Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Walmart And Visa Declare Truce In Half-year Battle Over Credit Card Fees

IANS, 06 Jan, 2017 01:08 PM
    TORONTO — Corporate behemoths Walmart Canada and Visa have declared a truce in their dispute over merchant fees, allowing Walmart customers in Manitoba and Thunder Bay, Ont., to resume using the credit card beginning Friday.
     
    Both companies said they came to an agreement but did not provide details, calling the arrangement confidential.
     
    Walmart began refusing Visa credit cards at its three stores in Thunder Bay in mid-July. It said it pays more than $100 million in fees every year for customers to use various brands of credit cards, and that the fees charged by Visa were excessive.
     
    That set off a widely watched battle within the retail sector that intensified in October, when Walmart expanded its policy of rejecting Visas to its 16 stores in Manitoba. The retail giant had said it was planning to expand its phase-out of Visa to all of its 400 stores in Canada.
     
     
    The months-long dispute became so heated that at one point Visa offered its cardholders in Manitoba a reward for buying their groceries somewhere other than Walmart. It launched an advertising campaign in November offering Manitoba Visa cardholders a $10 credit if they spent $50 or more at grocery stores.
     
    The campaign didn't explicitly mention Walmart or the fee dispute, but a Visa spokeswoman said at the time that the company was hoping to ease any inconvenience for Visa cardholders who can't use their cards everywhere that they want to.
     
    Visa ran a similar ad in Thunder Bay, promising cardholders there with a $25 credit for every grocery purchase of $75 or more.
     
    Visa previously said it had offered Walmart one of the lowest rates for any merchant in the country, and that if it gave in to the retailer's demands then other merchants would want a reduction in their fees, as well.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Dead Mouse Found In Cup Of Tim Hortons Coffee, Says Nova Scotia Man

    Dead Mouse Found In Cup Of Tim Hortons Coffee, Says Nova Scotia Man
    A man who says he pulled a dead mouse from a cup of Tim Hortons coffee is asking for an apology from the restaurant chain.

    Dead Mouse Found In Cup Of Tim Hortons Coffee, Says Nova Scotia Man

    Quebec First Nation Lays Claim To Downtown Ottawa, Including Parliament Hill

    Vancouver's Tsawwassen First Nation signed British Columbia's first urban treaty in 2007, which gave the band 724 hectares of land, harvest rights to fish and other resources and a one-time cash payment of $33.6 million, along with another $2.9 million annually for five years. 

    Quebec First Nation Lays Claim To Downtown Ottawa, Including Parliament Hill

    Alberta Human Services Minister Irfan Sabir Says He Didn't Botch Probe Into Girl's Death

    Alberta Human Services Minister Irfan Sabir Says He Didn't Botch Probe Into Girl's Death
    EDMONTON — Alberta's human services minister says he didn't botch an investigation into the death of a girl in government care and rejects opposition calls for his resignation.

    Alberta Human Services Minister Irfan Sabir Says He Didn't Botch Probe Into Girl's Death

    Family Of Slain Doctor Express Gratitude For Outpouring Of Support

    Family Of Slain Doctor Express Gratitude For Outpouring Of Support
    TORONTO — The family of a doctor found strangled and beaten to death is expressing gratitude for an outpouring of support.

    Family Of Slain Doctor Express Gratitude For Outpouring Of Support

    Saskatchewan's Wall, B.C.'s Clark Get Premiers Gathering Off To Fractious Start

    Saskatchewan's Wall, B.C.'s Clark Get Premiers Gathering Off To Fractious Start
    OTTAWA — A day-long meeting of first ministers on finalizing a pan-Canadian climate plan is off to a fractious start.

    Saskatchewan's Wall, B.C.'s Clark Get Premiers Gathering Off To Fractious Start

    Snow Arrives To Southern B.C. But Weather Agency Downplays Earlier Predictions

    Snow Arrives To Southern B.C. But Weather Agency Downplays Earlier Predictions
    Monday's flurries marked the first time a significant amount of snow fell on Metro Vancouver in more than two years, causing widespread traffic delays and prompting the closure of several schools.

    Snow Arrives To Southern B.C. But Weather Agency Downplays Earlier Predictions