IR chip. If you only knew, you would refuse, much like the chip in the passports.
09:34 AM on 11/23/2011
This is a company which has a Smart Card with Biometrics . There is a very informativ­e Audio Interview by the CEO with a lot of facts. The size and scope of the needs within the heath care industry is amazing! http://www­.equitygro­ups.com/st­ock-discus­sion/BSKS/
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12:02 AM on 11/22/2011
What if we refuse to use PINS???
06:00 AM on 11/22/2011
You don't get the goods ;-)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wesdfs
11:36 PM on 11/21/2011
sounds like we are way behind the rest of the world
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wtf is this
we are part of society -- make it better for all!
11:44 PM on 11/21/2011
We are... in many many ways....